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Drugs in the United States:
Virginia
State Facts
Population: 7,078,515
Law Enforcement Officers: 15,634
State Prison Population: 30,510
Probation Population: 32,098
Violent Crime Rate National Ranking: 35 2001 Federal Drug Seizures
Cocaine: 82.1 kgs.
Heroin: 4.7 kgs.
Methamphetamine: 19.1 kgs.
Marijuana: 110.3 kgs.
Clandestine Laboratories: 366 (DEA, state, and local)
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Cocaine:
Cocaine is widely abused and available throughout Virginia.
Crack cocaine continues to plague inner city settings, particularly
in Richmond, Roanoke, and the Tidewater area. New York has long been
a key source city for the cocaine sold in Virginia, often supplied
by Dominican drug traffickers to African-American distributors. However,
during the past 18 months, several DEA investigations in Richmond,
Roanoke, Norfolk and Winchester have identified Mexican drug traffickers
based in North Carolina who have been supplying increasing amounts
of cocaine to Virginia.
Heroin: Heroin is widely available in Virginias urban
areas, but is less prevalent in rural counties of the Commonwealth.
Washington, D.C. is the source city for users living in Northern Virginia.
In the Richmond metropolitan area, heroin is not only an inner city
phenomenon, but has gained popularity amongst white young people from
upper middle class suburbs. Heroin also poses an increasing threat
in the Tidewater area. Dominican drug trafficking groups based in
New York City and Philadelphia supply African-American distributors
who travel to the Northeast for their supply.
Virginia
Methamphetamine arrests Methamphetamine: Methamphetamine began
making inroads into Virginias Shenandoah Valley in the mid-1990s.
Since that time, methamphetamine has become the drug of choice in
certain Valley towns such as Harrisonburg and Staunton. Most methamphetamine
is imported by Mexican groups who live and work in the Shenandoah
Valley. The user population in that part of the state is largely white,
rural, and uneducated. By contrast, the user population in the Richmond
area consists of white college-aged young people involved in the rave
scene. The drug has gained popularity in the citys clubs over
the past year and a half. In addition to some distribution by Mexican
organizations, Richmond District Office investigations indicate that
young people from Richmond are traveling to the Southwestern United
States and bringing back quantities to sell on the local market. Methamphetamine
is also increasingly popular in Northern Virginia among young people
who frequent clubs in Washington, D.C. Methamphetamine does not yet
appear to pose a serious threat in the Tidewater area.
Club Drugs: MDMA is available throughout Virginias urban
areas and is sold largely in dance clubs and raves where young college-aged
young people congregate. MDMA is widely distributed in Richmonds
club district known as Shockoe Bottom. In the case of Northern Virginia,
suburban white college-aged ecstasy users have easy access to Washington
D.C., known nationwide for its active club and rave scene. In that
area, MDMA is rapidly encroaching on the mainstream drug trade and
cuts across all categories of race, age and socio-economic status.
In smaller cities such as Roanoke, Charlottesville, and Fredericksburg,
and in small college towns, MDMA is the drug of choice among this
particular demographic.
Marijuana: Marijuana is widely available
throughout the Commonwealth, and is imported into Virginia from a
number of diverse trafficking groups from many different source areas.
The Southwest Border is frequently cited as the primary source area
for marijuana smuggled into Virginia by Mexican trafficking organizations.
Mexican groups based in North Carolina often supply the Central and
Western parts of Virginia. Cannabis is cultivated in clandestine outdoor
plots, primarily in the remote Southwestern corner of Virginia. Each
year, the Virginia State Police launches a state-wide eradication
campaign concentrating principally on those counties that border Kentucky
and Tennessee.
Other Drugs: Oxycontin use is pervasive
in Virginias rural Southwestern counties. OxyContin abuse has
impacted all socio-economic levels of the areas populace. Although
enforcement efforts have curbed sales from certain unscrupulous practitioners
in Virginia, OxyContin remains widely available as distribution rings
and users travel to neighboring states and to Northern Virginia to
purchase their supply.
DEA Mobile Enforcement Teams: This cooperative
program with state and local law enforcement counterparts was conceived
in 1995 in response to the overwhelming problem of drug-related violent
crime in towns and cities across the nation. There have been 359 deployments
completed resulting in over 14,456 arrests of violent drug criminals
as of April 1, 2002. There have been seven MET deployments in the
state of Virginia since the inception of the program: Manassas City,
Chincoteague, Fredericksburg, Richmond, Petersburg, Prince William
County, and Hopewell. These deployments resulted in 208 arrests and
the seizure of 3.1 pounds of cocaine, and 2.8 pounds of crack cocaine.
Also seized were 10 weapons, 24 vehicles, and over $177,000 in U.S.
currency and property
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Special Topics: The Annandale High Intensity
Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA)/MATF is comprised of two DEA task forces.
Seven local agencies and the State Police are represented. On the
federal level, the FBI provides three Special Agents. Housed within
the same office space is a joint IRS/Secret Service money laundering
group. Analytical support is provided by intelligence analysts assigned
to the Washington Field Divisions Intelligence Group 31.
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