U.S. crackdown sends meth labs south of border
By Richard Marosi
Times Staff Writer
November 26, 2006
GUADALAJARA — The methamphetamine laboratories that once plagued California's hinterlands and powered a national explosion of drug abuse have been replaced by an increasing supply from Mexico, U.S. law enforcement officials say.
Methamphetamine production has surged south of the border, from
The fortress-like compound ringed by high brick walls housed 11 custom-designed pressure cookers that could produce 400 pounds of the drug per day. It dwarfed anything ever found in
"It was the mother lode of mother lodes," a
The boom in Mexican methamphetamine production stems from successful efforts in the
Drug traffickers, some of them ex-convicts and fugitives from the
The largest share of the chemicals is believed to be shipped to
Like traffic in heroin and cocaine, the methamphetamine economy has become a global phenomenon. So too is the battle to control what most
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