Cocaine, a powerful stimulant derived from coca leaves, became the commodity that linked Contra war fundraising to the devastation of American inner cities during the 1980s. CIA-connected networks trafficked thousands of kilos into the [[United States]], with proceeds funneled to the [[Contras|Contra]] war effort in [[Nicaragua]].[^1] ### Contra-Connected Trafficking The earliest documented Contra cocaine pipeline began in December 1981, when [[Norwin Meneses|Meneses]] associates proposed selling cocaine to raise funds for the Contras. [[Carlos Cabezas]] testified that a meeting in [[Costa Rica]] was "the genesis of an effort to raise money for the Contras by selling drugs." Cocaine was initially smuggled via hand-woven Peruvian baskets concealing roughly a kilo each, brought into the U.S. by airline flight attendants. The operation scaled rapidly; by late 1982, the ring used freighters to ship cocaine into [[San Francisco]] and [[Los Angeles]].[^2] On January 17, 1983, FBI agents intercepted seven frogmen carrying 430 pounds of cocaine off a freighter at Pier 96 in San Francisco, the biggest cocaine bust in West Coast history at that time. Two weeks later, another 150 pounds were seized off a sister ship in L.A. [[Danilo Blandon|Danilo Blandón]] testified he sold 200 to 300 kilos of cocaine for Meneses in Los Angeles, and "all the profits were sent to the Contras."[^3] ### Supply Chain and Quantities A 1990 [[DEA]] report showed the ring sourced cocaine from the Suarez family in [[Bolivia]] and the Ochoa family in [[Colombia]], founders of the [[Medellin Cartel|Medellín Cartel]]. When shown an FBI report stating the Torres brothers estimated Blandón moved over 5,000 kilograms of cocaine between 1980 and 1991, Meneses laughed and said: "It would be more accurate if you multiplied that by ten." The DEA independently estimated Blandón imported between 18,000 and 27,000 kilos between 1982 and 1990. A 1996 L.A. County Sheriff's report quoted sources saying Blandón sold 10,000 kilos "mostly in [[South Central Los Angeles]]" in a single two-year span.[^4] ### Conversion to Crack A 1991 DEA report recorded Blandón's assessment of his L.A. customers: "Blandón stated that one of the groups that he supplied cocaine to were black gang members in Los Angeles that didn't care about the quality of cocaine because they were going to convert it to [[Crack Cocaine|crack]] anyway." The conversion process was simple: cocaine powder was mixed with water and baking soda and heated until it crackled, producing smokable "rocks" sold in $20 hits. [[Ricky Ross|"Freeway" Ricky Ross]] developed techniques to stretch profits further, at his peak moving over 200 kilos of cocaine every month and producing approximately 165,000 vials of crack per day.[^5] ### Footnotes [^1]: Gary Webb, *Dark Alliance*, Cast of Characters. [^2]: Gary Webb, *Dark Alliance*, Ch. 4. [^3]: Gary Webb, *Dark Alliance*, Ch. 4, Ch. 6. [^4]: Gary Webb, *Dark Alliance*, Ch. 10, Ch. 14. [^5]: Gary Webb, *Dark Alliance*, Ch. 5, Ch. 6, Ch. 25.