Mapping the Incredible Spread of Mexican Drug Cartels in the U.S.

Borderland Beat – by Colin Daileda

U.S. involvement in Mexico’s battle against drug cartels is getting a lot of press. But it’s worth noting that Mexico’s notorious narcotics trade isn’t just Mexico’s problem anymore.

And Obama should be well aware of that, considering that this past February Chicago declared Sinaloa cartel leader Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán its first “Public Enemy No. 1” since Al Capone.   

“While Chicago is 1,500 miles from Mexico, the Sinaloa drug cartel is so deeply embedded in the city that local and federal law enforcement are forced to operate as if they are on the border,” Jack Riley, the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Chicago office, told CNN.

The infiltration of the Windy City shows the extent to which Mexican drug syndicates have made inroads in the United States — the Associated Press and others have reported that cartel cells are operating in Atlanta, Ga., Louisville, Ky., Columbus, Ohio, and rural North Carolina. In fact, according to an excellent National Post infographic based on data from a U.S. Justice Department report and other sources, it’s much easier to list states that don’t have a drug trade tied to Mexican gangs.

There are only twelve that haven’t reported the presence of one of four Mexican cartels since 2008: Alabama, Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Maine, Montana, North Dakota, Utah, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. The Mexican drug trade is everywhere else.

Detected cartel operations range from traditional drug-running to using a horse ranch as a front for laundering drug money, as one group did in Oklahoma.

The Sinaloa cartel, which has emerged as Mexico’s dominant syndicate, has carved out new territory in the United States by controlling 80 percent of its meth trade (Mexican cartels have come to dominate the U.S. market by aggressively bumping up the purity of their meth while dropping the price per gram).

All told, Mexican cartels reside in 1,200 American communities as of 2011, up from 230 in 2008, according to the Associated Press. Below is a map that shows just how many states have been penetrated, according to the National Post’s special report on the topic.

Link to Map:
https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msa=0&msid=211583255200445972949.0004db306f524dc7f6bc3&ie=UTF8&t=m&source=embed&ll=38.272689,-96.152344&spn=32.935553,56.25&z=4

Texas
Federation, Juarez and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

California
Tijuana, Federation and Juarez cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Minnesota
Tijuana and Federation cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Michigan
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Chicago, Illinois
Federation, Juarez and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Columbus, Ohio
Federation, Tijuana, Juarez and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Indiana
Federation and Juarez cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Oklahoma
Federation and Juarez cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

St. Louis, Missouri
Federation, Juarez and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

North Carolina
Federation and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Atlanta, Georgia
Federation and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Louisville, Kentucky
Gulf cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Pennsylvania
Tijuana, Juarez and Federation cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Arizona
Juarez Cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

New Mexico
Juarez cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Denver, Colorado
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Washington
Tijuana cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Oregon
Federation Cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Nevada
Tijuana and Federation cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Wyoming
Juarez Cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

South Dakota
Tijuana and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Kansas
Juarez cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Louisiana
Federation and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Florida
Federation and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Mississippi
Gulf cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Nebraska
Tijuana cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

South Carolina
Gulf cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Virginia
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Maryland
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

New York
Tijuana and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

New Hampshire
Juarez cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Massachusetts
Federation and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Rhode Island
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Delaware
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

New Jersey
Federation, Juarez and Gulf cartels, according to the Justice Department report.

Tennessee
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Washington, DC
Juarez cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Arkansas
Federation cartel, according to the Justice Department report.

Original Source Article:
http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/05/02/mexican_drug_cartels_penetration_united_states?wp_login_redirect=0

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2013/05/mapping-incredible-spread-of-mexican.html

3 thoughts on “Mapping the Incredible Spread of Mexican Drug Cartels in the U.S.

  1. How does Columbus, Ohio rate more drug cartels than Crazifornia?

    That would seem highly unlikely.

  2. The majority of drug trafficking is done by Whites (including jews). The % of Mexicans involved is a very SMALL fraction.

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