DEA's Mobile Enforcement Teams


Book Description







Audit of the Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA) Mobile Enforcement Team Program


Book Description

The DEA established its Mobile Enforcement Team (MET) program in 1995 to combat violent drug-related crime. METs initially were intended to help local law enforcement agencies, particularly in rural areas, confront drug trafficking problems that were beyond their immediate capabilities. The DEA's goals for MET are to reduce drug related violence and disrupt or dismantle the rapidly increasing number of meth drug traffickers and labs. The DEA seeks to remove offenders from communities' streets and have a significant impact on drug-related violence and drug availability. This audit examines the design and implementation of the MET program and evaluates the success of MET enforcement operations. Illus. This is a print on demand report.
















Narco-terrorism


Book Description

Volume 105: Narco-Terrorism explores the legal aspects of combatting narco-terrrorism, domestically in the U.S. and through international endeavors in Colombia and Afghanistan. This book serves as a one-volume guide to the relationship between the drug trade and terrorism. The volume's sections on Afghanistan and Colombia demonstrate the challenges faced by the international legal community in thwarting that relationship.




TERRORISM: Commentary on Security Documents Volume 105


Book Description

Volume 105 of Terrorism: Commentary on Security Documents, Narco-Terrorism, brings researchers up to date on U.S. and international efforts to stem terrorism related to drug trafficking. In the pages of this volume, readers will find both legal documents from criminal cases against narco-terrorists and governmental reports on how to approach the problem on a broader level. After showing recent trends in combating narco-terrorism globally, Volume 105 focuses on the rising drug crises in Colombia and Afghanistan. Researchers will find in this volume not just U.S. agencies' major reports on international drug-trafficking but also similarly comprehensive reports from international organizations, from NGOs to the U.N. These reports place a particular focus on the connection between terrorist activity and the global narcotics trade. The section on Colombia, while updating readers on the international struggle with that country's drug cartels, also includes an analysis of the political, diplomatic, and economic challenges in intervening there. The Afghanistan portion of the volume shows how the U.S. has tried to confront the heroin trade that has funded the Taliban there, including an example of how the U.S. government has used criminal prosecutions domestically to curb that trade.




Drug Control


Book Description

Discusses the strategies and operations of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in the 1990s. Covers: (1) what major enforcement strategies, programs, initiatives, and approaches DEA has implemented in the 1990s, including its efforts to (a) target and investigate national and international drug traffickers, and (b) help state and local law enforce. agencies combat drug offenders and drug-related initiatives. It includes a recommendation to the Attorney General regarding the development of a measurable DEA performance targets for disrupting and dismantling drug trafficking organizations. Charts and tables.