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Northern U.S. Border Described as Undefended Against Cartel Fentanyl Trafficking from Canada

Danny Jones Podcast · #397 - "We're Under Siege" China's New Deal With The Sinaloa Cartel | John Nores · May 18, 2026
Northern U.S. Border Described as Undefended Against Cartel Fentanyl Trafficking from Canada
Danny Jones Podcast
Danny Jones Podcast
#397 - "We're Under Siege" China's New Deal With The Sinaloa Cartel | John Nores
"The track of the border is thinner than the power line track behind my running trail on the house on Forest Service property. That's it. And snow-covered. This is 5,000 miles, guys. And the northern border right now is absolutely under siege because obviously it's super remote. What would it take, a Jalisco New Generation Cartel trafficker with a backpack with up to a million fentanyl pills coming from dirty labs in China or in Canada now, not made in Mexico. Why bother, right? And hike right down that trail and get them into distribution centers."
Nores, who now lives 30 miles from the Canadian border in Montana, revealed that cartels have shifted operations north as the southern border tightened under the Trump administration. The 5,000-mile northern border is largely undefended forest with minimal patrol presence, and fentanyl is now being manufactured in Canadian labs using Chinese precursors before being walked across into rural American communities. Nores described filming helicopter footage showing the border is nothing more than a narrow walking trail through remote wilderness.

About this episode

In this episode, host Danny Jones sits down with retired California game warden John Nores, who spent nearly 30 years battling Mexican and Chinese cartel operations on American public lands. Nores recounts how a routine wildlife enforcement career transformed into a hidden war after he discovered armed Sinaloa Cartel growers operating near Silicon Valley in 2004. The conversation centers on a shocking 2005 incident in which one of Nores' officers was shot by cartel gunmen during a raid in the Los Gatos foothills, marking the first time any U.S. law enforcement officer had been shot by marijuana growers tied to organized crime. Nores explains how cartel operations employ EPA-banned nerve agent insecticides like carbofuran on marijuana crops, killing endangered wildlife and sickening officers, while producing poison-tainted weed that floods the black market nationwide. He reveals that a captured Sinaloa plaza boss openly referred to California as 'Mexico North' and detailed how deported growers are smuggled back across the border within days for as little as four thousand dollars. The episode takes a geopolitical turn as Nores describes recent Chinese cartel involvement, explaining that Chinese criminal organizations now partner with Mexican cartels to dominate black market marijuana while laundering fentanyl cash and supplying precursor chemicals from mainland China. Nores, who now lives in Montana, warns that as the southern border tightened under recent enforcement, cartel operations have shifted to the largely undefended 5,000-mile northern border, where fentanyl is manufactured in Canadian labs and walked across remote forest trails into American communities. He criticizes California's Proposition 64 for reducing illegal growing penalties from felonies to misdemeanors, effectively eliminating deterrence and allowing cartel grows to explode across multiple states. Throughout, Nores calls for national prioritization of the issue, arguing it represents the greatest domestic threat to American wildlife, public lands, and youth safety.

Key takeaways

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