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Gun trafficking from the US to Mexico: The drug connection

Gun trafficking from the US to Mexico: The drug connection

  • Gun trafficking from the US to Mexico is deeply connected to the illegal drug trade, with weapons often purchased with drug money and used to strengthen cartels.
  • A federal investigation in Idaho uncovered a scheme to exchange pounds of narcotics for guns, including 15 pounds of meth, heroin, and 3,000 fentanyl pills.
  • The trafficking web extends across the US, with court records showing that nearly one-fifth of cases mention drug trafficking in connection to confiscated firearms.
  • Examples of individuals involved in gun-for-drugs exchanges include Pedro Hernandez-Gomez, who was caught attempting to exchange kilos of fentanyl and heroin for machine guns, and Xavier Drew, who sold several pounds of meth and fentanyl to undercover agents.
  • The sheer volume of firearms being trafficked across the border – 135,000 annually – has led to brazen tactics, including the transportation of large quantities of weapons in vehicles without concealment.

These blue pills appear to be oxycodone but are laced with fentanyl. U.S. Attorneys Office for Utah via AP, File

Illegal firearm trafficking is inseparable from the illegal drug trade: Weapons are often bought with drug money, can strengthen cartels and can be traded for drugs.

In the spring of 2021, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, known as ATF, started a gun-trafficking investigation that ran from Idaho, down through California and into Mexico. The investigation uncovered a scheme to drive pounds of narcotics north, and some of their “white China” and black tar heroin were exchanged for guns that an Idaho Falls resident purchased out of a firearm seller’s garage.

By the summer, ATF and other federal agents tracked the traffickers to a hotel off West Broadway Street in downtown Idaho Falls, where they observed a suspected drug deal and apprehended their suspects.

Their final haul included 15 pounds of meth, a pound of heroin, 3,000 fentanyl pills and 16 handguns and rifles.

The trafficking web

The incident fits into a larger web of trafficking guns south to Mexico and narcotics north to the American Midwest and coasts. The Louisville Courier Journal documented the connection in their investigation into cartel drugs poisoning Oregon.

We are a professor of economic development and an investigative journalist, and we have spent a year sifting through documents to follow the flow of illicit weapons trafficked from the U.S. to Mexico.

This trafficking web regularly shows up in prosecutions, including 14 federal sentences in North Carolina that included dozens of firearms and hundreds of pounds of narcotics.

Our collection of court records and gun data traces the relationship throughout the United States.

Read the full investigation: Mexican drug cartels use hundreds of thousands of guns bought from licensed US gun shops – fueling violence in Mexico, drugs in the US and migration at the border

Of the 100 court cases we cataloged, nearly one-fifth explicitly mention drug trafficking in connection to the confiscated firearms.

Drugs for guns

In 2020, Pedro Roberto Hernandez-Gomez was caught in Los Angeles attempting to exchange a kilogram of fentanyl and a kilogram of heroin for three machine guns and three grenade launchers.

A pistol lying on a rug

This semiautomatic pistol is one of the weapons that Xavier Drew was convicted of selling to an undercover agent.
ATF

And in March 2024, Xavier Drew, also known as “Flock,” was sentenced to 13½ years in prison for selling several pounds of meth, fentanyl and nearly a dozen firearms to undercover agents. The guns included a semiautomatic pistol and pistols with obliterated or missing serial numbers. He also sold them Glock switches, or machine-gun conversion kits. A collaborator, Esvin Ivan Calles-Corrales, was sentenced to five years for shipping narcotics and facilitating the transfer of related proceeds to Mexico.

Bag containing many blue pills lying on the chrome top of a digital scale

Xavier Drew was convicted of selling fentanyl to an undercover agent, including this bag of around 3,000 pills.
ATF

Closer to the border, in August 2022, Maria Del Rosario Navarro-Sanchez, aka Fernanda, coordinated gun purchases in the U.S. – using drug funds from Mexico for the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel and courier deliveries of meth and fentanyl pills from Mexico through El Paso, Texas – with Brian Munoz-Castro.

Munoz-Castro distributed the narcotics to separate couriers, who delivered the drugs throughout the U.S. Federal agents arrested Munoz-Castro in a gun store parking lot in March 2023 after he picked up gun parts from an El Paso gun shop. He later took the agents to his home in El Paso where he had close to 2½ kilos of meth.

Federal agents indicted Navarro-Sanchez after they intercepted her communications with former Juarez, Mexico, city hall police officer Rene Hernandez-Cordero.

The agents tracked a gun exchange involving Hernandez-Cordero at a Circle K in El Paso. Twenty assault rifles and two Barrett .50-caliber rifles were set to be trafficked into Mexico in August 2023 in the back of a pickup truck for the purchase price of US$66,000.

When Munoz-Castro was convicted in September 2024, Navarro-Sanchez was still a fugitive, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. Munoz-Castro received a 10-year sentence for his role.

At the hearing, the defense tried to call out the absurdity of so many weapons just thrown into the back of a pickup truck and driven across the border. “That’s inherently ridiculous, isn’t it?” the attorney asked.

Mark Cervantes, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection enforcement officer, answered by pointing to the ubiquity of these kinds of trafficking actions. “I’ve had one instance where an individual had 20 SCAR assault rifles and 30 Glock pistols without concealment in the vehicle,” he said.

With some 135,000 firearms traveling across the border annually, it’s not a surprise that some traffickers might be so brazen.

Read the full investigation: Mexican drug cartels use hundreds of thousands of guns bought from licensed US gun shops – fueling violence in Mexico, drugs in the US and migration at the border

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. What is the connection between gun trafficking and the illegal drug trade?
A. Weapons are often bought with drug money, can strengthen cartels, and can be traded for drugs.

Q. Where did the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) start a gun-trafficking investigation in 2021?
A. The ATF started a gun-trafficking investigation that ran from Idaho to California and into Mexico.

Q. What was found during the ATF’s investigation in Idaho Falls?
A. The investigation uncovered a scheme to drive pounds of narcotics north, and some of their “white China” and black tar heroin were exchanged for guns purchased out of a firearm seller’s garage.

Q. How many pounds of meth, heroin, and fentanyl pills were seized by federal agents during the ATF’s investigation?
A. The final haul included 15 pounds of meth, a pound of heroin, 3,000 fentanyl pills, and 16 handguns and rifles.

Q. What is the relationship between gun trafficking and narcotics trafficking in the United States?
A. The trafficking web regularly shows up in prosecutions, including 14 federal sentences in North Carolina that included dozens of firearms and hundreds of pounds of narcotics.

Q. How did Pedro Roberto Hernandez-Gomez attempt to exchange drugs for guns in Los Angeles in 2020?
A. He attempted to exchange a kilogram of fentanyl and a kilogram of heroin for three machine guns and three grenade launchers.

Q. What was sentenced to 13½ years in prison for selling several pounds of meth, fentanyl, and nearly a dozen firearms to undercover agents?
A. Xavier Drew, also known as “Flock,” was sentenced to 13½ years in prison.

Q. How did Maria Del Rosario Navarro-Sanchez coordinate gun purchases using drug funds from Mexico?
A. She coordinated gun purchases in the U.S. – using drug funds from Mexico for the Jalisco Nueva Generación cartel and courier deliveries of meth and fentanyl pills from Mexico through El Paso, Texas.

Q. What was found by federal agents when they arrested Munoz-Castro in a gun store parking lot?
A. He had close to 2½ kilos of meth.

Q. How many assault rifles and Barrett .50-caliber rifles were set to be trafficked into Mexico in August 2023?
A. Twenty assault rifles and two Barrett .50-caliber rifles were set to be trafficked into Mexico in the back of a pickup truck for the purchase price of US$66,000.