Tag Archives: War on Drugs

Can El Chapo face a murder rap?

Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman has been convicted of 10 drug-related felonies. The man is heading for a life in prison.

I have this thought I want to share.

The miserable drug lord is one of the world’s most notorious criminals, responsible for untold misery and mayhem. He’ll likely never breath freely ever again.

But I’m wondering: Do U.S. federal statutes allow for a trial and potential conviction on murder charges if it can be proven that anyone who consumed drugs provided by El Chapo’s network died from that consumption? Can there be a case made that El Chapo’s drug-running activity contributed directly to anyone’s death and for that can he stand trial on murder charges?

Just wondering out loud, man.

Well, goodbye El Chapo. Here’s to a life in hell on Earth and to an eternity in the actual hell.

Drug-bust stories becoming … um, boring

“Police grab drugs in ‘traffic stop.'”

You hear and read these headlines all the time. I almost always chuckle when I see these stories. Why? Because the traffic stop, such as it is, usually is something of a ruse. The police pull motorists over expecting to find contraband hidden away.

http://www.newschannel10.com/story/28575346/dps-finds-15-pounds-of-marijuana-on-i-40

Texas Department of Public Safety troopers have gotten really good at this.

The Interstate 40 corridor across the Texas Panhandle usually is among the most lucrative for DPS traffic troopers of any district within the state police network.

How do these troopers do it? As I understand it, they “profile” motorists as they blaze their way along I-40. If the motorist or a passenger looks suspicious when they pass a DPS trooper, the officer will give chase. Then they just might find something in the trunk of the car, or stuffed under the seats, or duct-taped to the undercarriage a “controlled substance” of some sort.

The War on Drugs, which has produced mixed results — and that’s the best thing I can say about it — has made law enforcement officers quite proficient at intercepting drugs on our major highway corridors.

Have these “traffic stops” done anything to curb the manufacture, sale, distribution and use/abuse of these drugs? Not one bit.

However, I continue to marvel at how good the police have gotten at this endeavor.

To be sure — as any cop on the beat will tell you — none of these “traffic stops” ever can be called “routine.”