ONDCP's 2007 Cocaine Smuggling Report Now Available Online

               

Three separate data sources have revealed steep reductions in availability and use of cocaine over the past two years.  More specifically, significant changes in the street-level price and purity of cocaine (key indicators of stress in the drug market) suggest the supply of the drug on American streets is dropping.   DEA data from January 2007 through September 2008 show a staggering 89 percent increase in the average price per pure gram of cocaine (from $97 to $183).  Simultaneously, average cocaine purity has fallen by nearly a third (32 percent).  The result is dwindling supplies on the street and cocaine that is more expensive to buy and of lower quality. 

Also, as reported in the 2009 National Drug Threat Assessment (.pdf) of the National Drug Intelligence Center, “counterdrug agencies have made measurable progress against cocaine production, transportation, and distribution, contributing to a reduction in cocaine availability in the United States.”  Positive tests for cocaine use among adults, as indicated by results of workplace drug tests nationwide, fell 38 percent from June 2006 through June 2008.  Among youth, MTF finds a 15 percent reduction in past-year use of cocaine from 2007 – 2008.

To provide more context regarding the state of the illegal cocaine market, ONDCP has now posted a compilation of cocaine smuggling data for 2007 (.pdf).  The report includes important information regarding trends in cocaine seizures and disruptions, data regarding modes and methods of transportation, departure locations, etc. 



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Follow Us on Twitter!

ONDCP has begun using Twitter, one of the fastest-growing social media platforms on the Internet to provide information on National efforts that push back against America's illegal drug problem. ONDCP will use the service to post frequent updates on upcoming drug policy-related announcements, interesting policy-related news links, and other information reflecting Federal anti-drug priorities and initiatives. This effort will enable ONDCP to reach more Americans online and illustrates how public institutions can adapt to meet the rapidly changing nature of today’s communications environment.

Twitter is a free social networking and micro-blogging service that allows its users to send updates which are text-based posts of up to 140 characters in length.  Updates are displayed on the user's profile page and are delivered to other users who have signed up to receive them.   The use of this microblogging technology will allow ONDCP to expand its ability to share accurate drug information and help more Americans understand how their government is working with communities to reduce drug use.

To view or begin following ONDCP’s new Twitter feed visit www.twitter.com/drugpolicy

New York Times Publishes Interview with Pot Researcher

In June, ONDCP and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) released the latest analysis (.pdf) from the University of Mississippi's Potency Monitoring Project, which revealed that levels of THC - the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana - have reached the highest-ever amounts since scientific analysis of the drug began in the late 1970s. According to the latest data on marijuana samples analyzed to date, the average amount of THC in seized samples has reached a new high of 9.6 percent. This compares to an average of just under 4 percent reported in 1983 and represents more than a doubling in the potency of the drug since that time.

Today, the New York Times published a behind-the-scenes interview with Dr. Mahmoud A. Elsohly, the lead marijuana researcher at the University of Mississippi.  Dr. Elsohly is just one of the many scientists the Federal Government relies on to shape national drug policy.

Q. WHAT EXACTLY DOES THE MARIJUANA PROJECT DO?

A. Though cannabis had been used by man for thousands of years, it wasn’t until 1964 that the actual chemical structure of the active ingredient, tetrahydrocannabinol — THC — was determined. That stimulated new research on the plant.

At this laboratory, which began in 1968, we often investigate marijuana’s chemistry. We also have a farm where we grow cannabis for federally approved researchers. Our material is employed in clinical studies around the country, to see if the active ingredient in this plant is useful for pain, nausea, glaucoma, for AIDS patients and so on. For these tests, researchers need standardized material for cigarettes or THC pills. We grow the cannabis as contractors for the National Institute on Drug Abuse — NIDA. And the only researchers who can get our material are those with special permits. We have visitors at the building now and then who ask, “Oh, do you give samples?” We say, “No!”

Q. WHY BOTHER CULTIVATING YOUR OWN MARIJUANA WHEN LAW ENFORCEMENT ORGANIZATIONS SEIZE BRICKS OF IT EVERY DAY?

A. The most obvious reason is that with confiscated marijuana, you don’t really know what you have. When researchers are performing clinical tests, they must have standardized material that will be the same every time. And it must be safe. You certainly wouldn’t want to give a sick person something sprayed with pesticide or angel dust, substances we’ve detected in some illicit marijuana.

When this project first started in the late 1960s, people thought, “Oh, we’ll get materials for testing after a big bust happens.” So the first batch was acquired that way. They made an extract out of the seized material, and it turned out to be contaminated with tung oil. That brought home the point: if you’re going to do clinical trials on humans, you’d better know what you’re using and where it came from. Hence, our farm.

Read the rest here

White House Roundtable Highlights Success in Reducing Drug Availability and Use

Speaking today at a roundtable discussion with national leaders in drug use prevention, treatment, and enforcement, President Bush and John Walters, the U.S. "Drug Czar," released data showing steep reductions in drug use and availability in the United States, specifically over the past two years. The data was drawn from three new studies: The University of Michigan’s Monitoring the Future Study (MTF), the DEA’s System to Retrieve Information from Drug Evidence (STRIDE), and workplace drug tests performed by Quest Diagnostics.

The University of Michigan's MTF Study shows that between 2001 and 2008, illicit drug use among youth dropped by nearly 1 million, representing a 25 percent reduction. Meanwhile, positive tests for cocaine use among adults fell 38 percent from June 2006 through June 2008, according to national workplace drug tests performed by Quest Diagnostics. 

In other encouraging news, the supply of drugs on America's streets seems to be dropping as a result of significant changes in the street-level price and purity of cocaine (which are key indicators of stress in the drug market). STRIDE data from January 2007 through September 2008 reveal an 89 percent increase in the average price per pure gram of cocaine (from $97 to $183).  Simultaneously, average cocaine purity has fallen by 32 percent. 

Director Walters said, "President Bush insisted on a balanced effort against demand and supply.  Thousands of people joined that effort . . . and they produced historic progress.  The use of drugs has dropped broadly, steeply, and rapidly, while the supply of these poisons has been cut dramatically.  Taken together, this impact is historically unprecedented."

View related materials:
Data Summaries
Reducing Drug Use in America, December 2008 fact sheet (PDF 260 KB)
Making the Drug Problem Smaller, 2001-2008 (PDF 1.1 MB)

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