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Cocaine:Cocaine is available throughout the state in
fractional ounce to kilogram quantities. Residents, primarily Caucasians,
historically have utilized Interstate 95 in passenger vehicles to meet cocaine
suppliers, generally Dominican violators, based in Lawrence, Lowell, and Lynn,
MA. The popularity of crack cocaine continues to increase in southern and
central Maine communities, with Biddeford and Lewiston serving as the main
distribution points for dealers.
Heroin: Massachusetts-based Dominican traffickers
continue to be the primary suppliers of high quality heroin to the Maine
distributors. These distributors, who typically transport the drug in passenger
vehicles, provide for an increasing availability of heroin in the state. While
use is more prevalent in southern communities, it is also encountered in
coastal and Canadian-border communities, and heroin use has spread into rural
and remote areas. Abuse has increased, particularly among younger teenagers in
Bridgeton, Rockland, Penobscot, and York counties.
Methamphetamine: There is a potential for
methamphetamine to become a problem in Maine. Despite two clandestine lab
seizures in 2002, the drug continues to be encountered throughout the state.
Abuse and availability have increased in Aroostook County. Low-quality
metamphetamine is often express-mailed into the state from California and the
southwestern states. Trafficking groups supplying methamphetamine to the state
generally are connected to outlaw motorcycle clubs or are members of the
rave set. The methamphetamine labs seized last year serve as a reminder
that Maines size and predominantly rural population create an ideal
environment for large-scale methamphetamine manufacturing.
Club Drugs: Law-enforcement officials in southern Maine
have noticed a small increase in the use of MDMA, which continues to be
associated with rave parties and the student population.
Marijuana:Marijuana, historically the illicit drug of
choice in the state is plentiful and readily available. Year-round indoor grows
are common, but high-grade marijuana cultivated in Canada has been smuggled
over the border. Commercial-grade marijuana is often obtained from middlemen in
the southern New England states and New York. Hashish is available sporadically
in small quantities, but the increasing popularity of hashish in Canada may
change the hashish situation in Maine. Traffickers have moved hashish and hash
oil through Maine and into Canada. Caucasian traffickers typically supply
locally grown marijuana as well as marijuana 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 continue to control much of the marijuana distribution in
Maine, using associates to distribute approximately 300 to 500 pounds monthly.
Marijuana Legislation: 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, MA is available in
the southern portion of the state; LSD, available in gelcap form, is abused by
young students; and psilocybin mushrooms, most often obtained from commercially
available cultivation kits, are available in Maine.The state continues to
experience an increase in the availability of diverted pharmaceuticals.
Oxycodone products, Percocet, Roxicet, and OxyContin are readily available.
Dilaudid is found in Washington County, including the city of Calais. Many
instances of doctor-shopping schemes, falsified prescriptions, and pharmacy
robberies of OxyContin have been experienced in Lincoln County and the Portland
area. Diverted Canadian pharmaceuticals also are being smuggled into Maine.
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