Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) drug case

 

Search the web for a major drug case involving the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) drug case and provide a review of that specific case. You will describe the law enforcement operations, enforcement strategies, subsequent prosecution of the case, etc… and you will relate the reported or projected impact of the case on drug supply reduction in the targeted jurisdiction. Supplemental research on this case is encouraged. This paper must be from three to five full pages of text, not including the cover page or references page.

Sample Solution

The mission of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is to enforce the controlled substances laws and regulations of the United States and bring to the criminal and civil justice system of the United States, or any other competent jurisdiction, those organizations and principal members of organizations, involved in the growing, manufacture, or distribution of controlled substances appearing in or destined for illicit traffic in the United States; and to recommend and support non-enforcement programs aimed at reducing the availability of illicit controlled substances on the domestic and international markets. In carrying out its mission as the agency responsible for enforcing the controlled substances laws and regulations of the United States, the DEA`s primary responsibilities include investigation and preparation for the prosecution of major violators of controlled substance laws operating at interstate and international levels.

Despite arguments that the toro bravo is treated with great care (see chapter one), for animal rights activists and even those who do not dedicate their time to defending animals, caring alone is not good enough when we consider the bull’s fate. Ultimately the bull will die a bloody and prolonged death, in a loud bullring with people cheering, booing, clapping and a matador piercing blades into its back. For many, the events of the bullfight outweigh the care the bull may receive beforehand. A question that one could pose is, would a human be willing to put itself in the bull’s position? If the care it receives can be used as a justification and defence of humane treatment, then why should a person be unwilling to go through the same fate?

Again – using the example of human beings – caring for a young human as it grows up to ensure it lives the best life possible is expected. It is not done with an ulterior motive that leads to a staged killing witnessed by hundreds or thousands of people. Animal rights activists believe the same should be applied to animals and in this case bulls. This is a similar argument used by Peter Singer in what he defines as equal consideration of interests. This is the concept that suffering and pain should not depend on “the species that experiences it”. Instead, identical interests should be given equal weight, regardless of species. Using this reasoning, bullfighting could not be considered ethical or just because the bull suffers in a way that would not be accepted if it were a human being.

In the 1970s Richard D Ryder coined the term speciesism, defined in the OED as, “the assumption of human superiority leading to the exploitation of animals”. Peter Singer also used this term in his 1975 book, Animal Liberation, predicting that in the future human beings will look back at their treatment o

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