DEA
Offices & Telephone Nos. Bangor207-941-4737
Portland207-780-3331
State Facts Population: 1,274,923 Law Enforcement Officers:
2,565 State Prison Population: 1,740 Probation Population: 7,524 Violent Crime Rate National
Ranking: 48
2001 Federal Drug Seizures Cocaine: 0.5 kgs. Heroin: 0 kgs. Methamphetamine: 0 kgs. Marijuana: 21.3 kgs. Clandestine Laboratories: 2
(DEA, state, and local)
Drug Situation: Marijuana, which is both grown locally and
imported from Canada, Massachusetts, and New York,
remains the principal drug of abuse in Maine. Heroin
availability and use is increasing in the state, as are
cocaine and diverted pharmaceuticals. Methamphetamine,
although not yet a significant problem, has considerable
potential for production and distribution in Maine.
Interstate 95 provides a critical north-south
transportation avenue for drug traffickers who travel
most frequently to sources of supply in several
northeastern Massachusetts cities, and Maines many
harbors offer ample opportunities for drug smugglers.
Cocaine:Cocaine
is encountered throughout the state in fractional ounce
to kilogram quantities. Maine residents, generally
Caucasians, traditionally travel south on Interstate 95
in passenger vehicles to obtain cocaine from suppliers,
generally Dominican violators, based in Lawrence, Lowell,
and Lynn, MA. Crack cocaine is growing in popularity in
southern and central Maine communities, with Biddeford
and Lewiston serving as the main distribution points.
Heroin: The availability of heroin in
Maine continues to increase. MA-based Dominican
traffickers are the primary suppliers of high-quality
heroin to the Maine distributors who typically transport
the drug in passenger vehicles. While use is more
prevalent in southern communities, it is encountered in
coastal and Canadian border communities, and it has
spread into rural and remote areas. Abuse has increased,
particularly among younger teenagers in Bridgeton,
Rockland, Penobscot, and York counties.
Methamphetamine:Although
found throughout the state, methamphetamine has yet to
become a significant problem in Maine. The states
northernmost county, Aroostook, has experienced increased
abuse and availability. Investigations have revealed that
low quality metamphetamine is often express-mailed into
the state from California and the southwestern states.
Trafficking groups supplying meth to the state either
have connections to outlaw motorcycle clubs or are
members of the rave set. Law-enforcement
officials recently uncovered a non-functioning
methamphetamine lab in Washington County, a reminder that
Maines size and predominantly rural population
creates a significant potential for large-scale
methamphetamine manufacturing. The DEA has sponsored a
clandestine laboratory school for federal investigators,
state and local police, and fire marshals.
Club Drugs: Law-enforcement officials in the
southern portion of Maine have noticed a small increase
in MDMA (Ecstasy) use. MDMA continues to be associated
with rave parties and the student population.
Marijuana: Marijuana, long the illicit drug
of choice in Maine, is readily available throughout the
state. Year-round indoor grows are the current trend in
the state, but high-grade marijuana cultivated in Canada
has been smuggled over the border. Hashish is available
sporadically in small quantities; however, the popularity
of hashish in Canada may eventually impact Maine.
Traffickers have moved hashish and hash oil through Maine
and into Canada. Commercial-grade marijuana is often
obtained from middlemen in the southern New England
states and New York. Predominantly Caucasian traffickers
supply marijuana grown in Maine as well as shipped from
the southwest border and Canada. Shipments ranging from
15 to 500 pounds typically enter the state via Interstate
95 in automobiles, campers, rental trucks, and
tractor-trailers. Motorcycle groups historically have
controlled much of the marijuana distribution in Maine,
and these groups continue to use associates to distribute
approximately 300 to 500 pounds monthly. Maine has a
number of statutes related to marijuana possession,
cultivation, trafficking, therapeutic research programs,
paraphernalia, illegal importation, and asset forfeiture.
These laws are often cited as the reason that Maine
residents must travel to obtain their illicit drugs from
out-of-state traffickers wary of the states tough
drug laws.
Other Drugs: PCP purchased in Boston is available in
southern Maine. LSD, available in gelcap form, is abused
by young students. Psilocybin mushrooms, most often
obtained from commercially available cultivation kits,
are available in state. Law enforcement recently seized a
psilocybin cultivation operation run by a student on the
University of Maine campus. Maine has experienced a
significant increase in the availability of diverted
pharmaceuticals. Oxycodone products, Percocet, Roxicet,
and OxyContin are readily available. In Washington
County, including the city of Calais, Dilaudid is
encountered frequently. Numerous instances of
doctor-shopping rings, falsified prescriptions, and
pharmacy robberies of OxyContin have been experienced in
Lincoln County and the Portland area. In addition, there
have been several instances of diverted Canadian
pharmaceuticals being smuggled into Maine.
DEA
Mobile Enforcement Teams: This cooperative program with state and
local law enforcement counterparts was conceived in 1995
in response to the overwhelming problem of drug-related
violent crime in towns and cities across the nation.
There have been 348 deployments completed resulting in
14,794 arrests of violent drug criminals as of June 2002.
Special Topics: Interstate 95, The New England
Pipeline, remains the interdiction focus in Maine
since it travels through the interior of the state,
connects several of the
larger cities, and terminates at the Canadian border.