-Caveat Lector- an excerpt from: The Great Heroin Coup - Drugs, Intelligence, & International Fascism Henrik Kruger Jerry Meldon, Translator South End Press©1980 Box 68 Astor Station Boston, MA 02123 ISBN 0-89608-0319-5 240pps - one edition - out-of-print Orginally published in Danish Smukke Serge og Heroien Bogan 1976 --[9]-- NINE THE HEROIN TRAILS As the 1970s began the French were the undisputed kingpins of the international narcotics traffic. Opium, the raw material, was extracted from the poppy harvest by the Turks, who either converted it themselves into morphine base, or sent it to refineries in Syria and Lebanon. Essentially all morphine base made from Turkish opium went to Marseilles' heroin laboratories. Until around 1966 it went by sea. But Marseilles' harbor was too easily patrolled, and so after 1966 roughly 70 percent of the morphine base went via Bulgaria and Yugoslavia to Munich. For the first half of this century, most Marseilles heroin was sent to Tangiers, Morocco, the main embarkation point for drugs bound for the United States. Tangiers eventually gave way to such European ports as Barcelona, Lisbon, and Antwerp. In addition some of the heroin went by air. At the close of the sixties there began what at first resembled a routine adjustment in the narcotics traffic. As time would show, however, this one involved such a colossal upheaval, that it might better be described as a tremendous political coup—yet a coup that apparently went unnoticed. At its source lay shifts in international politics, and friction between the CIA and the French SDECE. Later I will support this claim with a myriad of circumstantial evidence. The United States, during the first presidential administration of Richard Nixon, began cracking down on Turkish opium cultivation. While it slowed the delivery of morphine base to Marseilles, the Corsicans then — and now — had other sources to tap. They had long been connected closely with the Chinese Mafia. The latter organized the production of enormous quantities of opium on the rugged hillsides of the Burma-Laos-Thailand junction known as the Golden Triangle.[1] The sale of harvested opium is in the hands of well-organized Chiu Chao Chinese from the region between Canton and Fukien in southeast China. Hundreds of thousands of these Chinese emigrated to Southeast Asia, where they have resisted assimilation and control by local authorities. The Golden Triangle accounted, until very recently, for some twothirds of the world's illicit opium production, or 1300 tons of opium annually -enough to produce 130 tons of heroin at a retail value on the U.S. market of between 50 and 120 billion dollars. Conservative estimates place the yearly heroin consumption of U.S. addicts between twelve and twenty tons. The New York street price lies in the neighborhood of $300,000/kilo (1 kilo = 2.2 pounds), but many pushers dilute the heroin up to three or four times. The same kilo can then bring in close to $1 million. A major slice of the profits of organized crime in the U.S. derives from the wholesaling of illegal drugs. The trafficking of heroin, co-caine, morphine base, etc., along with marijuana, hash, LSD and other hallucinogens, yields an annual turnover estimated as high as $75 billion.[2] That is an enormous sum, even in the context of the U.S. economy. A very large portion of the U.S. market can be covered by derivatives of Southeast Asian opium. However, as late as 1969 only Marseilles Frenchmen produced snow-white heroin in quantities large enough to satisfy the American market. Obtaining absolutely pure white no. 4 heroin is no easy matter. The chemist generally ends with sligh[t]ly brownish no. 3 heroin, or "brown sugar." Though the Chinese Mafia had ample opium, they could not produce no. 4 heroin in sufficient quantities. Excluding them from direct entry onto the U.S. scene, it limited the Chinese to delivery of raw materials to Marseilles and sale of second-rate products elsewhere. In the golden era that culminated, at the start of 1970, with Christian David joining the Ricord gang hierarchy, Marcel Francisci and Dominique Venturi led the Corsican Mafia, and Jo Cesari was the wizard of the Marseilles labs. They were but the visible portion of the iceberg. The other 99 percent was comprised of politicians and men of responsibility and influence in French intelligence. "Mr. Heroin" Francisci was the man with the international perspective, with direct connections to politicians and the capos of the Italian Mafia. When international agreements were to be made, Francisci usually did the negotiating. Venturi and Joseph Orsini were in charge of effectively all drug import and export. There were five main heroin export routes to the U.S.A., two by air and three by sea. The shipping lanes emanated from Barcelona, Lisbon, and Antwerp and either ended in Brazil/ Paraguay, Haiti and the French West Indies, or went directly to the east coast of the United States. Heroin smuggled into the U.S. from the French Antilles and Haiti, like that from Paraguay, went via Florida or Mexico. The busiest air lanes were from Luxembourg and Madrid to either Montreal or Nassau.[3] Dominique Venturi's brother Jean received the shipments in Montreal, but was obliged to pass them on to the Cotroni family. Led by brothers Giuseppe, Vincent and Frank, the latter clan transported the heroin to the U.S.A., and distributed it to the big time pushers in New York. Heroin leaving Haiti, the Antilles, Nassau, and the Paraguay-based Ricord Mob wound up in Florida, where Santo Trafficante, jr. and the Cuban Mafia controlled the drug business in an axis that became the U.S.A.'s most powerful narcotics organization. For years the Corsicans had tried setting up their own U.S. network, but were repeatedly foiled. It might have been easier for them to get around the Italians and Cubans by way of Mexico, had the Cotroni and Trafficante organizations not also decided to enter the picture there. At a grand assembly of mobsters from Marseilles, Montreal, New York and Miami, the rules were fixed for smuggling via Mexico. The site of the meeting was Acapulco, the time was early 1970. Representing the French were Jean Venturi, Jean-Baptiste Croce and Paul Mondolini. Croce and Mondolini became the Corsicans' permanent men in Mexico. The tight control over the U.S. market wielded by the Cotronis of Montreal and Trafficante of Tampa was a legacy of Meyer Lansky and Lucky Luciano's reorganization of the U.S. heroin market. Lansky built himself a fantastic empire headquartered in Havana, and literally governed Cuba over the head of the dictator Fulgencio Batista. Lansky became the world's uncrowned narcotics king. His decisions affected everyone, including the bigwigs in France and Italy. He invested in the Marseilles labs and had the Corsicans reorganize themselves more efficiently. When Castro drove him from Cuba, Lansky created a similar gambling paradise in Nassau. Nassau became a focal point in more ways than one. Besides the gambling take, the greater part of the incredible bonanza from U.S. narcotics deals-the Corsicans' share included-was laundered via Lansky's Miami National Bank, to Nassau, and on to numbered accounts in Switzerland and Lebanon. The Lansky fortune is estimated at $2 billion. Unable to reenter the U.S. in 1970, Lansky took temporary refuge in Israel, which eventually refused him citizenship. It is difficult to say how much of his power he retains. His operation has apparently been taken over by former subordinates. In narcotics they are the Montreal Cotroni family and, above all, Santo Trafficante, jr. in Florida, the man to whom the Ricord/David Mob consigned enormous quantities of heroin. pps. 87-90 --[Notes]-- 1. In the 30 August 1963 issue of Life, Stanley Karnow named Bonaventure Francisci the kingpin of opium smuggling from Laos. According to Alain Jaubert (Dossier D ... comme Drogue, Alain Moreau, 1974), it was impossible to determine whether Bonaventure and Marcel Francisci were related. 2. F.A.J. lanni: Black Mafia (Simon and Schuster, 1974) lanni's estimate is the highest I have seen. The wide range of estimates demonstrates that no one really knows, or is even close to knowing, how great the narcotics handle is. 3. It was often little things which made a smuggling route especially attractive. For example, former French heroin smuggler Richard Berdin recalls his colleague Andre Labay's description of the important role played by the men's room at Nassau airport: "It's a small airport, and there's a common waiting room, which means that after I've gone through English customs I go straight to the American side, armed with apiece of hand luggage containing nothing but toiletries and the usual knick-knacks. There I check my baggage through to Miami. Assuming they check my hand bag, they'll wrap some kind of selfadhesive ticket around the handle to show it's been OK'd. I'll arrange my flight schedule so that my plane for Miami doesn't leave for at least an hour after our arrival in Nassau. So now I go back to the passenger lounge to wait for my flight. We meet in the men's room, where we exchange the contents of our hand luggage. Now I've got the merchandise, safely stashed in a piece of luggage bearing the customs seal of approval. When my flight is called, I climb aboard the last leg of the trip without a worry in the world. I don't see how it could miss." (R. Berdin: Code Named Richard, Dutton, 1974). --[cont]-- Aloha, He'Ping, Om, Shalom, Salaam. Em Hotep, Peace Be, Omnia Bona Bonis, All My Relations. Adieu, Adios, Aloha. Amen. Roads End DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright frauds is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. 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