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Sleepy evacuee gets arrested for drugs, guns
By Aimee Yee
Sept. 20, 2004

An Alabama man fleeing hurricane conditions was arrested after he fell asleep in the Wendy's drive-through with a bag of marijuana on his front seat, Lt. Sal Mike of the Hammond Police Department said.

A motorist flagged down a city police officer Wednesday afternoon to report the South-west Railroad drive-through pickup lane was blocked by a man who had fallen asleep, Mike said.

Around 3 p.m., the motorist pointed out the maroon 2002 Ford F-150 truck in the line, and an officer saw Eddrick Williams, 28, asleep at the wheel.

The policeman knocked on the window to tell Williams to move on.

When Williams rolled down the window, a bag of pot on the front seat was clearly visible, Mike said.

The officer reached inside the truck and grabbed the pot, Mike said.

He arrested the driver and discovered three weapons.

One was a 10 mm semiautomatic pistol found in the center console, Mike said. A .45-caliber semiautomatic pistol and 12 gauge assault-style shotgun were found in the back seat.

The officer seized all three weapons, the marijuana and a large amount of cash for evidence.

Williams is charged with illegal possession of firearms while in possession of a controlled dangerous substance.

Link
 
Teen gets eight years for psychedelic mushrooms

Monday, September 20, 2004

http://reviewappeal.midsouthnews.com/news.ez?viewStory=25328

ROGERSVILLE (AP) — A Hawkins County teenager was sentenced to eight years in prison for dealing psychedelic mushrooms.

Martin Lee Long, 18, of Unicoi, was sentenced Monday by Circuit Court Judge James Beckner to the eight-year term and a $2,225 fine.

He pleaded guilty to possession of Schedule I narcotics with intent to deliver and possession of drug paraphernalia. The narcotics were psilocybin mushrooms.

Assistant District Attorney Doug Godbee said he wanted to send a message.

"It's listed as a Schedule I narcotic, which means it is deemed among the most dangerous narcotics out there," Godbee said of the mushrooms.

"These mushrooms are basically the same as LSD in that people who take them hallucinate and seriously threaten the safety of themselves and people around them. This is a drug we definitely want to prevent from taking a foothold in our communities."

Long will be eligible for parole after serving 30 percent of his sentence.

———

Information from: Kingsport Times-News, http://www.timesnews.net
 
Three more arrested in lava lamp drugs case
NZPA
21 September 2004

Police investigating the alleged importation of illegal drugs hidden inside lava lamps have made three more arrests.

They have also learned that a further 30 lava lamps, believed to contain 9kg of the drug crystal methamphetamine, were imported into New Zealand, as well as the lava lamps that were seized in July.

Detective Hamish Kerr of the Auckland City police drug squad said three men were arrested on Friday.

They were a 35-year-old unemployed Chinese man, a 27-year-old Hong Kong student and a 26-year-old from Taiwan.

The trio appeared in Auckland District Court yesterday charged with three counts of possession for supply of a class A drug, two counts of supplying a Class A drug and three charges of importing a class A drug.

All three were remanded to reappear later this month.

The case comes after police and customs officials seized $9 million worth of alleged illegal drugs hidden inside lava lamps during July.

At that time, a Chinese student, aged 23, was charged.

The latest seizure brings the total value of crystal methamphetamine allegedly imported to New Zealand from China in the Operation Lava case to more than $18 million.

Police believe an Asian crime syndicate was behind the importation.

Link
 
Police Say Couple Took Grandchildren With Them To Buy Heroin,
Children In Car's Back Seat During Arrest

Associated Press
September 21, 2004

READING, Pa. -- Police in Reading, Pa., say a Luzerne County couple took their two grandchildren with them when they drove to Reading to buy heroin.

William Davis, 47, of Ebervale was ordered held on $25,000 bail Monday, charged with heroin possession, child endangerment and other offenses. He was taken to the Berks County Prison following a preliminary hearing.

His wife, 47-year-old Vicki Davis, faces identical charges and remains free awaiting further court action.

The two were arrested around 12:30 a.m. June 17th after they were stopped on state Route 61 in Shoemakersville.

Patrolman Michael Cardell testified that he found 149 packets of heroin and two syringes in Davis' car after he stopped him for driving without a tail light.

Officials say the grandchildren, ages 7 and 3, were in the back seat. Police called the children's mother to pick them up.

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Denver Police make huge ecstasy bust

http://9news.com/acm_news.aspx?OSGN...MPLATEID=0c76dce6-ac1f-02d8-0047-c589c01ca7bf

DENVER - Police say this is the largest ecstasy bust with which they have been involved.

During a traffic stop in central Utah Monday, a sheriff's deputy intercepted a shipment of ecstasy pills.

After learning the 18,000 tablets were bound for Denver, law enforcement decided to allow the delivery to be completed.

When undercover detectives took possession of the drugs, they arrested 47-year-old Kim Nguyen and 21-year-old Kimberlee Nguyen.

They are being held in the Denver City Jail on charges of possession of a controlled substance.

The tablets are believed to be worth about half a million dollars.
 
Re: Denver Police make huge ecstasy bust

BigCat007 said:
http://9news.com/acm_news.aspx?OSGN...MPLATEID=0c76dce6-ac1f-02d8-0047-c589c01ca7bf


When undercover detectives took possession of the drugs, they arrested 47-year-old Kim Nguyen and 21-year-old Kimberlee Nguyen.

They are being held in the Denver City Jail on charges of possession of a controlled substance.


Lets see here....Kimberlee will be in her 80's when she is released from federal prison and Kim Nguyen will most likely die in the pen.........
 
Denver Police make huge ecstasy bust

Denver Police make huge ecstasy bust
9/21/2004

DENVER - Police say this is the largest ecstasy bust with which they have been involved.

During a traffic stop in central Utah Monday, a sheriff's deputy intercepted a shipment of ecstasy pills.

After learning the 18,000 tablets were bound for Denver, law enforcement decided to allow the delivery to be completed.

When undercover detectives took possession of the drugs, they arrested 47-year-old Kim Nguyen and 21-year-old Kimberlee Nguyen.

They are being held in the Denver City Jail on charges of possession of a controlled substance.

The tablets are believed to be worth about half a million dollars.
 
When three is definitely a crowd
by Ryan Hawk, Coastal View Police Beat
September 23, 2004

Two deputies on foot patrol at the intersection of Santa Monica and Via Real noticed the loud 1993 Ford Explorer pull up to, and roll through the stop sign. The white truck sped quickly across the intersection, swung into the parking lot of the convenience store and parked with an abrupt jerk right next to the officers.

The deputies were not amused with the premature engine, tire and brake wear the three 18-year-olds inside were causing the innocent SUV. They called the driver and front passenger out to question them.

Soon, the third passenger, a Santa Barbara youth who had been seated in the back seat, was up for questioning. But he wasn’t interested in having his rights violated, he said. He pressed down the automatic locks, but the driver’s window was left open, so the officer pulled up the lock.

The youth in the back seat pressed it down again. The smell of alcohol and appetite stimulating hippie weed was too strong to keep the officer from losing this fight, however. When stated to the youth that he was causing a delay in the investigation with this charade, the 18-year-old moved his hand around, fidgeting with something inside his pocket.

The officer opened the door and the youth stepped out, yelling he was being searched illegally. The pat down revealed a cigarette box in the front pocket. Knowing that no self-respecting man smokes Parliament Lights, the officer opened the box to reveal it was stuffed with marijuana. The 18-year-old began flailing his arms and pushed the two officers back. But the handcuffs were soon in place and he was on his way to jail.

A wooden pipe and a glass marijuana pipe with burnt residue were subsequently located inside the vehicle. The driver was warned not to drive so carelessly in the future.

Link
 
Cops raid pot farm

Cops raid pot farm

by MIKE PECK
Managing Editor

Three Milam County men were arrested Tuesday after local and state lawmen converged on a marijuana production farm just east of Thorndale and seized over $1 million in growing marijuana plants.

Authorities also confiscated an estimated 200 pounds of marijuana that had been processed, packaged and hidden in one of two houses located on the property.

Milam County Chief Deputy Ted Retchloff, who is also an investigator with the Central Texas Narcotics Task Force, called the farm, located about three miles east of Thorndale off US 79, an "elaborate operation."

"They had a pump with lines running to the marijuana fields and that area over there was being used to germinate marijuana seeds," Retchloff said. "It appears they would plant it, grow it, process it and then package it for sale."

Coy Ray Doss, 58, Abraham Doss, 21, and Alden Ray Doss, 19, were arraigned Wednesday on first degree felony charges of possession of marijuana over 50 pounds but less than 2,000 pounds. The two younger men were also charged with first degree felony possession of a controlled substance, less than 400 grams. The trio remained in the Milam County Jail. Bond was set at $50,000 for each charge.

Retchloff said authorities do not yet know how long the pot farm might have been in operation, but he noted that the plants ranged in size from a few inches to more than six feet tall.

Additionally, Retchloff said it appeared that there were several types of marijuana being raised at the location.

Officers with the Milam County Sheriffs Department and the Central Texas Narcotics Task Force, outfitted with blue latex gloves, spent most of Tuesday afternoon pulling up the plants by hand and then loading them into a rented 14-foot U-Haul box van.

By the end of the day, the back of the van was stuffed to capacity with live plants and as many as 20 boxes of processed marijuana as well as mushrooms and other suspected narcotics.

Authorities estimated that the processed marijuana alone weighed in at 200 or more pounds.

Investigators with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms also responded to the location after authorities discovered several weapons in one of the houses on the property.

"All of the guns were legal firearms," West said. "But, when ATF officials ran the serial numbers, one came back as having been reported stolen."

The case unfolded after Retchloff received a tip concerning the cultivation and sale of marijuana from the location.

Local officials called in a Department of Public Safety helicopter from Austin to do an aerial survey of the area. Retchloff was among those who spotted the farm from the air and then radioed other lawmen who were waiting along US 79 to move in on the area.

Authorities said there were as many as nine children and several other adults at the location when they arrived. When officers inquired about why they children were at home rather than in school they were told the children are home schooled.

Milam County District Attorney Kerry Spears also responded to the location and made an aerial survey of the farm from the helicopter.

Officials said the marijuana was spotted about 10 a.m. Tuesday and and by 10:30 a.m. authorities had converged on the farm and taken two suspects, Abraham Doss and Alden Ray Doss into custody.

Coy Ray Doss was arrested later in the day.

Authorities said the pot and other narcotics have been transported to a Department laboratory for analysis.

A determination has not yet been made concerning forfeiture proceedings on the homes and farm property. State law allows for such forfeitures when homes and acreage are used in the production of illegal narcotics.

Authorities said that an investigation into the pot farming business will continue. However, at least for now, no further arrests are anticipated.


Link
 
Top Russian Mafia Boss Jailed for Drug Smuggling

The Moscow Regional court has sentenced a powerful Russian drug lord, who owned several international firms, to 21 years in prison for smuggling six tons of the narcotic mandrax to a number of countries in 2000.

Vadim Petrov was sentenced Tuesday to 21 years in prison, together with his accomplices who were each given 20, 19, and 18 years, the Itar-Tass news agency reported.

The ruling culminated a three-year criminal investigation into the workings of an underworld kingpin.

The dapper drug boss, who mingled with celebrities and even ran for the State Duma, owned a French castle, a Spanish villa, and about $500 million worth of real estate in the Caribbean. He and his “business partners” registered several fake IT firms in Moscow in the mid 1990s as covers for their drug trade, and then went on to bigger and better things.

In 1997, Petrov developed a recipe for producing methaqualone, also know as mandrax — a barbiturate-like narcotic with effects similar to those of heroin. Smuggling 12 tons of banned sedatives from China to produce the new drug, Petrov stashed the store in a number of warehouses in the Moscow suburbs.

The drug clan sent out its first shipment of mandrax in February of 1999, when a ship delivered 3 tons of the drug to Mozambique through a Romanian cover firm. Another 3 tons were delivered to Malaysia in March of 2000.

Petrov’s criminal empire had also traded in cocaine since 1999, when it made several shipments to Francis Morgan’s British mafia clan.

Then, in May of 2000, U.S. Customs in Miami smelled something fishy when it opened a container supposedly containing industrial machinery, and discovered cocaine. The DEA then informed Russia’s Interior Ministry, and the shipment, which arrived shortly afterwards at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport, was intercepted.

Investigators launched a case, and in December 2001, Petrov, who was tracked down in Monaco, was extradited to Moscow.


http://www.mosnews.com/news/2004/09/08/mafiadrugs.shtml
 
Colombian police assault cocaine labs

Colombian police assault cocaine labs

CUMBITARA, Colombia (AP) -- Seven helicopter gunships skirted the steep mountainsides, then quickly descended on a cocaine lab, marked by a smoke grenade thrown by one of the raiders.

As the heavily armed anti-narcotics police jumped from the hovering craft, accompanied by an informant wearing a ski mask, peasants who worked the coca fields and in the complex scampered away.

Associated Press journalists accompanied the officers on the lightning raid Saturday, allowing them to see firsthand the type of dangerous operation that has put a crimp in Colombia's cocaine production.

So far this year, raids have destroyed 100 labs that convert coca paste -- made from the leaves of the coca bush -- into cocaine, said Col. Alvaro Velandia, deputy director of Colombia's anti-narcotics police.

Saturday's raid in the mountains of southwestern Colombia showed that precise intelligence, coordination between police and helicopter squadrons and swift action are needed to destroy the drug labs, often located in remote, rugged regions teeming with Marxist rebels, who make huge profits by controlling the drug trade.

After flying over vast coca fields hugging the base of steep mountainsides, the U.S.-made helicopters -- three Black hawks and four Hueys -- circled the cocaine-producing complex. One raider dropped a smoke grenade, its purple cloud billowing against a background of bright green coca bushes.

One helicopter, carrying an AP reporter, an AP photographer and police, banked into the landing zone and hovered four feet from the ground.

With the wash of the noisy rotors flattening nearby coca bushes, the door gunner made a hand signal, ordering those aboard to jump. The journalists and the raiders leapt to the earth. The police quickly fanned out, assault rifles at the ready.

"We are in the cocaine empire of the FARC," Velandia declared as he surveyed the scene. FARC, an acronym for Colombia's bigger rebel group -- the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia -- is one of the main players in Colombia's drug trade.
Finding a lab

Narino state, where Saturday's raid unfolded, is one of Colombia's major cocaine-producing areas, after U.S.-backed aerial fumigation wiped out much of the coca crop in neighboring Putumayo state, along the Ecuadorean border.

The 30 raiders, wearing olive green uniforms and helmets, noticed some earth recently had been overturned. They found buried barrels holding 44 pounds of coca base. The informant, who will be paid by police, looked on with satisfaction.

"I used to work here," he told the AP. "But I left because I had not been paid in 10 months. We were producing 3,306 pounds of cocaine every eight days."

Other policemen, meanwhile, moved down a slippery, steep slope, and found dozens of barrels of chemicals and electrical cables. Inside a hut, food was still cooking in a kitchen.

Moving deeper into the now-abandoned complex, the policemen found hidden in a gorge the lab that converted the coca paste into pure cocaine. Inside, they found 772 pounds of cocaine.

Suddenly, they were surprised by the ringing of a cell phone. A member of the Colombian inspector general's office found the phone and answered.

"Did you get away? Did you get away," a voice on the other end asked anxiously, before the caller realized he was not talking to a drug worker and hung up.

The officers also discovered an abandoned gold mine. Inside was a cocaine drying chamber.

All the while, a police explosives expert was lining the drug lab and the gold mine with charges. The police wanted to get in and out fast, before rebels of the FARC's 29th Front could arrive to counterattack.

The police stood back and watched as the explosives went off, echoing off the mountainsides. Pieces of the drug lab flew high into the air. The gold mine collapsed.

Members of the raiding party clambered back into the helicopters. One of the door gunners spotted a muzzle flash from the ground and opened fire. A cascade of machine-gun shell casings danced off the floor of the chopper and tumbled out the door, as the chopper clattered back to base at Pasto city where the raiders began planning a fresh operation.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/americas/09/26/colombia.raid.ap/index.html


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US Seizes 30,000 pounds of cocaine

U.S. Seizes 30,000 Pounds of Cocaine



WASHINGTON (AP) - The Coast Guard and Navy seized 30,000 pounds of cocaine from a boat off South America's Pacific coast this month in what authorities called the largest-ever seizure of the drug at sea.

On Sept. 17, the USS Curts, a Navy frigate based in San Diego, intercepted the Lina Maria, a Cambodian-flagged fishing boat, about 300 miles west of the Galapagos Islands. A Coast Guard team boarded the boat and found 30,000 pounds of cocaine hidden in a sealed ballast tank.

Ten people were detained. They were charged Monday by federal authorities in Tampa, Fla.

A second seizure was made Friday in the same area. The frigate USS Crommelin, based in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, stopped the fishing boat San Jose, and a Coast Guard team found 26,000 pounds of cocaine hidden under fish and ice in the vessel's cargo hold. Eight people were detained.


The two boats had Colombian crews and were believed to have come from Colombia. Officials believe they were headed for the U.S. West Coast, said Navy Lt. Ligia Cohen, a spokeswoman for U.S. Southern Command.


In the last year, the Coast Guard has seized a record 240,518 pounds of cocaine, worth about $7.7 billion, officials said. Much of that is in the Caribbean, but authorities say there is also a thriving drug trade on the Pacific coast of the Americas.


The Navy provides warships to assist in counternarcotics operations, but military personnel are not allowed to arrest suspected drug smugglers because they are not law enforcement officers. Coast Guard teams instead make the actual arrests.

Link
 
Missouri Linebacker Arrested on Marijuana Charges
9/27/2004
By MICHAEL PETRE, The Associated Press

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri starting linebacker David Richard was suspended Monday from the Big 12 game against Colorado on Saturday after police say he was arrested for marijuana possession.

Richard, 21, was arrested about 2:30 a.m. Sept. 11, Columbia police Capt. Marvin McCrary confirmed Monday. Police, dispatched to a report of a party in an off-campus neighborhood, heard loud music coming from a parked car, a 1999 Dodge Intrepid registered to Richard.

Officers found Richard and another man in the vehicle, along with a suspected marijuana cigarette and a small bag of suspected marijuana, according to the police report.

Both men were arrested for misdemeanor marijuana possession.

The second suspect was not a football player, McCrary said.

A Missouri State Highway Patrol lab was testing the contents of the cigarette and bag to confirm if it was marijuana, and no charges have been filed.

At a Monday afternoon press conference, Missouri coach Gary Pinkel said Richard would not play Saturday when the Tigers (2-1) open Big 12 play at home against Colorado (3-0), saying that Richard "has been suspended from this game for disciplinary reasons." He made no additional comment.

Richard will be replaced in the lineup by sophomore Marcus Bacon.

Richard, a 6-foot-2, 235-pound sophomore in his first season at Missouri, started all three games and had six tackles. During Missouri's Sept 18. against Ball State — the first game after his arrest — Richard started but did not see much action for the rest of the game.

At suburban St. Louis' Hazelwood East High School in 2001, Richard was an All-American at linebacker and tailback. That season, he was named high school defensive player of the year by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the St. Louis American.

Richard initially played at Michigan State as a tailback, leading the Spartans in rushing with 654 yards in 2002, averaging 4.9 yards per carry, before transferring to Missouri, along with former Hazelwood East teammate safety Brandon Massey.

Both players sat out last season because of NCAA transfer rules and had three years of eligibility remaining.

Pinkel moved Richard to linebacker during the offseason.

Link
 
Son's drug debt puts dad in jail
By Nevin Farrell, Belfast Telegraph
29 September 2004

A 50-year-old Merseyside man became involved in an attempt to smuggle a quarter of a million pounds worth of drugs into Northern Ireland to pay off a debt his cocaine addict son had run up, it has been claimed in court.

Antrim Crown Court heard yesterday that Paul McSween, of Lathum Close, Prescot, was detected as part of a planned police operation on November 11 last year as he and his wife Barbara (52), drove a Ford Mondeo off a ferry at Larne after sailing from Fleetwood.

A police search dog helped find 50 kilos of cannabis resin worth £250,000, professionally sealed inside door panels of the car.

McSween admitted a charge of possessing the drugs with intent to supply when a similar charge against his wife was dropped and today he was jailed for three years.

During interview McSween initially claimed he had no knowledge of the drugs and that he was asked by a member of the travelling community to take the car to the Causeway Hotel on the north coast of Co Antrim where it would be bought by an unknown man.

A thousand pounds was found and McSween said it was to be spent shopping during the trip.

Prosecution lawyer Neil Connor said the police view was that the story was a "tissue of lies" and that McSween was in fact a drugs courier and that it was his own car.

Mr Connor said the police believed that, given the amount of drugs involved and the risk of custody, that McSween would have been paid thousands of pounds and that the £1,000 was "expenses".

Defence barrister Stephen Fowler said McSween's 28-year-old son had a serious addiction to cocaine and that as a result his marriage had broken down and he lost his home.


Mr Fowler said: "Violence was threatened to the son and the family home," but that McSween was told that if he took the consignment of drugs the debt would be cleared.

Link
 
dumbass

Man tries to fly with meth lab
The Daily Interlake
September 29, 2004

A Kalispell man was arrested Friday for allegedly attempting to board a commercial airplane with a meth lab.

Steven K. Konopatzke, 43, reportedly carried the components for making methamphetamine in carry-on luggage.

They were found during a routine inspection at Glacier Park International Airport.

Security workers reportedly also found sulfuric acid in Konopatzke's checked luggage.

He was reportedly ticketed to fly to Michigan.

A law officer with the Northwest Drug Task Force said Konopatzke denied that the items were his and said he had picked up the bags from a friend he wouldn't identify.

The officer said gray crystals in Konopatzke's bag are thought to be iodine. Also found was a substance tested as ephedrine (a component used in making methamphetamine), a white powder analyzed as a diet pill and another white crystalline substance.

The officer said Konopatzke also carried coffee filters, pieces of hose, clamps and balloons — all are used to make the illegal stimulant.

Another drug task force officer said the toxic and flammable chemicals used to make methamphetamine pose a peril on the ground that would be compounded in an enclosed airplane.

"Anything we are afraid of in meth labs, going up at 32,000 feet or whatever" is worse, he said.

People who manufacture methamphetamine in their own homes may jeopardize themselves or a few friends, he said.

Someone bringing chemicals such as iodine and sulfuric acid on a flight endangers everyone on board with the potential of a fire, explosion or a leak of chemicals that would recirculate through the plane’s air system.

Because of that added risk, Konopatzke could face enhanced charges, the officer said.

For now, prosecuting Deputy County Attorney Dan Guzynski has charged Konopatzke with operation of a clandestine drug lab.

Link
 
Four nabbed in major Ecstasy haul
BY SIM LEOI LEOI

PUTRAJAYA: The Customs Department has foiled attempts by four people to smuggle in RM2.7mil worth of Ecstasy and Eramin pills at the KL International Airport after it recently decided to randomly check passengers using the green lane.

The attempted smuggling came to light after a Taiwanese woman in her 20s was found to have 9,750 Ecstasy pills stashed under a false bottom of her baggage on Sept 23.

Customs director-general Tan Sri Abdul Halil Abdul Mutalib said that after questioning, “she told us to expect a few more deliveries.”

n_pg04halil.jpg

BIGGEST BUST THIS YEAR: Abdul Halil showing the pills seized at the Customs headquarters in Putrajaya Thursday.--Bernamapic

“We subsequently caught three Malaysian men, including a key syndicate member, trying to smuggle in the pills on flights from Paris on Sept 25 and Sept 26,” he told a press conference here.

The pills were hidden in cosmetic, green tea and Hello Kitty boxes.

More than 20,600 Ecstasy pills were recovered from two men on Sept 25 and more than 21,400 Ecstasy and Eramin from the third man the next day.

Abdul Halil said the drug haul was the department’s biggest success this year and it was because of the decision to randomly select passengers passing through the green lane for baggage screening.

“This is the practice in countries in Europe, the United States and Australia, where passengers are chosen for screening through a risk assessment profile.

“We decided to implement this measure as we felt that there are unscrupulous passengers taking advantage of this (green lane) facility, which is meant for the convenience of genuine tourists,’’ he said.

“Previously, we acted based on tip-offs.”

The four suspects have been remanded until Thursday. Authorities have yet to establish whether the smuggling is the work of a local or international syndicate.

Abdul Halil said that most of the pills originated from Amsterdam, adding that the department would install more X-ray machines at the KLIA to screen passengers using the green lane.

The airport has only two X-ray machines at present, he added.Read Original
 
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