News (Media Awareness Project) - US DC: 22 Fedex Workers Arrested In LA.-Based Marijuana Ring |
Title: | US DC: 22 Fedex Workers Arrested In LA.-Based Marijuana Ring |
Published On: | 2000-04-14 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-04 21:49:18 |
22 FEDEX WORKERS ARRESTED IN L.A.-BASED MARIJUANA RING
U.S. Agents Say They Dismantled Network That Shipped Pot Across The
Nation. Jamaican Drug Lord Accused Of Masterminding Scheme Is Still Being
Sought.
WASHINGTON--Federal authorities said Thursday that they have broken up
a Los Angeles-based drug trafficking operation that used the Federal
Express overnight delivery system to ship tons of marijuana across the
United States.
Sweeping into FedEx warehouses and offices across the country, federal
agents on Thursday arrested 22 drivers, customer service
representatives and security agents--including 10 in Los Angeles--who
they allege packed the marijuana into FedEx boxes, placed bogus labels
on them and handed them over to dealers parked along delivery routes.
FedEx shipped more than 4,000 boxes of drugs across the country,
federal officials said. Like the majority of the packages FedEx
handles, the shipments were picked up by 4 p.m. and delivered by 10
a.m. the next day.
The scheme was masterminded by Mark Morant, 33, a Jamaican drug lord
working out of a Western Avenue warehouse, Drug Enforcement
Administration officials said. He bribed dozens of FedEx employees
over a span of at least two years to ship more than 121 tons of
marijuana from Southern California to dealers in New York, New Jersey,
Boston and hundreds of cities and towns across the East Coast,
officials said. As of Thursday evening, Morant was still being sought.
One of the world's most powerful drug cartels, the Tijuana-based
Arellano Felix gang, smuggled the marijuana to the Jamaican
traffickers in Southern California, said Joe Keefe, head of the DEA's
special operations division. But the scheme to use FedEx trucks,
planes and warehouses was the brainchild of Morant, Keefe said.
Workers in Ring Made $2,000 a Week For their labors, FedEx employees
pocketed more than $2,000 a week each from the traffickers, whether
packages were delivered or not, he said.
FedEx officials, who cooperated with DEA agents during the 20-month
investigation, said that never before to their knowledge has their
delivery service been used to transport such large quantities of
illicit goods. The cartel apparently was able to corrupt employees
throughout FedEx, from drivers to clerks to warehouse workers.
More than 100 people involved in the distribution network have been
arrested since July 1998, 45 of them on Thursday, the DEA said. By
Thursday evening, with arrests continuing, federal agents had seized
17 tons of marijuana, $4 million in assets and 18 weapons. Arrests
were made in California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, New
Jersey, Georgia and Florida.
Law enforcement officials from the Los Angeles and Long Beach police
departments and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department
participated in the operation.
"The message of this case is clear," said U.S. Customs Commissioner
Raymond Kelly. "If you absolutely, positively want to send your
contraband overnight, don't use FedEx."
But that is exactly what the Jamaican traffickers did for several
years at least, DEA officials estimated. By the time a FedEx employee
set off the DEA investigation when he smelled the powerful odor of
marijuana after a package had fallen open, federal authorities said
the distribution network was fully operational.
Using marijuana supplied by Silvestre Rendon, a Mexican national in
Los Angeles working with the Tijuana cartel, traffickers at the
unmarked Western Avenue warehouse wrapped the sticky, strong-smelling
leaves in dozens of layers of cellophane sprinkled with laundry
detergent and fabric softener to mask the odor, federal officials
said. Rendon was among those arrested Thursday.
Packed by corrupted FedEx employees in boxes bearing the company's
distinctive logo, the marijuana was loaded onto FedEx trucks and
planes by other, often unsuspecting employees who sent it along to
powerful Jamaican distribution cells in the Northeast.
Because corrupt FedEx customer service representatives created bogus
shipping labels for the packages, the drug traffickers reaped a side
benefit from the operation: free nationwide shipping.
Authorities said that almost none of the marijuana was sold on the
streets of Los Angeles, where the Jamaicans were outnumbered and
outgunned by rival gangs. The drugs were shipped on FedEx planes from
Los Angeles International Airport to the company's operations hub in
Memphis, Tenn., and then on to Newark and John F. Kennedy
international airports in the New York City area. The packages were
addressed to companies that did not exist, often at well-known
locations. One shipment was delivered to dealers in the parking lot of
the Empire State Building.
FedEx Launched Own Inquiry Into Scheme
Couriers brought the proceeds of the sales back to the Los Angeles
traffickers on commercial flights, wearing as much as $100,000 in cash
in belts strapped to their bodies, federal officials said.
FedEx employees, meanwhile, hoarded the cash they collected each
Friday, federal agents said. On Thursday agents searching a FedEx
employee's house in New Jersey discovered $20,000 in a shoe box under
his bed. When FedEx officials discovered the scheme, they launched
their own investigation and contacted the DEA. Working together, the
company and federal agents identified and tracked corrupt employees
and searched the company's computer databases for records that
eventually unraveled the distribution network.
Robert Bryden, vice president of security for FedEx, said that the
overnight shipping business is vulnerable to criminals seeking to get
their contraband delivered quickly. For years, the company has used
X-ray equipment to search suspicious packages.
"FedEx handles over 3 million packages a day," Bryden said. "Our
employees don't actually have their hands on these packages for very
long periods at all, certainly not long enough in most cases to be
able to detect something like this."
Drug agents said they believe they have effectively dismantled the
Jamaican organization.
In addition to Rendon, the Mexican national, those arrested Thursday
included Stacey Clarkson, who headed the group's distribution
operation in New York; David Levy, who collected money for the gang in
New York; Jonathan Boswell, a member of the organization based in Fort
Lauderdale; and Wilza Pierre, a distributor arrested on Long Island.
In addition, agents Thursday arrested FedEx drivers in New York, New
Jersey and Atlanta, three customer service representatives, a company
security agent and three former FedEx employees.
As for the effect of the arrests on the Arellano Felix gang, DEA
agents were less than sanguine.
"With the Arellano Felix brothers as strong as they are, to them this
is just one customer that they no longer have," said Michele Leonhart,
special agent in charge of the DEA's Los Angeles office.
U.S. Agents Say They Dismantled Network That Shipped Pot Across The
Nation. Jamaican Drug Lord Accused Of Masterminding Scheme Is Still Being
Sought.
WASHINGTON--Federal authorities said Thursday that they have broken up
a Los Angeles-based drug trafficking operation that used the Federal
Express overnight delivery system to ship tons of marijuana across the
United States.
Sweeping into FedEx warehouses and offices across the country, federal
agents on Thursday arrested 22 drivers, customer service
representatives and security agents--including 10 in Los Angeles--who
they allege packed the marijuana into FedEx boxes, placed bogus labels
on them and handed them over to dealers parked along delivery routes.
FedEx shipped more than 4,000 boxes of drugs across the country,
federal officials said. Like the majority of the packages FedEx
handles, the shipments were picked up by 4 p.m. and delivered by 10
a.m. the next day.
The scheme was masterminded by Mark Morant, 33, a Jamaican drug lord
working out of a Western Avenue warehouse, Drug Enforcement
Administration officials said. He bribed dozens of FedEx employees
over a span of at least two years to ship more than 121 tons of
marijuana from Southern California to dealers in New York, New Jersey,
Boston and hundreds of cities and towns across the East Coast,
officials said. As of Thursday evening, Morant was still being sought.
One of the world's most powerful drug cartels, the Tijuana-based
Arellano Felix gang, smuggled the marijuana to the Jamaican
traffickers in Southern California, said Joe Keefe, head of the DEA's
special operations division. But the scheme to use FedEx trucks,
planes and warehouses was the brainchild of Morant, Keefe said.
Workers in Ring Made $2,000 a Week For their labors, FedEx employees
pocketed more than $2,000 a week each from the traffickers, whether
packages were delivered or not, he said.
FedEx officials, who cooperated with DEA agents during the 20-month
investigation, said that never before to their knowledge has their
delivery service been used to transport such large quantities of
illicit goods. The cartel apparently was able to corrupt employees
throughout FedEx, from drivers to clerks to warehouse workers.
More than 100 people involved in the distribution network have been
arrested since July 1998, 45 of them on Thursday, the DEA said. By
Thursday evening, with arrests continuing, federal agents had seized
17 tons of marijuana, $4 million in assets and 18 weapons. Arrests
were made in California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, New
Jersey, Georgia and Florida.
Law enforcement officials from the Los Angeles and Long Beach police
departments and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department
participated in the operation.
"The message of this case is clear," said U.S. Customs Commissioner
Raymond Kelly. "If you absolutely, positively want to send your
contraband overnight, don't use FedEx."
But that is exactly what the Jamaican traffickers did for several
years at least, DEA officials estimated. By the time a FedEx employee
set off the DEA investigation when he smelled the powerful odor of
marijuana after a package had fallen open, federal authorities said
the distribution network was fully operational.
Using marijuana supplied by Silvestre Rendon, a Mexican national in
Los Angeles working with the Tijuana cartel, traffickers at the
unmarked Western Avenue warehouse wrapped the sticky, strong-smelling
leaves in dozens of layers of cellophane sprinkled with laundry
detergent and fabric softener to mask the odor, federal officials
said. Rendon was among those arrested Thursday.
Packed by corrupted FedEx employees in boxes bearing the company's
distinctive logo, the marijuana was loaded onto FedEx trucks and
planes by other, often unsuspecting employees who sent it along to
powerful Jamaican distribution cells in the Northeast.
Because corrupt FedEx customer service representatives created bogus
shipping labels for the packages, the drug traffickers reaped a side
benefit from the operation: free nationwide shipping.
Authorities said that almost none of the marijuana was sold on the
streets of Los Angeles, where the Jamaicans were outnumbered and
outgunned by rival gangs. The drugs were shipped on FedEx planes from
Los Angeles International Airport to the company's operations hub in
Memphis, Tenn., and then on to Newark and John F. Kennedy
international airports in the New York City area. The packages were
addressed to companies that did not exist, often at well-known
locations. One shipment was delivered to dealers in the parking lot of
the Empire State Building.
FedEx Launched Own Inquiry Into Scheme
Couriers brought the proceeds of the sales back to the Los Angeles
traffickers on commercial flights, wearing as much as $100,000 in cash
in belts strapped to their bodies, federal officials said.
FedEx employees, meanwhile, hoarded the cash they collected each
Friday, federal agents said. On Thursday agents searching a FedEx
employee's house in New Jersey discovered $20,000 in a shoe box under
his bed. When FedEx officials discovered the scheme, they launched
their own investigation and contacted the DEA. Working together, the
company and federal agents identified and tracked corrupt employees
and searched the company's computer databases for records that
eventually unraveled the distribution network.
Robert Bryden, vice president of security for FedEx, said that the
overnight shipping business is vulnerable to criminals seeking to get
their contraband delivered quickly. For years, the company has used
X-ray equipment to search suspicious packages.
"FedEx handles over 3 million packages a day," Bryden said. "Our
employees don't actually have their hands on these packages for very
long periods at all, certainly not long enough in most cases to be
able to detect something like this."
Drug agents said they believe they have effectively dismantled the
Jamaican organization.
In addition to Rendon, the Mexican national, those arrested Thursday
included Stacey Clarkson, who headed the group's distribution
operation in New York; David Levy, who collected money for the gang in
New York; Jonathan Boswell, a member of the organization based in Fort
Lauderdale; and Wilza Pierre, a distributor arrested on Long Island.
In addition, agents Thursday arrested FedEx drivers in New York, New
Jersey and Atlanta, three customer service representatives, a company
security agent and three former FedEx employees.
As for the effect of the arrests on the Arellano Felix gang, DEA
agents were less than sanguine.
"With the Arellano Felix brothers as strong as they are, to them this
is just one customer that they no longer have," said Michele Leonhart,
special agent in charge of the DEA's Los Angeles office.
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