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Chapter Seventy-Eight: The Texas Turmoil


Mexico, Texas section of the U.S.

-Mexico border.

Under the cover of the moonlight at night, dozens of Mexicans are dragging their families and carrying large and small burdens to the wire at the junction of the two countries.

A young man who rushed to the front cut the wire on the border line with a vice.

Then everyone scrambled to get in from here.

This scene happened almost every day along the more than 3,000-kilometer U.S.

-Mexico border, with some people rushing through, some being repatriated, and others dying at the guns of the Border Patrol.

Mexico, too far from God, too close to the United States.

Mexicans who have crossed the border in the hope of a happy future do not know that happiness is still out of reach when they arrive in the United States.

It didn't take long for almost all of these Mexicans on the U.S.

-Mexico border to know about a new money-making opportunity after Seryosha gave the Medellín group a special gift, and that was to go to the United States to help Mexican gangs in drug trafficking.

In less than a month, two spacious tunnels were dug underground along the U.S.

-Mexico border, through which drugs smuggled from Colombia to Mexico could be safely delivered to the United States.

And these Mexican drug dealers, having tasted the sweetness, ordered more shield machines from the Soviet Union.

With submarines and underground passages, Escobar's transportation channels were instantly much smoother.

The cost of transporting the cocaine he produced to the United States was reduced dramatically.

Even Colombia's neighbours, Bolivar and Peru, have seen a significant increase in coca leaf sales.

The purchase price of coca raw materials in Gran Colombia began to rise, while the price of cocaine in the United States began to decline.

While this is a good thing for both producers and consumers, the DEA understands the underlying reason, which is that more cocaine is entering the U.S. market.

Don't look at the retail price of cocaine in the United States, which has only dropped by a few dollars, but the chain reaction brought by these few dollars is huge for the whole country.

A few bucks mean a lower threshold for attempts.

Many young people who are shy but curious may have taken the first step, and the big drug lords will not lose anything in the process of reducing the price, although the profit per gram is reduced, but because of the large increase in sales, they will make more money.

As long as the drug lords who have made money give a little bit to motivate the farmers who make a living from it, more people will grow coca.

The Texas Division of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has already felt the severity of the situation.

Although they have intensified their crackdown, they have had little effect.

The change came so suddenly, as if overnight, the entire Texas cocaine shortage was no longer in short supply, and supplies began to open up.

The DEA is under unprecedented pressure from the top.

From the perspective of the US government, drug prohibition is not just for the health of the public, but because of the spread of drugs, the United States has to flow nearly 100 billion dollars of funds abroad every year, as well as a considerable amount of public health expenditure.

Fiscal revenue is what the U.S. government values.

There is also a lack of rhetoric in Congress in favor of legalizing drug sales, which holds a view similar to that of the American Gun Association, which is that people kill people, not drugs.

Members of Congress are elected, and in states where drugs are already rampant, having a tolerant political attitude toward drugs will get more votes.

So it's no surprise that there are voices in Congress.

Democratic electoral systems also have their own dark side.

The surge in drug sales has forced the DEA to take several large-scale actions to salvage the situation.

In order to find out the truth, the Drug Enforcement Administration, under the guidance of informants, raided a community populated by Mexicans, and after a fierce battle, both sides were killed and wounded.

The Drug Enforcement Administration harvested tons of cocaine and a room full of Mexican pesos and dollars, as well as the bodies of several unknown little people.

They thought that even if the drug dealers ran away, they would stop for a while.

Who knew that the next day there would still be a steady stream of Mexicans on the streets.

The actions of the Drug Enforcement Administration did not hurt people's bones at all, and the drug dealers are still alive and well.

After this battle, the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration finally understood that the Mexicans must have a safe transportation channel in their hands to avoid the eyes of American law enforcement.

Knowing this, the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration began to focus on unearthing the routes of Mexican drug traffickers.

The Federal Drug Enforcement Administration brought in statisticians from Washington to begin counting changes in the price and volume of cocaine on the market and narrowing down the search.

After more than a month of investigating, statisticians have discovered a new clue, which is that prices always start to change from Texas and Florida.

"Why do these two states start to change prices in the first place?

Texas borders Mexico, but what about Florida, which is surrounded by the sea on three sides, and doesn't share a border with Texas and Mexico."

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D.A. investigators would never have imagined that Florida would be one of the conduits for cocaine, and they had long thought that drugs were circulating through Texas.

"What about our informants in Mexico, do they know anything?"

"I'm sorry, boss, we don't have any information on this."

"That's really strange, the amount of drugs seized by our customs has not increased, according to common sense, even if there are gaps in our security checks, then with the increase in the flow of drugs, the number of seizures will also increase because of the tide.

How the hell did all this cocaine get in?"

Specialists from the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration were puzzled.

At that moment, a phone call came straight into the conference room.

Someone pressed the speakerphone on the phone, and soon the voice of the investigation team in front came from the other side of the phone: "Have you read the newspaper in Mexico this morning, there are more than a dozen bodies hanging under the bridge of a highway in Juarez."

I just spoke to the Mexican police on the phone, there are no Americans among the victims, but the identities of these people are a bit different, it is said that they are all tunnel engineers from Mexico City, I wondered if the death of these people has something to do with drugs in Texas, I asked the Mexican police, they told me that these people have been missing for several months, but in the past few months, the cocaine on the market has multiplied, is there such a coincidence in the world?"

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