
DEA official: Agents seizing large quantities of methamphetamine in Minnesota more often
A top official with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says agents could take a record amount of methamphetamine off of Minnesota streets this year if the current pace continues.
Last year, the DEA seized more than 2,000 pounds of meth in the state, said Acting Special Agent in Charge Rafael Mattei with the agency's Omaha division, which covers Minnesota. That's enough to fill each seat in Target Field in Minneapolis with more than 380 doses of it.
"Ten years ago, we would celebrate when we got one pound off of a dealer on the street. That was a big seizure for us. Today, we're seizing triple-digit amounts," Mattei told WCCO in an interview from the Minneapolis field office Wednesday.
That data from last year only reflects what the DEA is catching, and does not include other federal, tribal and local law enforcement agencies. Mattei said the DEA is on pace to confiscate the same amount as last year — or more.
"In Minnesota, meth is king. We are really swamped with meth right now," he added. On Wednesday morning alone, agents intercepted 30 pounds of it.
In recent years, there has been
a heightened focus on fentanyl
and its deadly dangers for good reason. But meth, Mattei explained, doesn't capture the same attention, despite its prevalence becoming a bigger problem.
Congress 20 years ago
passed a law
limiting over-the-counter sales of products at pharmacies with ingredients that can be used to make meth at home. That led to domestic production dwindling, he said.
Now, the main source of supply is coming across the U.S.-Mexico border.
"[The cartels] are making more than ever. They are pushing more than ever—they're just pushing that product up. So that's why we're seeing bigger seizures," Mattei said.
Just last week, a federal grand jury indicted five men in the state for a drug trafficking conspiracy scheme distributing large amounts of meth and fentanyl,
according to the U.S. Attorney's Office
. The group was affiliated with the
Sureños
, a transnational criminal street gang, federal prosecutors said.
The case stemmed from a DEA investigation.
"The Sureños and other drug cartels are dangerous criminal organizations that are fueling the drug crisis in America," said Acting U.S. Attorney Lisa D. Kirkpatrick in a news release. "Cartel-backed drug dealers are on notice. Do not bring your poison to Minnesota. If you do, you will see federal charges and federal prison time."
The DEA's
"National Take Back Day"
is scheduled for April 26. That's when the public can turn in any unneeded medications to their local police departments. The goal is to prevent misuse of prescription opioids.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
2 days ago
- New York Times
Louis Diaz, Undercover Agent Who Busted a Drug Kingpin, Dies at 79
Nicky Barnes was 'Mr. Untouchable.' That's how he, a brazen narcotics kingpin from Harlem, was identified on a cover of The New York Times Magazine in June 1977, and for good reason. He had been arrested more than a dozen times at that point, but the charges had rarely stuck. Mr. Barnes was so brimming with bravado that when he was told by the magazine editors that his police mug shot would run with the profile, he agreed to pose for a formal, more flattering portrait. But his good fortune was about to run out, thanks in part to the undercover investigative efforts of Louis Diaz, a fearless, fractious agent for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and a Brooklyn-born former boxer. His work helped ensure Mr. Barnes's conviction that December and a sentence of life in prison — a penalty demanded by federal prosecutors, who had been galvanized by their bosses in Washington. Many months earlier, President Jimmy Carter had become so incensed that a drug lord was cavalierly violating the law — getting away with murder, in fact — that he ordered the Justice Department to, figuratively, place a target on Mr. Barnes's back. The attorney general energized the D.E.A., which enlisted Mr. Diaz to go under cover. His superiors deliberately chose a white man because, they figured, Mr. Barnes would be expecting his heroin-trafficking ring to be infiltrated by an agent who, like him, was Black. Posing as a part-time hit man and the cousin of a mob wannabe, and tooling around New York in a garish yellow Cadillac, Mr. Diaz used Mr. Barnes's own henchmen to insinuate himself into the ring, headquartered in Harlem. The operation had imported tons of heroin and had laundered tens of millions of dollars in drug profits. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
2 days ago
- New York Times
Luis Diaz, Undercover Agent Who Busted a Drug Kingpin, Dies at 79
Nicky Barnes was 'Mr. Untouchable.' That's how he, a brazen narcotics kingpin from Harlem, was identified on a cover of The New York Times Magazine in June 1977, and for good reason. He had been arrested more than a dozen times at that point, but the charges had rarely stuck. Mr. Barnes was so brimming with bravado that when he was told by the magazine editors that his police mug shot would run with the profile, he agreed to pose for a formal, more flattering portrait. But his good fortune was about to run out, thanks in part to the undercover investigative efforts of Louis Diaz, a fearless, fractious agent for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and a Brooklyn-born former boxer. His work helped ensure Mr. Barnes's conviction that December and a sentence of life in prison — a penalty demanded by federal prosecutors, who had been galvanized by their bosses in Washington. Many months earlier, President Jimmy Carter had become so incensed that a drug lord was cavalierly violating the law — getting away with murder, in fact — that he ordered the Justice Department to, figuratively, place a target on Mr. Barnes's back. The attorney general energized the D.E.A., which enlisted Mr. Diaz to go under cover. His superiors deliberately chose a white man because, they figured, Mr. Barnes would be expecting his heroin-trafficking ring to be infiltrated by an agent who, like him, was Black. Posing as a part-time hit man and the cousin of a mob wannabe, and tooling around New York in a garish yellow Cadillac, Mr. Diaz used Mr. Barnes's own henchmen to insinuate himself into the ring, headquartered in Harlem. The operation had imported tons of heroin and had laundered tens of millions of dollars in drug profits. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
CT man arrested after authorities report finding narcotics during raid in Manchester
A man was arrested on narcotics charges after police searched his home in Manchester on Thursday. The search was carried out following a drug investigation that led to police obtaining multiple search and seizure warrants at a residence on Oak Street, according to Lt. Nick Reinert of the Manchester Police Department. The search was conducted by the East Central Narcotics Task Force in coordination with the DEA Hartford Regional Office, Reinert said. The target of the investigation was 25-year-old Derrick Lee of Manchester, according to Reinert. During a search at his residence, authorities allegedly found 10 grams of raw fentanyl and 10 grams of cocaine in both powder and crack forms, according to Reinert. The substances were allegedly packaged in a manner consistent with distribution. Lee was taken into custody and charged with three counts of possession with intent to distribute and a single count of operating a drug factory and interfering with police. He was held on a $250,000 bond and was arraigned on Friday morning in Manchester Superior Court.