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Cocaine: Cocaine HCl remains popular and readily
available throughout Hawaii, and is often used in conjunction with other drugs
including alcohol, heroin, and/or marijuana. The tourist industry throughout
the state perpetuates the demand for user quantities, therefore ounce type
dealers flourish in the bar, nightclub and hotel scenes. Crack cocaine is also
readily available. Most crack is converted "as needed," usually an ounce or two
at a time, although occasionally pound quantities have been smuggled into
Hawaii.
Heroin: Much of the heroin seized in Hawaii is black tar
heroin, although there is also the smuggling and distribution of Southeast
Asian heroin. The majority of seized heroin is body carried into the islands
from Los Angeles by Mexican organizations and distributed throughout the state
by a close-knit cell of distributors. Mexican organizations with bases in Los
Angeles operate cells in Hawaii, rotating members between Hawaii, California,
other states, and Mexico. Heroin is distributed on a "call and deliver" system
with extensive use of pagers, cell phones, calling cards, and pay phones.
Mexican organizations recruit local distributors to lease houses, cars and
cellular telephones for their on-site representatives. Much of the heroin use
is associated with the traditional age/ethnic group (white, middle class, 30s -
40s), although younger persons are now experimenting with the drug. Addicts are
daily users of which a small percentage acts as secondary or tertiary
distributors to finance their own habits.
Methamphetamine: Crystal methamphetamine ("ice") is the
drug of choice in Hawaii, where it is readily available, with the majority of
it converted into ice before distribution. In the past few years, ice-related
crimes have increased as the drug has increased in popularity and availability.
The Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring program in 2001 revealed 38.1% of adult
males arrested from January September 2001 tested positive for meth abuse.
Furthermore, male and female arrestees in Honolulu tested positive for meth at
a higher rate than for marijuana (29.8%) and cocaine (11.2%). Pound quantities
of crystal meth arrive from the southwest regions of the United States smuggled
by couriers and the by private parcel services, such as Fed-ex and DHL. Local
addicts can purchase ice from a variety of sources, since ounce dealers are
abundant throughout the state. Most of the meth lab seizures in Hawaii are
small "conversion" laboratories. Analysis of seized glassware and chemicals
reveal that most laboratories are capable of manufacturing ounce quantities.
Club Drugs:There has been a continued increase in the
use of Ecstasy in Hawaii among teens and young adults 20-30 years old. Ecstasy
is not manufactured here, but is shipped from the mainland through the U.S.
mail or smuggled on incoming flights through the Honolulu airport. Ecstasy
abuse is rising among the large military population in Hawaii. Local military
officials view ecstasy use as the major drug use issue effecting active duty
military in Hawaii.
Marijuana:Marijuana is accessible throughout Hawaii,
which maintains its status as a "national leader" in the production of
high-grade marijuana. Homegrown marijuana, either harvested from sophisticated
indoor grows or from outdoor grows, remains a staple for the local demand and
for export to the mainland. Medical marijuana certificates are a concern on the
islands, where local users are permitted to grow several plants at their
residences for personal consumption. The availability of marijuana is perceived
by the local population as normal. Small, mail order marijuana operations from
the islands to the mainland exist and survive by shipping small quantities
through air parcel providers. Marijuana may be shipped to the West Coast in
shipping containers marked "household goods," as growers allegedly move to the
mainland, although this has not been confirmed. Marijuana is frequently
encountered in the public schools among students as young as sixth grade. A
recent survey of high school students indicated that 70% of the respondents
have easy access to marijuana.
Other Drugs: The most common sources for diversion of
pharmaceutically controlled substances continue to be doctor shoppers;
employees who steal from the drug inventory; prescription fraud, including
forgeries and other types of prescription falsification; and physicians who
indiscriminately prescribe and write prescriptions for reasons other than
legitimate medical purposes, outside the scope of their professional practices.
Hydrocodone is one of the most abused pharmaceutical drugs in Hawaii, ranging
from $3-$9 per tab on the street. OxyContin's street price has risen 20% (80
mg/$18; 40 mg/$9; 20 mg/$4-5; 10 mg/$3) due to increased demand. Local
pharmacies in Hilo report that individuals are purchasing the maximum limits
for pseudoephedrine-based OTC drugs. |