Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs
The Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs was a federal law enforcement agency within the United States Department of Justice with the enumerated power of investigating the consumption, trafficking, and distribution of narcotics and dangerous drugs. BNDD is the direct predecessor of the modern Drug Enforcement Administration.
History
Merging the old guard
Prior to the creation of the BNDD, there were two law enforcement agencies dedicated to narcotics enforcement: the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and the Bureau of Drug Abuse Control. These bureaus were organizationally within the structure of the Department of the Treasury and the Food and Drug Administration.On February 7, 1968, President Lyndon Johnson wrote to Congress;
“This administration and this congress have the will and the determination to stop the illicit traffic in drugs. But we need more than the will and the determination. We need a modern and efficient instrument to transform our plans into action.”This official executive request of the legislature was called Reorganization Plan #1. The text of the plan laid out the mission that the new BNDD would;
- Consolidate the authority and preserve the experience and manpower of the Bureau of Narcotics and Bureau of Drug Abuse Control;
- Work with state and local governments in their crackdown on illegal trade in drugs and narcotics, and help to train local agents and investigators;
- Maintain worldwide operations, working closely with other nations, to suppress the trade in illicit narcotics and marijuana;
- Conduct an extensive campaign of research and a nation-wide public education program on drug abuse and its tragic effects.
The BNDD was established on April 8, 1968. The new BNDD, as detailed in the plan, took the enforcement powers of Treasury and the FDA and transferred them to the singular Department of Justice, under the authority of the United States Attorney General.
John Ingersoll
was the first Director of the BNDD, being appointed on August 1, 1968, and its last. He departed the bureau in disgruntlement on June 29, 1973, and the bureau was merged into the new DEA two days later.Ingersoll's timeline of tenure as the head of BNDD is similar to his two main predecessors in federal narcotics enforcement;
- Levi Nutt was the Deputy Commissioner of the Narcotics Division from 1919 to 1930 - the entire length of its existence, leaving the new Bureau of Narcotics in scandal before it was taken over by Harry Anslinger.
- Harry Anslinger was the Commissioner of the FBN from 1930 to 1965 - the FBN was merged into the BNDD only three years after his departure, in 1968.
Elvis Presley becomes a federal agent
Upon hearing the news that Elvis had initiated a meeting with Nixon, Haldeman replied in the margins of Bud Krogh's memo with a single sentence: "You must be kidding." When Elvis did meet Nixon, he mentioned that he could infiltrate any group of "hippies or young people," and had "studied communist brainwashing and the drug culture."
After Deputy Director of the BNDD John Finlator had initially denied Elvis's request for a BNDD badge, he informed Elvis that "his original decision had been changed by the President." Instead of the position of federal agent at large, Elvis was presented with an equally unique badge. This badge did not declare him an agent, a special agent, a supervisor, or a director. Instead, the badge declared that he was "Elvis Presley." This badge became one of Elvis's most prized possessions, and he would carry it in a leather wallet everywhere he went for the rest of his life.
Ingersoll launches internal investigations
By 1970, Ingersoll suspected that the old Federal Bureau of Narcotics was notoriously corrupt, and that this corruption had carried over to the new BNDD. In December 1970, Ingersoll requested the assistance of Central Intelligence Agency director Richard Helms in rooting it out.In January 1971, Helms approved a program of "covert recruitment and security clearance support to BNDD."
The investigation, and many following investigations, prove that Ingersoll was not wrong in many of his suspicions. Evidence exists today that;
- FBN supervisory agent at large George Hunter White had extrajudicially killed several of his suspects during investigations. While White had retired in 1966, he still had many connections at BNDD.
- White's primary undercover operative after 1948, Jacques Voignier, was an operative for the FBN while simultaneously running drugs for the Corsican Brotherhood and running cons for his own personal gain. Voignier was arrested in 1969, the year after the establishment of the BNDD.
- FBN Agent Dean Unkefer admits in a memoir released in 2015 to having been addicted to narcotics within only a few years of his recruitment into the organization, despite never having done them before joining the bureau.
Activities
Foreign offices
By 1970, BNDD had nine foreign offices:The first federal narcotics task force was established in 1970 in New York City.
French Connection
The BNDD carried on the work of the FBN in investigating the French Connection. In 1967, BNDD Deputy Director Andrew Tartaglino declared that: "France has been identified as the source of more than 75% of the heroin consumed by our drug addicts." Most of those narcotics transactions were being controlled from the city of Marseilles, where there was an established power base in the Marseilles mafia - an extension of Union Corse. BNDD worked closely with French narcotics agents of the Office Central pour la Répression du Trafic Illicite des Stupéfiants to investigate the Corsican Mafia, Union Corse, and the Corsican Brotherhood in their dominance of the European narcotics trade. This effort was successful, and the French Connection was completely dismantled by 1974.However, French historian Andrew Merchant writes that the narcotics trade which had so successfully interrupted by the BNDD and the OCRTIS in "Franco-American cooperation," by 1981 was now no longer centralized within a few families, but had become a drugs milieu, where there was already a present crimes milieu. This is a result of what he calls the rise of the "user-dealer."