Soldiers escort Los Zetas drug cartel leader Omar Trevino Morales in Mexico City on March 4, 2015. Credit: Time

Soldiers escort Los Zetas drug cartel leader Omar Trevino Morales in Mexico City on March 4, 2015.
Credit: Time

MEXICO CITY, MEXICO — In the midst of this seething mountain capital, Mexico’s security ministry houses a bizarre museum — a collection of what the army seizes from drug traffickers. The Museo de Enervantes, often referred to as the Narco Museum, has drug samples themselves (including the rare black cocaine), diamond-studded guns, gold-coated cell phones, rocket-propelled grenades and medals that cartels award their most productive smugglers. It also shows off the narcos’ ingenuity for getting their drugs into the United States, including “trap cars” with secret compartments, catapults to hurl packages over the border fence and even false buttocks, to hide drugs in.

Agents on the 2,000 mile-U.S. border have wrestled with these smuggling techniques for decades, seemingly unable to stop the northward flow of drugs and southward flow of dollars and guns. But the amount […]

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