Year
Goals
Achievements
GENERAL MOTION OF THE FIFTH CONGRESS OF HOC
RESOLUTION OF THE KIGALI CONFERENCE
U.N. RESOLUTION 2014

U.N. RESOLUTION 2012
U.N. RESOLUTION 2010

REPORT ON THE 2ND ANNUAL EU FORUM ON THE DEATH PENALTY IN ZAMBIA

Videos

DECLARATION OF LIBREVILLE

Publications
Hands Off Cain Headquarters
U.N. RESOLUTION 2008

U.N. RESOLUTION 2007

Appeal To The United Nations
Board of Directors

LETHAL TRADE DOSSIER
2014 FREETOWN CONFERENCE Final Declaration
THE COTONOU DECLARATION 2014
DOSSIER IRAQ 2003

DOSSIER ON MORATORIUM
DOSSIER IRAQ 2012

DOSSIER USA 2011

NOBEL LAUREATES APPEAL
Bulletin Board
Sign up
Join appeal
Newsletter
Our Publications

USA - US military kills
USA - US military kills
USA - Contradictions in the war on drugs

January 2, 2026:

January 2, 2026 - USA. Contradictions in the war on drugs

War on Drugs—-The DOJ Thinks Cocaine Couriers Are Not Worth Prosecuting. Trump Thinks They Deserve To Die.—-Even as the president blows up drug boats, the government routinely declines to pursue charges against smugglers nabbed by the Coast Guard.

On September 2, President Donald Trump gleefully announced that he had ordered a “kinetic strike” on a speedboat “transporting illegal narcotics,” killing 11 men he described as “positively identified Tren de Aragua Narcoterrorists.” That SEAL Team Six operation became newly controversial a few months later because it included a follow-up missile strike that obliterated 2 defenseless survivors of the initial attack as they clung to the smoldering wreckage. But even before that revelation, it was clear that the attack marked an alarming escalation of the war on drugs.

The September 2 operation inaugurated a deadly military campaign against suspected drug boats in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific that so far has killed 115 people in 35 attacks. This new anti-drug strategy treats cocaine couriers as “combatants” who can be killed at will, from a distance and in cold blood, rather than criminal suspects subject to arrest and prosecution. Yet remnants of the latter approach persist, creating contradictions that underline the illogic, immorality, and lawlessness of the murderous methods that Trump prefers.

The U.S. Coast Guard is still intercepting boats suspected of carrying illegal drugs, as it did for decades before Trump deemed that strategy insufficiently violent. Between September 1 and November 30, The New York Times reports, “the Coast Guard interdicted 38 vessels suspected of smuggling drugs.” During the same period, the U.S. military blew up 22 suspected drug boats, killing 83 people. The smugglers who were lucky enough to be caught by the Coast Guard met a strikingly different fate: By and large, they were returned to their home countries because the Justice Department declined to prosecute them.

Under U.S. law, the death penalty generally is not available in drug cases. But the Trump administration says cocaine couriers deserve death, delivered without legal authorization or any semblance of due process, because supplying Americans with the drugs they want is tantamount to murder. It also says cocaine couriers are committing crimes so minor that prosecuting them would be a waste of Justice Department resources. That blatant inconsistency exposes the fallacy of conflating drug smuggling with violent aggression.

In an executive order he issued on his 1st day in office, Trump said “it is the policy of the United States to ensure the total elimination” of drug cartels. Toward that end, Attorney General Pam Bondi instructed federal prosecutors to eschew charges against low-level drug offenders, including smugglers very much like the ones Trump is summarily executing, in favor of higher-value cases involving “leaders and managers” of drug trafficking organizations.

“Under the total-elimination policy,” Bondi wrote in a February 5 memo to Justice Department employees, “it will often be prudent to pursue removal from the United States of a low-level investigative target without immigration status, rather than incurring the time and resource costs associated with criminal prosecution. Similarly, because the Department is working toward elimination of these threats from the homeland, it will rarely be consistent with this policy to pursue foreign arrests and extraditions of targets who may be eligible for safety-valve relief or minor role adjustments. This includes foreign arrests of low-level narcotics offenders pursuant to the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act under Chapter 705 of Title 46.”

That law authorizes the Coast Guard to intercept and arrest drug smugglers in international waters. But according to Bondi, such cases generally are not worth pursuing. So what happens to “low-level narcotics offenders” nabbed by the Coast Guard?

When the Justice Department “declines prosecution,” the Coast Guard told the Times, “the Coast Guard coordinates either the direct repatriation to the detainee’s country of nationality or transfer ashore to Department of Homeland Security custody for additional investigation and expedited removal.” On November 19, for example, a Coast Guard cutter returned to Port Everglades after seizing 49,010 pounds of cocaine in 15 boat interdictions. “The cutter took custody of 36 smuggling suspects during the mission, repatriated 29 to Ecuador for prosecution and referred the others to the Justice Department,” the Times reports. In other words, at least 4/5 of the crew members were deemed unworthy of federal prosecution.

According to Tampa defense attorneys who represent smuggling suspects, the Times says, their clients typically are “men so poor they get their lawyers through court appointment.” They “don’t own the boats and may not know where they are going until they reach a boat and are handed a GPS device with preprogrammed coordinates.” They are “poor fishermen and farmers willing to risk their lives on the drug boats” in exchange for payments that reportedly range from $500 to $10,000 per trip.

It seems likely that many of the “narcoterrorists” whose deaths Trump has ordered fit that profile. We have no way of knowing for sure because the government has provided almost no information about the people killed in these strikes. In most cases, it has not even identified the criminal organizations for which they allegedly worked. But one thing is clear: The same crime cannot be so heinous that it merits the death penalty yet so petty that federal prosecutors can’t be bothered to prove it.

https://reason.com/2026/01/02/the-doj-thinks-cocaine-couriers-are-not-worth-prosecuting-trump-thinks-they-deserve-to-die/

(Source: reason.com, 02/01/2026)

IRAN - Report on the 11th Day of Protests
SAUDI ARABIA: THREE CITIZENS EXECUTED IN ONE DAY
IRAN - 9 men 1 woman executed on January 7
IRAN - Mohsen Teymouri executed in Rasht on January 6
IRAN - Report on the 10th Day of Protests: 36 Dead in 285 Demonstrations
IRAN - 7 men executed in various prisons on January 6
IRAN - Hrana: 2,063 people executed in Iran in 2025
IRAN - Protests: Hengaw confirms at least 27 deaths in ten days
IRAN - Rostam Hariri executed in Semnan on January 5
IRAN - Karim Asgari and Tayebeh Hekmat executed in Zanjan on January 5
USA - Florida. Nonunanimous death penalty verdicts upheld by Supreme Court
IRAN - Report on the 9th Day of Protests
IRAN - Amirreza Sarlak executed in Doroud on January 5
USA - Florida. Marcelle Waldon, 42, Black, sentenced to death
IRAN - Report on the 8th Day of Protests
IRAN - Hengaw: at least 17 people killed during the first week of protests
IRAN - 16 men executed on January 4
IRAN - Report on the 7th Day of Protests
PAKISTAN: TWO BROTHERS SENTENCED TO DEATH IN DOUBLE MURDER CASE
IRAN - 3 men executed in Tabriz on January 3
IRAN - 3 men executed in Shiraz on January 3
IRAN - Arrest of 81 Teenagers in Yasuj and 200 Citizens in Qom During Protests
IRAN - 77 new arrests
IRAN - Report on 5th Day of Protests
IRAN - Report on the Sixth Day of Protests
TANZANIA - Europe brings the LGBTQ+ agenda to Africa
IRAN - Names of 29 arrested protesters
USA - Oklahoma. Why Is Richard Glossip Still in Jail?
IRAN - Report on 4th Day of Protests
IRAN - 3 men executed on January 1
2026
january
  2025
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2024
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2023
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2022
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
 
2021
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2020
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2019
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2018
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2017
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2016
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
 
2015
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2014
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2013
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2012
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2011
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2010
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
 
2009
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2008
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2007
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2006
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2005
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
  2004
january
february
march
april
may
june
july
august
september
october
november
december
 
IRAN - Wife of Djalali pleads for EU action
  IRAN - Hands off Cain Year End Report: At least 284 executions in 2020  
  IRAN: HANDS OFF CAIN, THE HANGING OF THE PROTESTER MOSTAFA SALEHI IS A SHAME FOR THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC WORLD   
  USA: ‘BLACK LIVES MATTER’, BUT IS IT ONLY RACISM?  
  IRAN. HANDS OFF CAIN, REDUCTION OF DRUG EXECUTIONS BUT NUMBERS REMAIN WORRISOME  
  HUMAN RIGHTS: DEMONSTRATION OF THE RADICAL PARTY BEFORE IRANIAN EMBASSY 14 FEBRUARY  
news
-
latest actions
-
data base
-
actions
-
who we are
-
registered users
-
credits