02/01/2026
PDEA: Strict monitoring of social media and e-wallet usage in the drug trade
As drug vendors switch to social media and e-wallet payments, the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) reports that law enforcement authorities in Occidental Mindoro are stepping up community cooperation and cyber surveillance.
The transfer to online communication and cashless payments has made street-level drug trafficking harder to identify, according to PDEA Provincial Director Jeremy Junio, who spoke at the Joint Provincial Peace and Order Council and Anti-Drug Abuse Council meeting in Mamburao on December 17, 2025.
According to PDEA PD, local peddlers are now utilizing social media to complete transactions and digital wallets like GCash to make payments. Rather than conducting in-person transactions, sellers frequently utilize a "dead drop" system, in which they send buyers a picture of the location where drugs are left for pickup, which minimizes direct interaction and helps them avoid being arrested.
The PDEA stated that it collaborates with national cybercrime and financial intelligence organizations to monitor internet activity, identify questionable transactions, and freeze accounts connected to illicit drug activities in order to combat these strategies. Additionally, the agency collaborates with telecommunications and digital service companies to enhance the monitoring of digital footprints and the collection of evidence. PDEA Provincial Director Jeremy Junio stated that, at the provincial level, enforcement teams continue to depend heavily on community collaboration in order to combat drug trafficking that occurs online.
He underscored the significance of Barangay Drug Abuse Councils in reporting suspicious behavior, pointing out that street-level activity frequently manifests itself in communities long before law enforcement becomes aware of it.
He claims that "shabu" is still the most popular drug in the province, costing an average of P4,000 per gram.
In the meanwhile, he said that PDEA carried out five operations between October and December that led to the arrest of six high-value individuals. Provincial Director Junio also said that the dismantling of a drug den in San Jose was a necessary step because drug dens promote repeated use and frequently result in additional illicit activities, such prostitution.
The PDEA is stepping up preventive efforts by conducting lectures in schools, workplaces, and barangays, in addition to enforcing the law. The focus of these sessions is on digital safety, spotting indicators of drug usage, and comprehending how illicit transactions are being carried out via online platforms.
To combat the changing strategies employed by drug organizations, PD said, it is essential to increase public awareness.
In order to combat the drug issue in Occidental Mindoro, the PDEA and its partner organizations stated they would keep increasing cyber monitoring, financial tracking, community reporting mechanisms, and preventative education.
(VND/JBG/PIA MIMAROPA-Occidental Mindoro/photographs from PDEA Occidental Mindoro)