Mega Merged Drug Bust Thread v2.0

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[CommercialAppeal.com] TENNESSEE :: Cops find 1M in pot in truck "Together, the loa

[CommercialAppeal.com] TENNESSEE :: Cops find 1M in pot in truck

"Together, the load weighed about 920 pounds, an amount with a street value of approximately $920,000 that Armstrong said could cause much damage if released on Memphis streets."

Read Full Article At :: http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2012/mar/24/cops-find-1m-in-pot-in-truck/
 
[DominicanToday.com] DOMINICAN REPULIC :: Drug trafficker arrested at Puerto Plata a

[DominicanToday.com] DOMINICAN REPULIC :: Drug trafficker arrested at Puerto Plata airport

"The National Drugs Control Agency (DNCD) yesterday arrested a man with nine packages of cocaine in his luggage as he tried to take a flight to New York at the Puerto Plata International Airport."

Read Full Article At :: http://www.dominicantoday.com/dr/lo...g-trafficker-arrested-at-Puerto-Plata-airport
 
RUSSIA :: 43 kg of heroin seized in St Petersburg

[RUVR.ru] RUSSIA :: 43 kg of heroin seized in St Petersburg

"Russia’s anti-drugs agency has confiscated over 40 kg of heroin in St. Petersburg, its director, Viktor Ivanov, has said."

Read Full Article At :: http://english.ruvr.ru/2012_03_23/69327277/
 
Aus - Drug import sting nets waiter

Aus - Drug import sting nets waiter

A drinks waiter faces up to 10 years' jail after today admitting he helped a friend import party drugs through the mail from China and the United States.

Athanasios Polychronopoulous, 21, from Wantirna South, pleaded guilty in the County Court to three charges of assisting in the importation of the drugs methylone and methylendioxprovalerone (MDPV).
The maximum penalty for each charge is 10 years' jail and a $21,000 fine.

Prosecutor Thien Tran said Customs officers intercepted five packages containing the drugs at the Australia Post Port Melbourne gateway facility in May last year.

The packages were addressed to an 'Arthur Nash' at Polychronopoulos' address in Wantirna South, where he lived with his parents and younger sister.
The first package contained 199.3 grams of methylone and the second package 422 grams.

Ms Tran said methylone was "an ecstasy-like substance which can be consumed on its own".
"It is also the main ingredient of a liquid designer drug known as 'explosion'," she said.

The three other packages had been sent from the United States addressed to Arthur Nash and contained a total of 38.54 grams of pure MDPV.
MDPV is a close derivative of methcathinone. It is nicknamed 'fake cocaine' as the effects are similar and users 'snort' the powder to get high, Ms Tran said.
When Federal Police raided Polychronopoulos' home on May 31 he was found with a small quantity of the drugs ice and ecstasy.

A computer seized from his bedroom revealed he was using the Facebook name 'Nash Poly'.
Polychronopoulos told police he agreed to have the packages sent to his home as a favour to his former high school friend, Norman Cox.
Cox was his drug supplier and he owed him money.

"He did tell me that this was a research drug and it hadn't been made legal yet," Polychronopoulos told police.
Polychronopoulos had agreed to transfer almost $4000 in cash overseas for Cox, using Western Union, to buy the drugs.
The street value of the drugs was not mentioned in court today.

Defence lawyer Tony Trood said Polychronpoulos would use a wide range of drugs with Cox, including heroin and methamphetamines.
He said Polychronopoulos had agreed to co-operate with police and tell them where Cox stored his drugs and where he carried out his drug transactions, including at McDonald's. Cox died of a suspected heroin overdose in August.

Judge Jeanette Morrish adjourned the case until tomorrow for further submissions.​

http://www.smh.com.au/victoria/drug-import-sting-nets-waiter-20120327-1vvsq.html
 
Drug Conspiracy/Murder-for-Hire Plot Disrupted by DEA Investigation

Drug Conspiracy/Murder-for-Hire Plot Disrupted by DEA Investigation

March 26 (Laredo, TX) – Several men have been arrested and charged in a conspiracy related to drug trafficking and/or an attempted murder-for-hire plot, Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent in Charge, Javier F. Peña and United States Attorney Kenneth Magidson announced today.

Kevin Corley (Corley), 29, Samuel Walker, 28, both of Colorado Springs, Colo., and Shavar Davis, 29, of Denver, Colo., were taken into custody Saturday afternoon in Laredo, Texas, while Marcus Mickle, 20, and Calvin Epps, 26, both of Hopkins, S.C., were arrested in South Carolina. A sixth man, Mario Corley, 40, of Saginaw, Texas, was also taken into custody in relation to this case in Charleston, S.C.

The criminal complaint charging Corley, Walker and Davis was filed just a short time ago in Laredo federal court, at which time they made their initial appearances before U.S. Magistrate Judge Diana Song Quiroga. Mickle and Epps, charged in a now unsealed indictment, are expected to make their initial appearances in Columbia, S.C., this afternoon.

The investigation began in January 2011, when Mickle started negotiations with those he thought were members of the Lot Zetas Cartel, who were actually undercover Drug Enforcement Administration agents, to purchase marijuana in return for stolen weapons. The criminal complaint indicates that as they began discussions about the distribution of marijuana in the Columbia, S.C., area, Mickle and Epps allegedly told undercover agents about a friend in the military who could provide military weapons to them. The agents were later introduced to Corley who allegedly identified himself as an active duty officer in the Army responsible for training soldiers. He offered to provide tactical training for cartel members and to purchase weapons for the cartel under his name.

The complaint states that over the next several months, Corley continued to communicate with undercover agents regarding the services he could provide the cartel as a result of the training, experience and access to information/equipment afforded him as an active duty soldier. According to the criminal complaint, Corley allegedly mailed an Army tactics battle book to the agents, thoroughly explained military tactics and told undercover agents he could train 40 cartel members in two weeks.

On Jan. 7, 2012, Corley traveled to Laredo and met with undercover agents at which time the agents inquired about his ability to perform "wet work," allegedly understood to mean murder-for-hire, specifically, whether he could provide a team to raid a ranch were 20 kilograms of stolen cocaine were being kept by rival cartel members. Corley confirmed he would conduct the contract killing with a small team, at a minimum comprised of himself and another person who he described as an active duty soldier with whom he had already consulted. According to the complaint, Corley ultimately agreed to $50,000 and five kilograms of cocaine to perform the contract killing and retrieve the 20 kilograms of cocaine and offered to refund the money if the victim survived.

Corley further offered to provide security for Mickle and Epps’ purchase of 500 pounds of marijuana for transport from Texas to South Carolina. He traveled with them to Laredo, where they loaded the marijuana into a tractor trailer and attempted to escort it back to South Carolina. However, the tractor-trailer carrying the load was stopped and seized in La Salle County, Texas, on Jan. 14, 2012. Corley continued to contact undercover agents to discuss the possibility of future transactions with the agents, according to the complaint. Corley allegedly arranged for 300 pounds of marijuana to be delivered to Mario Corley in Charleston, S.C., and allegedly assisted in brokering 500 pounds of marijuana and five kilograms of cocaine for Mickle and Epps and discussed the distribution of these narcotics in South Carolina, Texas and Colorado.

On March 5, 2012, Corley delivered two AR-15 assault rifles with scopes, an airsoft assault rifle, five allegedly stolen ballistic vests and other miscellaneous equipment to an undercover agent in Colorado Springs, Colo., in exchange for $10,000. At the meeting, Corley and the undercover agent allegedly again discussed the contract killing and the retrieval of the cocaine which was to occur on March 24, 2012. Corley allegedly stated he had purchased a new Ka-Bar knife to carve a “Z” into the victim’s chest and was planning on buying a hatchet to dismember the body.

On March 24, 2012, Corley, Walker, and Davis traveled to Laredo and met with undercover agents, at which time they discussed the location of the intended victim, the logistics of performing the contract kill and their respective roles. The three were arrested, during which time a fourth suspect was shot and killed. A subsequent search of the vehicle in which Corley and the other co-conspirators arrived revealed two semi-automatic rifles with scopes, one bolt-action rifle with a scope and bipod, one hatchet, one Ka-Bar knife, one bag of .223 caliber ammunition and one box of .300 caliber ammunition.

The criminal complaint charges conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute more than five kilograms of cocaine and carries a possible punishment of a minimum of 10 years and up to life in prison and/or a $10 million fine. Use of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking or violent crime could result in up to 10 years in prison which is served consecutively to any other prison term imposed. Those charged in the indictment for conspiracy and possession with intent to distribute more than 100 kilograms of marijuana, including Corley, Mickle and Epps, also face five to 40 years in prison if convicted.​

http://www.justice.gov/dea/pubs/states/newsrel/2012/hou032612.html
 
AUS - Drugs, steroids seized in raid

AUS - Drugs, steroids seized in raid

MORE than 152 cannabis plants and a hoard of other drugs where seized from two homes on the Central Coast.

Police searched a house on Turpentine Street, Wyoming and located more than 152 cannabis plants, 13 kilograms of dried cannabis, a sum of cash and a quantity of anabolic steroids about 4pm yesterday.

A 32-year-old man was arrested at the scene and a search of his home on nearby Jarrett Street found 524 grams of cannabis head, a large sum of cash, a large quantity of anabolic steroids and prescription drugs.

The man was charged with a number of offences including drug related offences, recklessly deal with the proceeds of crime and possess prescribed restricted substance.

He was refused bail and will appear in Gosford Local Court today.​

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ne...s-seized-in-raid/story-fn7y9brv-1226310870250
 
Troopers bust $1.2M worth of heroin hidden in bumper

EATON -- Two suspects from Chicago are facing felony drug charges after Ohio State Highway Patrol troopers seized 8 kilos of heroin, worth an estimated $1.2 million, following a traffic stop in Preble County.

Troopers stopped a 2001 Honda Accord, with Illinois registration, for a speed violation along I-70 on Tuesday. Criminal indicators were observed and a patrol drug-sniffing canine alerted to the vehicle. A probable cause search revealed the 8 kilos of heroin in an electronically controlled hidden compartment built into the rear bumper.

The driver, Emerita M. Irias, 43, and passenger, Jose Luis Cruz-Martinez, 29, were charged with possession of heroin, a first-degree felony and possession of criminal tools, a fifth-degree felony.

Both suspects were incarcerated in the Preble County Jail. If convicted, each could face up to11 years in prison and up to a $22,500 fine.


http://www.northwestohio.com/news/story.aspx?id=732797

I believe this type of incident was being discussed in another thread about hidden compartments being illegal? I'm assuming that's how they got "possession of criminal tools".
 
Five arrested after drug manufacturing investigation - Middle Eastern Organised Crime

AUS - Five arrested after drug manufacturing investigation - Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad

Five people will face court today after ongoing investigations into the manufacture of prohibited drugs.

On 14 February 2012, officers from the Middle Eastern Organised Crime Squad’s (MEOCS) Strike Force Felix and Camden Local Area Command raided two clandestine laboratories at Catherine Fields and Narellan.

Prohibited drugs with an estimated potential street value of more than $1 million and firearms were seized. A number of people arrested last month remain before the courts.

As a result of ongoing investigations, officers from Strike Force Felix, assisted by Strike Force Raptor, the Public Order and Riot Squad and the South-West Metropolitan Region Enforcement Squad, raided six houses at Auburn, Berala, Lidcombe, Granville and Guildford early yesterday (Wednesday 28 March 2012).

Five men, aged between 25 and 29, were arrested and subsequently charged with knowingly take part in the manufacture of a prohibited drug (large commercial quantity) and other offences.

They were each refused bail to face court at Parramatta and Burwood today.

Inquiries are continuing.​

http://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news/l...nb3YuYXUlMkZtZWRpYSUyRjIyMzY4Lmh0bWwmYWxsPTE=
 
AUS - Man found with cannabis plants avoids jail

AUS - Man found with cannabis plants avoids jail

A Broken Hill man has avoided a jail sentence after police found seven large cannabis plants growing in his house.

27 year-old Jason Leigh Rowbotham received a 15 month good behaviour bond for knowingly taking part in the cultivation of a prohibited plant.

Last year, police found the cannabis plants in his house on Radium Street, with an estimated value of $35 000.

They also found 6.7 grams of methamphetamine and two books with instructions on how to make illicit drugs.

The district court heard the drugs belonged to Rowbotham's brother.

Rowbotham was acquitted of most of the charges relating to the methamphetamines, and pleaded guilty to knowingly taking part in the cultivation of a prohibited plant.

In sentencing, Judge Robyn Tupman said Rowbotham should wake up to himself, and to "stop hanging out with losers and stop smoking dope."

Judge Tupman told Rowbotham to treat the hearing as a chance to get his life back on track​

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-03-29/brother27s-drugs/3919750
 
AUS - Cannabis man wins appeal against jail term

AUS - Cannabis man wins appeal against jail term

A judge has overturned a jail sentence for a man who was found with about $30,000 worth of cannabis.

Boris Usachov, 39, from Parafield Gardens in South Australia, was caught with 3.2 kilograms of cannabis at Buronga, near Mildura, last June.

In the Wentworth Local Court, he pleaded guilty to possessing and supplying illicit drugs and was sentenced to 12 months' jail.

However, the district court of appeals, at Broken Hill, has overruled the sentence after it heard Usachov has been diagnosed with cancer and will have his kidney removed.

The court heard Usachov suffers from chronic back pain and was self-medicating with cannabis.

Judge Robyn Tupman said prison would be "potentially fatal" for Usachov.

He has been given a suspended sentence.​

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-03-28/cannabis-man-wins-appeal-against-jail-term/3917284
 
AUS - Ecstasy worth $120,000 seized

AUS - Ecstasy worth $120,000 seized

article-drugs-420x0.jpg


Ecstasy with a street value of $120,000 has been seized in the NSW city of Wollongong.

A police raid on a home at Blackbutt yesterday uncovered 150 ecstasy tablets, worth $2000.

But police say that over three months, they uncovered 1.12kg of ecstasy with a street value of $120,000 and $42,000 in cash.

Three men were arrested yesterday in a car park on Marine Drive, Wollongong, as the raid took place.

Police will allege they were in the process of supplying 4000 ecstasy tablets.

A 30-year-old man has been charged with four counts of supplying an indictable quantity of a prohibited drug, one count of supplying a large commercial quantity, and dealing with the proceeds of crime.
He was refused bail and will appear at Wollongong Local Court on Friday.

The other two men, aged 23 and 21, have been charged with a number of drug supply offences and have been refused bail to appear at Wollongong Local Court on April 24.​

http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/ecstasy-worth-120000-seized-20120330-1w1th.html
 
Thailand - Two killed in drug sting operation

Thailand - Two killed in drug sting operation

Two drug suspects were killed and another wounded after a sting operation in Kamphaeng Phet, which ended in their vehicle hitting a tree while they tried to escape.

A policeman in plainclothes, who was blocking the fleeing sedan and jumped over its hood, sustained injuries after the car hit a tree. The officers in hiding identified themselves to the suspects and ordered them to surrender.

The wounded suspect has been identified as Kamron Choosri, and charged with possessing amphetamine tablets with intent to sell.

In Phuket, a grenade attack on the home of an ex-drug convict wounded him. However, despite bleeding and other apparent injuries, he did not seek treatment at a hospital.

Police are looking for Mongkhol Benjaphan, 32, who served a prison term and is wanted on a drug-related warrant. They said the grenade attack, which killed a dog and also damaged nearby homes, |was likely carried out by his rivals in drug dealing.

Railway police arrested two male transvestites at a railway station in Nakhon Pathom for attempting to smuggle marijuana to the South. Suphat Srisamutnark and Choophan Laohaphan admitted to having already run the hemp three times, receiving Bt10,000 on each trip from an agent they refused to name, who picked up the cargo at Phatthalung station.

In Ayutthaya, police arrested a man possessing 600 amphetamine tablets at a road checkpoint.

Provincial police chief Pol Maj-General Anurak Taeng-kasem said he would begin assigning police in different precincts to set up checkpoints in others' jurisdictions to prevent local police from not strictly doing their duties by not stopping friends or acquaintances.

Deputy Prime Minister Chalerm Yoobamrung yesterday criticised a Thai daily newspaper for carrying a front-page story quoting a former drug kingpin dubbing the government's drug crackdown as ineffective.

Chalerm said the suspect was trying to discredit the crackdown because he had been affected.​

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/national/Two-killed-in-drug-sting-operation-30179037.html
 
AUS - Two men charged for importing 5kgs of cocaine

AUS - Two men charged for importing 5kgs of cocaine

A 36-year-old Yennora man and a 23-year-old Punchbowl man are scheduled to appear in Parramatta Local Court today after they were charged by the Australian Federal Police (AFP) with offences relating to the importation of five kilograms of cocaine.

On 29 March 2012, Australian Customs and Border Protection officers at Sydney International Airport intercepted an air freight consignment from the United States containing a wooden and marble chess board.

During an examination of the consignment, Customs and Border Protection officers located a quantity of a white powder substance concealed within the chess board. Initial testing of the white powder substance returned positive for cocaine and the matter was referred to the AFP for investigation.

An AFP forensic examination of the substance confirmed the substance to be cocaine, with an estimated weight of five kilograms. Further testing will determine its exact weight and purity.

The AFP substituted the cocaine and conducted a controlled delivery, executing a number of search warrants across Sydney yesterday.

Following the delivery, the AFP charged the two men charged with:
• Conspiracy to import a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug, contrary to Section 307.5 by virtue of section 11.1 of the Criminal Code 1995
• Attempt to possess a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug, contrary to Section 307.5 by virtue of section 11.1 of the Criminal Code 1995

The maximum penalty for these offences is an $825,000 fine and/or 25 years imprisonment.

The investigation remains ongoing and the AFP has not ruled out further arrests. Anyone with information relevant to this case is urged to contact the AFP.​

http://www.customs.gov.au/site/mediaRelease120331.asp
 
Leader of Notorious Tijuana Cartel/Arellano-Felix Drug Trafficking Organization Sente

Leader of Notorious Tijuana Cartel/Arellano-Felix Drug Trafficking Organization Sentenced for Racketeering, Money Laundering

April 2 (San Diego, CA) – DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart today announced that Benjamin Arellano-Felix, nearly 60, the former leader of the Tijuana Cartel/Arellano-Felix Organization (AFO) was sentenced today in U.S. District Court in San Diego by the Honorable Larry A. Burns to serve 25 years in federal prison. Judge Burns also ordered Arellano- Felix to forfeit $100 million in criminal proceeds. The sentence followed Arellano-Felix’s conviction for racketeering and money laundering.

“The Tijuana Cartel was one of the world’s most brutal drug trafficking networks, but has now met its demise with leader Benjamin Arellano-Felix’s sentencing today,” said DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart. “It is a major victory for DEA and Mexico’s Calderon Administration. Together, we will continue our pressure on the Mexican cartels whose leaders, members, and facilitators will be prosecuted and face the justice they fear.”

“Today’s prison sentence virtually ensures that Arellano-Felix will spend the remainder of his life in custody. Following this sentence, he will be deported to Mexico to finish a 22-year sentence. This is a fitting end for a person who has caused so much suffering and destruction,” commented United States Attorney Duffy. Duffy heralded the sentence as a landmark achievement in the United States and Mexico’s joint effort to dismantle drug cartels operating on both sides of the border and stated that “Attorney General Eric Holder and Mexican Attorney General Marisela Morales are pleased with today’s result and that this defendant has finally been held accountable for his crimes. Today’s sentence, together with what remains of his sentence in Mexico, will go a long way in ensuring that Arellano Felix spends his remaining years in prison.”

Long-reputed to be one of the most notorious multi-national drug trafficking organizations to ever exist, the AFO controlled the flow of cocaine, marijuana and other drugs through the Mexican border cities of Tijuana and Mexicali into the United States. Its operations also extended into southern Mexico and Colombia. Arellano-Felix was taken into custody by Mexican authorities on March 9, 2002. A final order of extradition to the United States was granted in 2007 and after years of unsuccessful appeals, Arellano-Felix arrived in the U.S. on April 29, 2011, to face charges in the Southern District of California for narcotics trafficking, money laundering and organized crime-related offenses. On January 4, 2012, he entered his guilty pleas before Judge Burns.

San Diego FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge Eric Birnbaum commented, “Today's sentencing marks the end of Mr. Arellano-Felix's reign as the leader of one of the most dangerous drug and organized crime organizations our agencies have ever investigated. While there is still much work to do, it is particularly noteworthy that this culmination would not have been possible without the cumulative efforts of law enforcement on both sides of the border. We are pleased to stand united against the violence brought forth by the AFO and see this individual brought to justice.”

“The money laundering investigation conducted by IRS Special Agents contributed to the dismantling of one of the most notorious and violent drug cartels in Mexico,” commented Leslie P. DeMarco, Special Agent in Charge of IRS Criminal Investigation Los Angeles Field Office. "Today’s sentencing is further evidence of the successful partnership that IRS Criminal Investigation has with other law enforcement agencies by using our financial expertise to unravel the money laundering component of this multi-national drug-trafficking organization.”

According to court records and the defendant’s admissions, Arellano-Felix was the leader of the AFO from approximately 1986 to until his arrest on March 9, 2002. During that time, Arellano-Felix served as the ultimate decision-maker for the AFO. Arellano-Felix issued directives to other members of the AFO, including his brothers, Ramon, Eduardo, and Francisco Javier Arellano-Felix, as well as his top lieutenants and drug-trafficking partners.

Arellano-Felix and other AFO members conspired to import and distribute within the United States hundreds of tons of cocaine and marijuana, for which the AFO obtained hundreds of millions in U.S. dollars in profits. At Arellano-Felix’s direction, members of the AFO kidnaped, physically restrained and murdered numerous persons in furtherance of the AFO's illegal activities. Also at Arellano-Felix’s direction, members of the AFO bribed law enforcement and military personnel, and murdered informants and potential witnesses in order to obstruct or impede the official investigation of their activities. Arellano-Felix conspired with other members of the AFO to launder proceeds of the above drug trafficking activities by directing other members to transport, transmit, and transfer hundreds of millions in U.S. dollars from the United States to Mexico.

This case was investigated by agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation and prosecuted in the Southern District of California by Assistant United States Attorneys Joseph Green, James Melendres, and Daniel Zipp. The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs provided significant assistance in the extradition. The investigation was coordinated by an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF). The OCDETF program was created to consolidate and coordinate all law enforcement resources in this country's battle against major drug trafficking rings, drug kingpins, and money launderers.​

http://www.justice.gov/dea/pubs/states/newsrel/2012/sd040212.html
 
U.S. - Canadians nabbed in California drug bust accused of conspiring to distribute 37 kg of cocaine

"The drug deal, described by a U.S. federal agent in court documents, was like a scene out of a Hollywood movie.

At a Southern California storage lot, one man — wearing white socks on his hands so as not to leave fingerprints — examines duffel bags filled with cocaine to make sure it’s all there.

Meanwhile, at a Starbucks parking lot, his partner prepares to hand over the money to pay for the drugs, but in order to make sure he’s giving the money to the right person, he has that person produce a $1 bill with a specific serial number on it.

What the men don’t realize is that the Mexican cocaine-trafficking brokers they think they’re dealing with are undercover agents.

June Jie Zhang, 31, of Toronto and John Philip Co, 41, of Richmond, B.C. — arrested last week and charged in a federal criminal complaint with conspiring to distribute more than 37 kilograms of cocaine — remain in the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service."

Read the full story here.
 
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