News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: Colombia, DEA Smash Drug Ring |
Title: | Colombia: Colombia, DEA Smash Drug Ring |
Published On: | 2000-11-02 |
Source: | San Diego Union Tribune (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 03:40:16 |
COLOMBIA, DEA SMASH DRUG RING
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- Colombian police and the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration said yesterday they have arrested 49 people and dismantled a
major international cocaine and heroin smuggling network.
The Medellin-based organization shipped 13.5 tons of cocaine and heroin to
the United States, authorities said, calling the group an example of a "new
generation" of low-profile traffickers who have replaced Colombia's former
drug cartels.
Colombia's deputy chief prosecutor, Jaime Cordoba, saluted the DEA for
providing critical intelligence and coordinating the two-year
investigation. Officials said the suspects belonged to a network of four
organizations coordinated by a 40-year-old Medellin-based trafficker,
Carlos Mario Castro Arias.
It sent at least a ton of cocaine a month from Colombia to the United
States by way of Mexico, often using fishing boats and concealing the drugs
in plastic molds, textiles and heavy machinery, police said.
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -- Colombian police and the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration said yesterday they have arrested 49 people and dismantled a
major international cocaine and heroin smuggling network.
The Medellin-based organization shipped 13.5 tons of cocaine and heroin to
the United States, authorities said, calling the group an example of a "new
generation" of low-profile traffickers who have replaced Colombia's former
drug cartels.
Colombia's deputy chief prosecutor, Jaime Cordoba, saluted the DEA for
providing critical intelligence and coordinating the two-year
investigation. Officials said the suspects belonged to a network of four
organizations coordinated by a 40-year-old Medellin-based trafficker,
Carlos Mario Castro Arias.
It sent at least a ton of cocaine a month from Colombia to the United
States by way of Mexico, often using fishing boats and concealing the drugs
in plastic molds, textiles and heavy machinery, police said.
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