Black cocaine explained

Black cocaine (Spanish; Castilian: italic=no|'''coca negra''') is a mixture of regular cocaine base or cocaine hydrochloride with various other substances. These other substances are added

Since the result is usually black, it is generally smuggled as toner, fingerprint powder, fertilizer, pigment, metal moldings,[1] or charcoal.[2] The pure cocaine base can be recovered from the mixture by extraction (freebase) or acid-base extraction (hydrochloride) using common organic solvents such as methylene chloride[3] or acetone. A second process is required to convert cocaine base into powdered cocaine hydrochloride.[3]

It was reported that in the mid-1980s Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet ordered his army to build a clandestine cocaine laboratory in Chile where chemists mixed cocaine with other chemicals to produce what Pinochet's former top aide for intelligence Manuel Contreras described as a "black cocaine" capable of being smuggled past drug agents in the US and Europe.[4]

Black cocaine was detected in Bogota, Colombia in May 1998.[5] [6] In 2008, a new type of black cocaine was discovered by police in Spain. It had been manufactured into rubber-like sheets and made into luggage.[7] In 2021, 860-1NaN-1 of black cocaine disguised as charcoal, in 30 sacks among 1,364 sacks of charcoal, were seized in Spain, one of the biggest cocaine seizures recorded in Castilla y León.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Cartels Shipping 'Black' Cocaine; Bricks of Drug Look Like Metal Moldings, McCaffrey Says. https://web.archive.org/web/20121104232219/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-583383.html. live. November 4, 2012. Branigin. William. April 28, 1999. The Washington Post.
  2. News: Police in Spain seize 860 kilos of black and odourless cocaine . Jones . Sam . The Guardian . 2 June 2021 .
  3. News: Lopez . Jaime . Black Cocaine from Colombia: How Does it Turn White? . 8 December 2019 . The Costa Rica Star . 8 September 2015.
  4. Jonathan Franklin, Pinochet 'sold cocaine to Europe and US', The Guardian, 11 July 2006
  5. News: Global alert for undetectable black cocaine. Davison. Phil. 8 September 1998. The Independent. 12 October 2010.
  6. Book: McNicholas, Michael. Maritime security: an introduction. 12 October 2010. 2008. Butterworth-Heinemann. 978-0-12-370859-5. 190.
  7. News: New Black Cocaine discovered at Barajas airport . Typically Spanish . Feb 19, 2008 . 12 October 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080314041537/http://www.typicallyspanish.com/news/publish/article_15169.shtml . March 14, 2008 .