Mega Merged Drug Bust Thread v2.0

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Just heard this on NPR today. Link to article: http://www.cnn.com/2014/05/07/justice/dea-synthetic-drug-busts/

Busts across U.S. target synthetic drug makers, sellers

(CNN) -- More than 150 people were arrested in a four-month nationwide roundup of alleged sellers and makers of synthetic drugs, substances that authorities say can be more dangerous than the drugs they mimic, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said Wednesday.

Federal, state and local agencies collaborated on the arrests, targeting drugs such as synthetic marijuana -- often sold online and labeled as incense to hide its purpose -- and hallucinogens and stimulants sold under the guise of "bath salts" or "plant food," the DEA said.

Authorities seized hundreds of thousands of synthetic drug packages and more than $20 million in cash and assets in the 29-state, January-to-May roundup, which the DEA said was the second phase of an operation called Project Synergy.

"Many who manufacture, distribute and sell these dangerous synthetic drugs found out first hand today that DEA will target, find and prosecute those who have committed these crimes," DEA Administrator Michele Leonhart said, adding the agency was targeting those "who are all too willing to experiment on our children and young adults."

Synthetic drugs are a wide range of chemical products with ever-changing -- and often dangerous -- ingredients. Synthetic marijuana, for example, can be plant material treated with psychoactive compounds that mimic marijuana's active ingredient.

Authorities and researchers have said synthetic drugs are particularly dangerous because their ingredients can be particularly potent and haven't been tested for safety. Users of bath salts sometimes have violent episodes, extreme paranoia and disorientation, the DEA says.

In the roundup's first phase, authorities arrested more than 227 people from December 2012 to June 2013, the DEA said.
 
Son uses father as unsuspecting drug mule to cart $13m meth oil

Sworn Ibrahim family enemy Alex Macris helped to save his father from life in prison after admitting he used him as an unsuspecting drug mule to transport $13 million worth of methamphetamine oil in jerry cans, a court has heard.

Police arrested Stelios Macris, 75, after they found 50 kilograms of meth oil in the boot of his Ford Falcon station wagon and the spare bedroom of his central coast property in 2011.

But a court acquitted Mr Macris on Thursday after his son told the court he had “duped” his father into moving the drugs.

In giving his evidence, Alex Macris said it was “low, dog act” getting his father to cart the drugs, but did so because he never dreamt police would pull him over.

Despite confessing the drugs were his, he will not face prosecution.

The court gave him a certificate granting him immunity from prosecution on the grounds that the evidence he gave was likely to incriminate himself.

Alex Macris married chicken and racing heiress Jessica Ingham in a lavish $500,000 wedding on Bennelong Lawn near the Opera House last year. His father was allowed to attend after his mother, Roula, posted $2 million bail.

A Sydney society family, the Inghams made their fortune through a successful horse racing operation and a poultry empire which they offloaded for $880 million in 2013. They were last valued on the BRW Rich List as having a wealth exceeding $1.1 billion.

Alex Macris is also the brother of nightclub owner John Macris - a man Michael Ibrahim was accused of conspiring to murder in 2009. A jury later acquitted Mr Ibrahim and family associate Rodney Atkinson.

In August 2011, a police informant tipped off the force’s Middle Eastern organised crime squad. Police were told Alex Macris was in possession of a large amount of methamphetamine oil and that he or an associate would be moving it from the central coast and Sydney.

Gosford District Court heard this week that detectives pulled over Stelios Macris on the F3 near Brooklyn on August 2.

In the boot of his car they found three metal drums filled with 26 kilograms of meth oil. The retiree claimed he thought it was petrol.

After police arrested the Mosman man they then searched his Phegans Bay property, where they found another three plastic containers and a metal drum containing a further 24 kilograms of the oil.

The oil can be used to make the crystallised form of methamphetamine, or the drug known as ice.

The trial before Judge Roy Ellis this week heard evidence that Stelios drove to the central coast to do repairs to one of his investment properties.

Alex learnt of the trip and asked his father to bring back three jerry cans he had been storing in the family's Phegans Bay property.

Detective Inspector Angelo Memmolo told the court the person who tipped off police about the drugs never mentioned the name Stelios Macris.

Solicitor Kiki Kyriacou, who was acting for barrister John Korn, said Stelios Macris had acquired his wealth through legal means and hard work.

“The evidence of Inspector Memmolo was that Mr Macris had never been mentioned by name, nor description by the source of the information to police,” Mr Kyriacou said.

“Mr Macris has never been mentioned to be involved in any way shape or form in the drug trade, nor any businesses as alleged against his sons,” he said.

Judge Ellis said there was not sufficient evidence to prove the accused knew the contents of the containers were illegal.

He found him not guilty of all four charges relating to the commercial supply of a prohibited drug.

At the time of the haul, Detective Superintendent Deb Wallace said the operation had a huge impact on a criminal network.

"We would allege that when you take 50 kilograms of ice, technically, off the street, it has a huge dent in any criminal organisation," she said. "And we would suggest that no one operates alone in these matters."

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/son-uses-...3m-meth-oil-20140510-zr8pq.html#ixzz31Lu2OavN
 
Strange bedfellows arrested in massive crackdown on Sydney's underworld

They had been running small businesses - barber shops, service stations, cafes and the like - across Sydney with modest success, yet were living luxurious lifestyles with multimillion-dollar homes, flashy cars and racing boats.

But, over the past two years, police have arrested 30 players in Sydney's drug market, picking them off almost one by one, in one of the longest and most successful crackdowns on organised crime in the city.

It has revealed a series of unlikely bedfellows working together in Sydney's organised crime networks, allegedly to import and distribute all sorts of drugs; from opium and heroin from Iran, to MDA and ice from parts of Asia, and cocaine from South America.

These discreet businessmen were allegedly working with members of established bikie gangs.

There is evidence of Middle Eastern crime figures allegedly doing deals with a senior member of the Bra Boys.

Senior police sources say some of those arrested in the two-year operation named Strike Force Taipan, which concluded with the final two arrests at the side of the road at Flemington early on Thursday, have been in their sights for decades.

Some of those arrested were well established in Sydney's underworld and, until now, untouched.

“The investigators involved in Strike Force Taipan have been relentless in their pursuit of some of the most serious and well organised criminals in NSW,” Deputy Commissioner Nick Kaldas said.

The first arrests occurred in February 2012 when Iranian-born Australian Mohammad Dashti, 43, walked into a storage unit on Sydney's north shore that housed several pallets of fruit juice boxes.

Waiting police were more interested in the fact the juice containers hid 47.5 kilograms of "black tar" heroin, as well as almost 2.2 kilograms of brown heroin and 25.5 kilograms of ice - together worth more than $26 million on the streets.

The arrest of Dashti and his colleague Abbas Bayatpour, who have now both pleaded guilty in court to large-scale drug importation, led police to a network that crossed traditional criminal and ethnic boundaries.

Along with the Iranians, Italians, Chinese and Greeks were arrested. Among the 30 are associates of the Hells Angels and the Rebels.

Commander of the Organised Crime Squad, Detective Superintendent Scott Cook said the connections were often formed through social networks.

"The largest and most influential organised criminals are no longer working in silos along geographic or ethnic lines, rather they are working across numerous markets with an expansive and multi-faceted network of criminal contacts," Detective Superintendent Scott Cook, said,

“The investigation by Strike Force Taipan, which has resulted in the arrests of people from a whole range of different backgrounds, reaffirms that point."

Many of the 30 were operating what appeared to be legitimate businesses in suburbs across Sydney, allegedly using their existing company structures as a front to carry out deals with each other and to launder the drug money or send it overseas.

Detective Superintendent Cook said police would be looking at the accountants and lawyers who might have assisted these alleged criminals in hiding their illegal businesses, their cash and their assets.

Detective Superintendent Cook said many of those arrested were not the "usual criminal types". They lived in well-to-do areas, sent their children to top schools and were well dressed.

They weren't the ones engaging in the petty low-level gun violence that has occurred through much of Sydney's west and south-west in the past two years, he said.

Along with $155 million in illicit drugs, detectives from Strike Force Taipan have also sezied almost $2.3 million in assets - including an $800,000 high-performance speedboat from Northmead in Sydney's north-west.

While the investigation began more than two years ago, 16 of the arrests have occured since March 1, since the establishment of the Organised Crime Squad.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/strange-b...-underworld-20140515-zrdh7.html#ixzz31pCy1aju
 
^ lol, it's because of the area they hang out/live in called Maroubra, which is in Sydney. Incase you didn't know. Nothing to do with female Bras haha. They are a bunch of surfers who get involved with this and that apparently :)
 
So liquid cocaine smuggling has always been used, looks like more on a national scale though. I have been told before it has been smuggled in this method as the smell is different as when it comes in powder, less of a "strong kick". Anyway:

Argentina says it has foiled a plan to produce and ship liquid cocaine to the United States and Europe.

At least eight people are suspected of having sent two tonnes of the drug, mixed with insulating oil inside large transformers, to Mexico.

A Mexican chemist and several Argentine police officers are among the arrested, Argentine Security Minister Sergio Berni told reporters.

It was the second seizure of liquid cocaine in Argentina this year.

Police suspect this type of trafficking is on the rise, the Argentine media reported.

In February, liquid cocaine was found hidden in a tanker lorry.

Not afraid'
The transformers made it through customs controls in Argentina and in Mexico, Mr Berni said.

But on closer inspection, a team of Argentine investigators who had been on the gang's trail since 2012 found the drugs.

The shipment, seized in the Yucatan Peninsula two weeks ago, would have reportedly have a street value of $40m (£24m).

From Mexico, the drugs would allegedly be smuggled into the US and Europe.

The authorities also seized computers, weapons and cash, Mr Berni told a news conference in Buenos Aires.

"The important thing is to investigate, to not be afraid, to show courage like this judge did," Mr Berni praised the investigating judge in charge of the case, Sandra Arroyo Salgado.

On 22 April, a Mexican chemist was arrested in the Buenos Aires district of Belgrano after a shootout with the police.

Mr Berni said Cesar Cornejo travelled to Argentina after his partners – most of them serving and former policemen – procured enough cocaine in other South American countries.

The drug was then mixed with insulating oil and hidden in transformers.
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-27451782
 
^ Interesting how in the article they talk of liquid cocaine in huge amounts and then the 3 pictures they use are all of guns laid on a table...?
 
I always wonder what exactly the media means when they talk about "liquid cocaine" or "liquid meth." In this case they state the cocaine was mixed with "insulating oil..." what the hell is that? Some solvent that they dissolved the cocaine freebase in?
 
^ lol, it's because of the area they hang out/live in called Maroubra, which is in Sydney. Incase you didn't know. Nothing to do with female Bras haha. They are a bunch of surfers who get involved with this and that apparently :)

Didn't they make their name partially through assaulting heroin dealers in their area of Sydney? Pretty ironic that some of them would be involved in the drug trade in some way, although not unexpected.
 
I always wonder what exactly the media means when they talk about "liquid cocaine" or "liquid meth." In this case they state the cocaine was mixed with "insulating oil..." what the hell is that? Some solvent that they dissolved the cocaine freebase in?

Basically, yeah. Coke mixes really easy, it is often smuggled in alcohol etc

Was a case a few years ago someone was given a bottle of whisky as a present to take home, they got home had a glass, had a heart attack and died it was concentrated cocaine, few days preceeding his death his friends thought they would have a drink in his memory, they drank from the same bottle but survived and soon realised what it that killed him
 
Didn't they make their name partially through assaulting heroin dealers in their area of Sydney? Pretty ironic that some of them would be involved in the drug trade in some way, although not unexpected.

Possibly, I'm really not sure If I know the origins of their 'gang'. There was some doco I watched on it ages ago, cant recall the name.
 
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Colombian police have seized 2,350 kilograms of cocaine hidden inside just one boat.
Authorities laid out their haul - for the cameras in a bid to reinforce their determination to crack down on illicit drugs in the South American country, which was long the world's leading cocaine producer.
The cocaine has a street value of $125 million - a considerable mark-up as according to figures provided by the police, a kilogram of cocaine can be purchased for $2,200 in the jungles in Colombia.
Colombian police have already seized over 29 tons of drugs this year.

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In April they intercepted seven tons of cocaine headed to the Dutch port of Rotterdam in one of the biggest such busts in years.
On Friday Colombia's government and the main rebel group in the country announced an agreement to jointly combat illicit drugs.


Under the accord, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as the FARC, agreed to divorce itself completely from the drug trade.
DEA and Colombian authorities have said that some FARC fronts are involved in the production and sales of drugs to Mexican and Colombian traffickers and through Venezuelan intermediaries.
In the past, the FARC had denied any involvement in trafficking, claiming it only taxes producers. Peru recently overtook Colombia in cultivation of coca, the crop used to produce cocaine.
'What we have agreed upon recognizes that in order to set the bases for a stable and lasting peace in Colombia it is necessary to find a definitive solution to the problem of illicit drugs,' said statement from the talks read at a news conference in Havana.

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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...isplay-massive-haul-seized-just-ONE-boat.html
 
Media Release: UK man attempts to import MDMA in bath salts

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This is a joint media release with Australian Customs and Border Protection Service.

A 29-year-old United Kingdom man has been caught attempting to import over two kilograms of MDMA (ecstasy) in bath salts.

Australian Customs and Border Protection (ACBPS) officers stopped the man for a baggage examination when he arrived at Sydney Airport on a flight from Abu Dhabi yesterday (29 May 2014).

During the examination, officers found five tins of bath salts in the man's luggage which contained a brown crystallised substance. Initial testing of the substance returned a positive result for MDMA.

ACBPS Regional Commander NSW, Tim Fitzgerald, said the drug concealment was particularly elaborate and showed the lengths people go to in order to smuggle drugs into Australia.

"Stopping drugs at the border is of the highest priority and ACBPS officers are always alert to people trying to illegally import drugs, no matter the concealment," Mr Fitzgerald said.

The man was referred to the Australian Federal Police who charged him with importing a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug contrary to section 307.1 of the Criminal Code Act 1995.

AFP Sydney Airport Police Commander Wayne Buchhorn said Australian authorities remain vigilant to prevent this and other dangerous substances from entering the country.

"People bringing these drugs into Australia can be as creative as they like with their concealment, but the AFP and its partner agencies have a track record of identifying and adapting to trends, leading to arrests and disruptions," Commander Buchhorn said.

The man will appear before the Sydney Central Local Court today (30 May 2014).

Further forensic testing will be undertaken to confirm the exact weight and purity of the substance.

The maximum penalty for this offence is life imprisonment.

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http://www.afp.gov.au/media-centre/...an-attempts-to-import-mdma-in-bath-salts.aspx
 
Greece makes record heroin bust, arrests tanker crew
Renee Maltezou
Reuters
June 22nd, 2014

Greek coastguards said on Sunday they had discovered a record two-tonne haul of heroin and arrested 11 crew from a Togo-flagged tanker that they suspected had brought it into the country.

Officers working with U.S Drug Enforcement Administration seized 987 kg of the drug on Sunday, the coastguard said without going into details on where it was found.

Another 1,133 kg was discovered during a raid on a warehouse near Athens last week, it added.

Read the full story here.

Why is the DEA in Greece anyway?

Shit, now that I look into it, those bastards have two offices here in Canada!
 
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