Drug families control narcotrafficking in the south

Dolores

Administrator
Staff member
Feb 20, 2019
15,702
2,446
93
Narcofamilias-caso-Caiman-El-Dia-1024x638.png


The Attorney General Office’s prosecution branch, the Public Ministry identified six drug families that make up a criminal structure dismantled through Operacion Caimán (Cayman Operation). These are charged with moving more than 28 tons of cocaine from December 2021 to date, to the United States, Puerto Rico and Europe.

The Public Ministry says the organizations handled enormous amounts of money from drug trafficking, which they used to pay bribes to politicians, merchants, businessmen and the military to obtain information and carry out their illicit operations.

The members of the drug families planned, transported and executed cocaine trafficking from South America to the Dominican Republic by sending artisanal boats (Gofast) to Colombian territory. These returned with kilos of narcotics to selected places along the southern coast of the country, specifically in the...

Continue reading...
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Reactions: AlaPlaya

MariaRubia

Well-known member
Jun 25, 2019
2,316
3,097
113
I do wonder about this government and drugs. I always understood that DR shipped 400 tons a year of cocaine to the US and Europe and that drugs were never stopped from leaving the country, only from coming in. And that doesn't seem to have changed all that much under Abinader. And yet now we have them arresting these families responsible for 28 tons a year of cocaine export. 28 tons is a big amount but clearly it still is a small percentage of the total. So I wonder whether they are seen as a little splinter operation that needed to be closed down because it was annoying the main players, or whether this is really a step in eliminating the drug shipments. If these guys do talk and name names of the military and the politicians they are back-handing, then this could have serious implications.

I do have a lot of respect for Abinader and for the prosecutors like Miriam Germán, I honestly believe that their hearts are in the right place and they want the country to change for the better. But I just wonder what is possible.
 

CristoRey

Welcome To Wonderland
Apr 1, 2014
11,788
8,056
113
News flash.
You can't arrest your way out of this problem. I've been told by many Dominicans the military controls the importation and the PN control the points of sale. Makes sense given the amount of drugs being sold openly across the country.

When I first arrived here I remember having lunch with some clients and they actually pulled up drug sales ponts on Google Maps to prove to me they weren't lying about the level of corruption.

I kid you not, some of them even had dozens of reviews from customers.
 

Big

Well-known member
Apr 24, 2019
4,829
4,017
113
News flash.
You can't arrest your way out of this problem. I've been told by many Dominicans the military controls the importation and the PN control the points of sale. Makes sense given the amount of drugs being sold openly across the country.

When I first arrived here I remember having lunch with some clients and they actually pulled up drug sales ponts on Google Maps to prove to me they weren't lying about the level of corruption.

I kid you not, some of them even had dozens of reviews from customers.
you can't arrest your way out of any criminal activity. Drunk driving, domestic violence, rape etc.
 

BermudaRum

Bronze
Oct 9, 2007
1,225
398
83
News flash.
You can't arrest your way out of this problem. I've been told by many Dominicans the military controls the importation and the PN control the points of sale. Makes sense given the amount of drugs being sold openly across the country.

When I first arrived here I remember having lunch with some clients and they actually pulled up drug sales points on Google Maps to prove to me they weren't lying about the level of corruption.

I kid you not, some of them even had dozens of reviews from customers.
Another situation in the DR that you can use the saying; “the fox guarding the henhouse” ;)
 
  • Like
Reactions: CristoRey

FF1

Well-known member
Dec 17, 2022
317
441
63
DR
...PN control the points of sale. Makes sense given the amount of drugs being sold openly across the country.
Everything is out in the open for those who want to see. A new puta comes to Sosua and within 15 minutes she knows who's selling and where the puntos are, and DNCD/PN who's job it is to know they don't know? LOL.
 
  • Like
Reactions: drstock

NALs

Economist by Profession
Jan 20, 2003
13,525
3,214
113
I do wonder about this government and drugs. I always understood that DR shipped 400 tons a year of cocaine to the US and Europe and that drugs were never stopped from leaving the country, only from coming in. And that doesn't seem to have changed all that much under Abinader. And yet now we have them arresting these families responsible for 28 tons a year of cocaine export. 28 tons is a big amount but clearly it still is a small percentage of the total. So I wonder whether they are seen as a little splinter operation that needed to be closed down because it was annoying the main players, or whether this is really a step in eliminating the drug shipments. If these guys do talk and name names of the military and the politicians they are back-handing, then this could have serious implications.

I do have a lot of respect for Abinader and for the prosecutors like Miriam Germán, I honestly believe that their hearts are in the right place and they want the country to change for the better. But I just wonder what is possible.
There have been the arrests of several big drug dealers through the years. Probably, the most well known are the cases of Quirino and Figueroa Agosto, but there are many others. By the nature of that illegal business, major drug dealers are into importing and exporting. These arrested due to drug tradficking in the South many or all of them (at least those on top) were into that considering most of the drugs isn’t created or sold in the DR, it simply goes through from its production in South America to some of the world’s biggest consumers of illicit drugs (USA/Europe.)

What would happen to that illegal trade if for the sake of argument demand in the USA is eliminated? :unsure:

Let’s have a look where the supply is created and goes through for their biggest customers. The data is outdated, but I doubt muxh has changed.

IMG_0902.jpeg

IMG_0904.jpeg




In a way, the cocaine trade using the DR is like sugar production that almost all of it is for export to the United States. The differences are that the cocaine trade is illegal while the sugar trade isn’t and the DR doesn’t produces the cocaine it exports while most of the crystals of sugar that it produces are for the USA.

What would happen to Dominican sugar production if the main source of the demand (USA) is cut and no new demand source can be used to replace the lost one? The DR only needs a sliver of the current % dedicated to growing sugar cane (in fact, the DR always supplied itself with sugar, even before the late 1870’s / early 1880’s when the massive modern sugar plantations began to be created.)

There would be no Central Romana, Cristóbal Colón, CAEI, Montellano, Consuelo, Boca Chica, Barahona, etc and no bateyes. The East would had a more scant population than it currently have, it would be composed of a greater % of Dominicans from colonial times which increases when reaching places like Higüey and vicinity but decreases tremendously when in places like San Pedro de Macorís, and the demographic centers for the region would had been around El Seibo and Higüey. Most coastal cities like San Pedro de Macorís, La Romana, Boca Chica, etc wouldn’t exist and if something would had existed in their place they would had been villages or small towns at most. The economy of the east would revolve around cattle ranching (which has been done there since the 16 century) and tourism which by comparison started the other day.

Even the north coast would be somewhat different from now if sugar production had never increased. Places like Montellano wouldn’t exist since it came u]into existence because of the sugar plantation that was created there and the Montellano Sugar Mill (along with the bateyes that accompany all sugar plantations.) Neither the other sugar mill west of Puerto Plata (Amistad? I don’t remember the name of the sugar mill, but sugar cane is still grown there as can be seen from the road when driving from Perto Plata to Santiago.) But it should be said those are the largest sugar operations in the entire Cibao, most of the sugar production is done in the East and in second place is the South between San Cristóbal and Baní, and around Barahona. There used to be more sugar plantations such as near Azua, but they disappeared.

Even the immediate area around Santo Domingo were sugar plantations along with the bateyes (in fact, still there are some bateyes in the outskirts of Greater SD), now covered in cement.

———-

Lastly, where did you get that the DR yearly exports 400 tons of cocaine to the USA? In 2008 it was estimsted that around 60 tons of cocaine passed through the Caribbean and since all of it doesn’t pass through the DR, the country’s cocaine exports had to be less than that. Most went through Mexico and that was estimated at 140 tons. While it’s possibke the amount of cocaine has increased through the years, I doubt the 400 tons figure fir the DR. That way more that what was estimated for the cocaine that went through Mexico and I doubt today Mexico’s cocaine exports are even near that figure! Whatever the current export amounts for the DR, the tendency is that it has fallen since Quirino/Figueroa Agosto were knocked down.
 

NALs

Economist by Profession
Jan 20, 2003
13,525
3,214
113
I think some people are overblowing the whole drug trade in the DR. At least the estimated data doesn’t backs up what many are claiming. Like the old notion that the DR economy depends on drugs when just consumption is much greater than the total amount estimated of the drug trade in the entire Western Hemisphere. :unsure:
 

bob saunders

Platinum
Jan 1, 2002
32,594
6,012
113
dr1.com
I think some people are overblowing the whole drug trade in the DR. At least the estimated data doesn’t backs up what many are claiming. Like the old notion that the DR economy depends on drugs when just consumption is much greater than the total amount estimated of the drug trade in the entire Western Hemisphere. :unsure:
Facts are facts, and the CURRENT GOVERNMENT is doing very little to stop internal drug use and sale.
 

CristoRey

Welcome To Wonderland
Apr 1, 2014
11,788
8,056
113
I think some people are overblowing the whole drug trade in the DR. At least the estimated data doesn’t backs up what many are claiming. Like the old notion that the DR economy depends on drugs when just consumption is much greater than the total amount estimated of the drug trade in the entire Western Hemisphere. :unsure:
The data provided is from 15+ years ago.
I think we can both agree a lot has changed in the DR since then.
 

NALs

Economist by Profession
Jan 20, 2003
13,525
3,214
113
I see a lot remaining here as well.
You know very well that if you take the Americans out of the equation, the amount of drugs that enters the DR will fall to a drop. Whether the Canadians are taken out or not is irrelevant, but take out the Americans and it falls almost completely.

The same would happen to other things such as sugar (basically 100% of exports head for the USA), tourism would also drop but not as much for the sector as in the other two examples.
 
  • Like
Reactions: NanSanPedro

JD Jones

Moderator:North Coast,Santo Domingo,SW Coast,Covid
Jan 7, 2016
11,911
8,308
113
I think in the big scheme of things, the amount consumed here is minuscule compared to what continues on.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MariaRubia

NALs

Economist by Profession
Jan 20, 2003
13,525
3,214
113
The data provided is from 15+ years ago.
I think we can both agree a lot has changed in the DR since then.
It’s the most complete data regarding that, but there are more current but less extensive data.

For example, here it says total cocaine production in 2020 was at around 2,000 tons and North America accounted for 30% of that (600 tons.) Almost all of that is the USA since the other North America (Canada) has a population that is considerable less than what lives in the Boston-NYC-Washington DC megalopolis in the USA. I will take a guess and say the US probably accounts for at least 98% of that (588 tons.)


This other article claims Mexico is from where 93% of cocaine makes in the US (passing through) and that would leave 42 tons passing through the entire Caribbean. Where the 400 tons exported from the DR to the USA comes from does remains up in the air. Lets say 400 tons is exported from the DR to the USA, that would be two-thirds of all cocaine that enters North America. That means Mexico can’t be where 93% of cocainw that enters the US comes from, the DR would account for 66%. Quite frankly, tht’s impossible since almost all cocaine heading from South America to North America goes through Central America and Mexico.

 

JD Jones

Moderator:North Coast,Santo Domingo,SW Coast,Covid
Jan 7, 2016
11,911
8,308
113
Is that really relevant though; the amount leaving doesn't affect the crime rate here, but the amount remaining does. Nals analogy with sugar doesn't work.
I'm with ya on that one.