News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Smugglers Are Swallowing Ecstasy |
Title: | US: Smugglers Are Swallowing Ecstasy |
Published On: | 2000-12-20 |
Source: | Spokesman-Review (WA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-02 08:25:22 |
SMUGGLERS ARE SWALLOWING ECSTASY
WASHINGTON _ The Customs Service says it is seeing a growing number of
cases where airline passengers are swallowing the hallucinogenic drug
ecstasy in an effort to smuggle the illegal tablets into the United States.
"The use of `swallowers' in ecstasy smuggling schemes is cause for serious
concern," said Customs Commissioner Raymond Kelly. "This technique has long
been a hallmark of the heroin and cocaine trade, sometimes with fatal
consequences for the couriers paid to perform this risky service."
In the 2000 fiscal year, customs officers seized a record 9.3 million
tablets of ecstasy, a huge increase over 1999's 3.5 million tablets.
So far this year, customs has encountered 16 cases in which airline
passengers tried to smuggle ecstasy into the country by swallowing the
drug. Four of those cases occurred in December, most recently on Saturday,
when customs agents at JFK Airport in New York recovered 31 pellets filled
with 676 ecstasy tablets from a woman arriving from the Netherlands.
Last year, customs reported no such incidents, said spokesman Dean Boyd.
Customs had its first encounter with ecstasy swallowers in March.
Inspectors caught two men at JFK Airport who had swallowed a total of 2,800
tablets contained in sausage-shaped casings called pellets.
WASHINGTON _ The Customs Service says it is seeing a growing number of
cases where airline passengers are swallowing the hallucinogenic drug
ecstasy in an effort to smuggle the illegal tablets into the United States.
"The use of `swallowers' in ecstasy smuggling schemes is cause for serious
concern," said Customs Commissioner Raymond Kelly. "This technique has long
been a hallmark of the heroin and cocaine trade, sometimes with fatal
consequences for the couriers paid to perform this risky service."
In the 2000 fiscal year, customs officers seized a record 9.3 million
tablets of ecstasy, a huge increase over 1999's 3.5 million tablets.
So far this year, customs has encountered 16 cases in which airline
passengers tried to smuggle ecstasy into the country by swallowing the
drug. Four of those cases occurred in December, most recently on Saturday,
when customs agents at JFK Airport in New York recovered 31 pellets filled
with 676 ecstasy tablets from a woman arriving from the Netherlands.
Last year, customs reported no such incidents, said spokesman Dean Boyd.
Customs had its first encounter with ecstasy swallowers in March.
Inspectors caught two men at JFK Airport who had swallowed a total of 2,800
tablets contained in sausage-shaped casings called pellets.
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