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Organized
Crime
Drug
Task
Force to
go after
large
scale
trafficking
in SE
Michigan
US
Attorney
Matthew
Schneider
announce
the
establishment
of the
Southeast
Michigan
Regional
Organized
Crime
Drug
Enforcement
Task
Force
(OCDETF)
Strike
Force.
This
step to
co-locate
federal,
state
and
local
resources
to
address
challenges
in the
southeast
Michigan
region.
This
multi-agency
Strike
Force is
composed
of
personnel
from the
FBI,
Homeland
Security
Investigation,
Bureau
of
Alcohol,
Tobacco,
Firearms
and
Explosives,
Drug
Enforcement
Administration,
Internal
Revenue
Service-Criminal
Investigation,
U.S.
Border
Patrol,
U.S.
Marshals
Service,
U.S.
Postal
Inspection
Service,
and
approximately
26
state,
local
and
Canadian
law
enforcement
agencies.
The
Department
of
Justice
recognized
that
Southeast
Michigan
had both
a
significant
opioid
problem
and a
violent
gang
problem.
Analysis
of
investigations
in the
Region
found
that
domestic
cartel
and
violent
street
gangs
are
responsible
for
distribution
of
Mexican-sourced
heroin,
fentanyl-laced
heroin
and pure
fentanyl
here.
Additionally,
DOJ
noticed
a
significant
increase
in
overdose
deaths
as well
as
identified
over 140
neighborhood-based
gangs
operating
in the
Region.
These
gangs
were and
are
facilitating
the drug
trade
and
using
violence
to
control
their
territories
and
prevent
cooperation
with law
enforcement.
In
response
to this
problem,
the
Southeast
Michigan
Strike
Force
will
coordinate
investigations
to
identify,
disrupt,
dismantle,
and
prosecute
transnational
criminal
organizations,
violent
drug
trafficking
organizations,
firearms
trafficking
organizations,
and
their
subsidiary
organizations,
which
operate
throughout
the
southeast
Michigan
region,
the
United
States
and the
world.
The
Strike
Force
will
focus
cooperative
investigations
on
dissolving
these
organizations,
their
financial
infrastructures,
and the
violence
and
associated
deaths
they
bring to
our
communities.
“While
all of
us have
been
working
individually
to fight
gangs
and
drugs,
our
individual
efforts
were not
as
effective
as we
wanted,”
stated
United
States
Attorney
Matthew
Schneider.
“We know
that
gangs
and
cartels
work
together.
So we’re
doing
the same
thing.
We’re
going to
step up
our
efforts.
We are
now
communicating
immediately,
sharing
intelligence,
and
planning
our
attacks
against
these
criminals
together.”
“As a
part of
the
Southeast
Michigan
OCDETF
Strike
Force,
we are
committed
to a
long-term
partnership
that
allows
law
enforcement
to
reduce
the
illegal
drug
supply
by
aggressively
targeting
criminal
organizations
operating
throughout
southeast
Michigan,”
stated
DEA
Special
Agent in
Charge
Timothy
J.
Plancon.
“Drug
trafficking
and
violence
go
hand-in-hand,
which is
why
federal,
state
and
local
law
enforcement
are
making
these
dangerous
drug
trafficking
organizations
a top
priority.
By
working
with our
partners,
we are
able to
bring
these
violent
individuals
to
justice
and
improve
the
safety
of our
communities.
We are
focused
on the
current
opioid
epidemic,
but this
initiative
is ready
to adapt
to any
future
drug
threat
facing
southeast
Michigan“
“The
Strike
Force
model,
which
has
proven
effective
in other
areas of
the
country,
will
certainly
be
highly
successful
in the
fight
against
criminal
organizations
that are
flooding
our
communities
with
dangerous
narcotics.
The
influx
of these
drugs
into our
communities
feeds
other
illicit
activities
including
human
trafficking,
carjackings,
homicides
and
other
gang-related
violent
crime.”
said
Special
Agent in
Charge
Timothy
R.
Slater,
FBI
Detroit.
“Combining
the
resources
and
capabilities
of the
agencies
responsible
for
investigating
and
prosecuting
these
crimes
will
improve
our
ability
to
target,
disrupt
and
ultimately
dismantle
those
organizations
distributing
drugs
and
contributing
to
violence
in
communities
throughout
Southeast
Michigan.”
“As
criminal
organizations
become
increasingly
sophisticated
in their
activities,
the law
enforcement
community
must
continue
to
partner
to
leverage
our
unique
capabilities
and
combined
resources
to
combat
this
ever
evolving
threat,”
said
Steve
Francis,
Special
Agent in
Charge
of
Homeland
Security
Investigations
(HSI)
Detroit.
“Special
Agent in
Charge
Manny
Muriel,
IRS -
Criminal
Investigation,
stated,
“The
IRS-CI
will
utilize
our
expertise
as
financial
investigators
and
leverage
our
domestic
and
international
partnerships
to
combat
national
and
transnational
money
laundering
organizations.”
Muriel
continued,
“Similarly
we will
continue
to work
with our
law
enforcement
and
private
sector
partners
to
repeatedly
assess
ongoing
and
emerging
money
laundering
threats.”
Since
its
inception
in
October
2017,
the
members
of the
Southeast
Michigan
Regional
Strike
Force
have
been
responsible
for the
seizure
or over
35
kilograms
of
fentanyl,
25
kilograms
of
heroin,
50
kilograms
of
cocaine,
as well
as the
seizure
of 12
weapons
and
approximately
three
million
dollars
in drug
proceeds.
The
seized
fentanyl
alone
would
have
exponentially
fueled
the
opioid
epidemic
in the
region
and was
enough
to have
killed
approximately
15
million
people
based on
the
lethal
dosage
threshold.
In
addition,
over 100
people
have
been
arrested.
Some of
the
people
arrested
by
Strike
Force
members
have
been
sentenced
to
extensive
terms of
incarceration
related
to the
delivery
of
controlled
substances
which
caused
the
death of
those
who
developed
an
addiction
to
opioids.
The
local
agencies
include
Michigan
State
Police,
Michigan
National
Guard,
Canton
Township
Police
Department,
Detroit
Police
Department,
Northfield
Township
Police
Department,
Washtenaw
County
Sheriff’s
Office,
Oakland
County
Sheriff’s
Office,
Walled
Lake
Police
Department,
Shelby
Township
Police
Department,
Southgate
Police
Department,
Livonia
Police
Department,
Livingston
County
Sheriff’s
Department,
Milan
Police
Department,
Pittsfield
Charter
Township
Police
Department,
Plymouth
Township
Police
Department,
Brownstown
Police
Department,
Woodhaven
Police
Department,
Allen
Park
Police
Department
and the
Wayne
County
Airport
Authority.
The
Canadian
law
enforcement
agencies
include
the
London
Police
Service,
Ontario
Provincial
Police,
Royal
Canadian
Mounted
Police,
Windsor
Police
Service
and the
Canada
Border
Services
Agency.
Also
included
are the
Michigan
State
Attorney
General’s
Office
and
Wayne
County
Prosecutor’s
Office.
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