Seattle, and a hundred other ports of entry, two million tons of cargo will cross the dock tomorrow.
[17] Los Angeles alone will land 130,000 containers this month. Customs inspectors will examine 400. The other 129,600 will pass through without so much as a tip of the hat. And as this tidal wave of heavy machinery, cameras, car parts and cookoo clocks moves off the wharf on endless lines of semi-trailers and flatcars, it’s worth remembering that the entire annual cocaine supply for the United States would fit in just thirteen of those steel boxes.^ A year’s supply of heroin could be shipped in a single container.
[18] CHAPTER EIGHT—ENDNOTES
[1] Interview, Tom Isbell, Supervisory Inspector, U.S. Customs, San Ysidro CA, May 18, 1996
[2] ibid.
[3] Washington Post, Feb 20, 1996, pA1“Probe of Customs Targets Corruption Along the Border”
[4] Interview, Mike Horner, former Customs Inspector, San Diego CA, May 18, 1996
[5] Los Angeles Times,Mar 20, 1993, “Corruption Probe Focuses on Ex-Customs Official”; Washington Post, Feb 20, 1996, pA8, col 6; Reader’s Digest, June 1994, p73 “Trouble on the San Diego Border”;
[6] Interview, Terri Price, former Treasury Dept. investigator, Los Angeles CA, May 28, 1996
[7] Hearings, Commerce Subcommittee, U.S. House of Representatives, 102nd Congress, 2nd Sess., Mar 26, 27 & Apr 1, 1992, p2, 32-34.
[8] Interview, Tom Isbell, May 26, 1996
[9] Reader’s Digest, Jan 1996, “Our Drug-Plagued Mexican Border” p 57.
[10] Border Corruption, Associated Press, Mar 1, 1997, 1:59pm
[11] U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, “Operation Gatekeeper: Landmark Progress at the Border,” October 1995, p5.
[12] Interview, Sheriff Oren Fox, El Centro CA, May 17, 1996
[13] Ibid.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Inspection tour, Jan 17, 1994; technical data courtesy of Evergreen America Corp.
[16] Interview, U.S. Customs Chief Inspector Wayne Kornmann, Long Beach, CA, June 7, 1996.
[17] U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Imports for 1996: 612,546,148,000 kilos by vessel; 25,000,975,000 kilos by air.
[18] General Accounting Office, “Observations on Elements of the Federal Druig Control Strategy, Mar 97, GAO/GGD-97-42. An estimated 780 metric tons of cocaine produced worldwide 230 tons siezed in 1995. US Consumption estimated at 300 tons of cocaine per year. 300 metric tons of heroin produced: 32 tons were seized. US Consumption estimated at 10 to 15 tons per year.