Tuesday, January 15, 2019
Top DEA Agent Laundered Millions in Drug Money and Hosted Wild Parties with Prostitutes, and May Have Permanently Compromised DEA's Undercover Colombian Ops
Tue, Jan 15, 2019 10:04 p.m.
A top Drug Enforcement Agency agent laundered millions in drug money and hosted wild parties with prostitutes, according to law enforcement officials who fear he may have permanently compromised the DEA's undercover Colombian ops.
"One of the biggest black eyes in DEA history": Star Agent Made Millions Off Drug Traffickers — RT USA News
The officials revealed that Irizarry is the unnamed "co-conspirator 3" in a federal case against DEA informant Gustavo Yabrudi, a dual Venezuelan-American citizen who pleaded guilty to money laundering in a federal case in Tampa, Florida in September. Irizarry spent lavishly, throwing wild parties on yachts with prostitutes – parties attended by his fellow DEA agents, a practice the agency ...
www.rt.com
This agency should have been abolished a long, long time ago.
Portugal's radical drugs policy is working. Why hasn't the world copied it? | News | The Guardian
When the drugs came, they hit all at once. It was the 80s, and by the time one in 10 people had slipped into the depths of heroin use – bankers, university students, carpenters, socialites ...
www.theguardian.com
But you have to follow the money trail with the DEA, just like any other parasite agency in D.C.
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
Drug Enforcement Administration - S&E (Dollars in Thousands) 2016 Enacted 2017 Current Services Comparison by activity and program Pos. FTE Amount Pos. FTE Amount
www.justice.gov
All of the laws criminalizing illicit drug consumption are abject failures.
Heck, prescription drug abuse is at an all time high in this country.
2018 Prescription Drug Abuse Statistics You Need To Know | Talbott Recovery
Prescription drug abuse is a serious and growing problem in the United States. The 2016 National Study on Drug Use and Health reported that an estimated 28.6 million Americans age 12 and over used illicit drugs during the month prior to the study.
You should talk to my oldest brother. He is a medical doctor (GP) with over 40 years experience in medicine. He works occasional weekends at a drug abuse clinic in Ohio. His hourly wage at this clinic is twice that of his regular job, there is that much demand for treatment.
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4 comments:
"All of the laws criminalizing illicit drug consumption are abject failures"- funny, those laws worked fine until the 1960s, when suddenly drug use became "socially acceptable." Laws aren't the problem, it's lack of enforcement, corruption, attitudes reinforced by the media et al, many other factors including forced integration (blacks have always been de facto drug users, and they're just so COOL, doncha know?).
The big joke is that most of these treatment centers people get tens of thousands of dollars in debt to don't do much more than spend the day bussing the client around to a bunch of "12 Step" programs that you can attend for free on your own. I guess they do keep you cooped up for a month to dry out physically, but this "12 Step" stuff is a bunch of Christian Personal Transformation cult stuff from the 30s that has nothing to do with chemical dependency. Confessing all your "wrongs" to some "ex drunk" or "ex addict" is not really a smart idea, let bygones be bygones.
Very little of that "treatment" ever succeeds. Sad to say but it is so.
"blacks have always been de facto drug users"
"Keep the traffic among the dark people" - - Don Zaluchi, Godfather I.
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