l****z 发帖数: 29846 | 1 Drop in the Bucket: Illegal Alien Pleads Guilty to Trafficking Heroin in
Idaho
Illegal alien Andres Avila pled guilty to trafficking drugs in September
after Idaho police caught him with 98 grams of heroin during a traffic stop,
according to the Idaho State Journal. Much to its credit, the Journal noted
Aliva was an immigrant in the headline — though where the U.S. should ship
him back to is not reported.
Avila will be sentenced on October 29; prosecutors recommended he serve a
minimum of 10 years in before facing deportation.
His arrest comes as Republicans such as Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley have
completely reversed their opposition to liberal, soft-on-crime policies and
complain that there’s a supposed epidemic of “non-violent” criminals
languishing in prison on drug-related charges. Like 99.8 percent of all
other convicts charges with drug offenses in prison, Avila is a trafficker
profiting from international criminal enterprises that depend on violence
and addiction to fuel their drug empires.
The Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act of 2015 could affect as many as 46
,000 convicted criminals like Avila, if Republicans continue their efforts
to enable Democrats and their bureaucratic allies to release prisoners back
onto the streets after race riots and a surging, nation-wide crime wave.
Illegal alien traffickers provide more than 90 percent of U.S. heroin with
elaborate smuggling efforts, and a blind eye from both parties interested in
automatic votes and cheap labor. Avila is only one thug in the foreign army
pushing drugs in American streets:
A sophisticated farm-to-arm supply chain is fueling America’s surging
heroin appetite, causing heroin to surpass cocaine and meth to become the
nation’s No. 1 drug threat for the first time. As demand has grown, the
flow of heroin — a once-taboo drug now easier to score in some cities than
crack or pot — has changed, too.
Mexican cartels have overtaken the U.S. heroin trade, imposing an almost
corporate discipline. They grow and process the drug themselves,
increasingly replacing their traditional black tar with an innovative high-
quality powder with mass market appeal: It can be smoked or snorted by
newcomers as well as shot up by hard-core addicts.
They have broadened distribution beyond the old big-city heroin centers
like Chicago or New York to target unlikely places such as Dayton. The
midsize Midwestern city today is considered to be an epicenter of the heroin
problem, with addicts buying and overdosing in unsettling droves. Crack
dealers on street corners have been supplanted by heroin dealers ranging
across a far wider landscape, almost invisible to law enforcement. They
arrange deals by cellphone and deliver heroin like pizza. |
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