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Drug war(s) may refer to:
Media[edit]
Historia de camarena 1-3.
- Drug War (film), a Chinese-Hong Kong action thriller film
- Drug Wars: The Camarena Story, a 1990 TV mini-series based on Elaine Shannon’s book Desperados and the Time article of the same name
- Drugwars, a turn-based strategy computer game
Real-world activities[edit]
- Bangladesh Drug War, an ongoing campaign against alleged drug dealers and users by the government of Bangladesh
- Mexican Drug War, an ongoing asymmetric low-intensity conflict between the Mexican government and various drug trafficking syndicates
- Miami Drug War, a series of armed conflicts in the 1970s and 1980s
- Philippine Drug War, the drug policy of the Philippine government under President Rodrigo Duterte
- War on drugs, a campaign, led by the U.S. federal government, of drug prohibition, military aid, and military intervention
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Drug_wars&oldid=891278004'
Has anyone seen 'Drug Wars: The Camarena Story?' I saw it about 20 years ago for the first time and unlike Narcos: Mexico, this one made me frustrated and pissed at the Mexican government for what they made the Americans go through in trying to solve Kiki's murder.Not saying it's better, obviously it's a lower budget series, but even though I already knew the story, it still managed to incite something Narcos didn't, for whatever reason, maybe I was just younger.It's 4 and a half hours long and in english, below are links to it on YouTube if anyone is interested in checking it out.Part 1:::Part 2::::Part 3:::.
Regarding Calderoni and Caro Quintero:Kevin Shipp 1.8.18 Intelligence Hour interview:documentary of Hector Berrellez (DEA) search for the killers of Enrique KIKI CamarenaAudio interview with DEA Hector Berrellez.I heard he was allowed to bring millions in cash into the U.S. Was part of his agreement as an informant. He told Hector Berrellez DEA that he was getting transferred a month before it happened. At his debriefing in Washington, Hector said that the Attorney Gen. Took no notes of the meeting and simply asked if he had seen a government employee load the drugs into planes.
Hector said no, only the cutouts or assets. That was it.His career ended and he retired in 1996 after checking into a blank schedule for a year. He gave interviews and spoke of Calderoni, but the government threatened do extradite him to Mexico where he was wanted for the kidnap of Dr. Machain, who was stuffed through a hole in the border fence,Hector's son committed suicide and under suspicious circumstances, so hector hesitated to speak again until 2013 when Caro Quintero was released.In Forbes Magazine, Hector stated that two $4billion + bank accounts of Caro Quintero's money were never seized,Dea agent Michael Levine says that Attorney General Edwin Meese personally warned the president of Mexico that Levine was DEA, blowing his cover and put him in danger. Levine had the President of Mexico on a 15 tonnes per month drug agreement using the president's body guard as a intermediary.Phil Jordan (DEA EPIC) said that he had interacted with Camarena in Mexico at one point and he was followed by DFS agents everywhere they went.In the book 'Down By The River' Phil Jordan says that he seized a load of cash; $22 million at the airport. He then received a phone call from the top of the DOJ telling him to release the man, give his cash back and allow him to continue on his way.The rot goes to the top folks. The president is involved.
Both here and in MexicoI think there is simply a drug department in the U.S. Treasury department. When you win the presidential election, they notify you of the slush fund and let you keep the money. Drug Wars: The Camarena Story is a 1990 TV mini-series based on Elaine Shannon’s book Desperados and the Time magazine article of the same name. It was directed by Brian Gibson and starred Steven Bauer, Miguel Ferrer, Benicio del Toro, Treat Williams and Craig T. It was the second most watched NBC mini-series of the year following The Kennedys.PLOTFact-based story of undercover DEA agent Enrique Camarena who, while stationed in Guadalajara, uncovered a massive marijuana operation in Northern Mexico that led to his death and a remarkable investigation of corruption within the Mexican government.