Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Web: Police Check Seized '$6bn Bonds'
Title:UK: Web: Police Check Seized '$6bn Bonds'
Published On:2003-09-05
Source:BBC News (UK Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-19 15:03:16
POLICE CHECK SEIZED '$6BN BONDS'

Police are examining bonds with a face value of over $6bn (£3.8bn) seized
during an operation against Colombian drug traffickers to see if they are
genuine.

Officers are also thought to have picked up 55,000 ecstasy tablets, 15kg of
amphetamines and £7m of cars, jewellery, property and cash in a painstaking
investigation.

They were attempting to smash a Colombian drugs and money cartel.

The seizures came after the National Crime Squad (NCS) swooped on addresses in
north London and Essex during two raids in July and August.

The BBC's crime correspondent, Neil Bennett, says if the bonds are genuine the
find would be by far "the biggest seizure of criminal assets in British legal
history".

The bonds could be confiscated by the courts under the Proceeds of Crime Act,
he said.

International Arrests

News of the action only emerged on Thursday after the Colombian authorities,
who worked with the British police in the operation, announced details of the
raid.

The vast find is three times more than the $2bn estimated worth of former
Colombian drug baron Pablo Escobar as reported by Fortune Magazine in the late
1980s.

Nine British men charged with conspiracy to import cocaine and conspiracy to
supply ecstasy appeared in court in the UK over the summer. One is understood
to have a house in Colombia.

They are due to appear at Winchester Crown Court in November.

Four more people were also arrested in Britain, although they have been
released on police bail.

And four further international arrests were made, two more in Colombia and two
in Ecuador.

A spokeswoman from the NCS said Southampton-based officers, assisted by Customs
and Excise, stumbled across the US bonds during a drugs raid on a house in
July.

She said: "We went in there looking for drugs, searching for drugs - anything
other than that is a bit of a bonus."

A Home Office statement congratulating the NCS on the arrests also warned of
the wider fight against drugs.

"Breaking down the supply chain is only half the battle," it said.

"We are cutting demand by targeting drug-users and getting them into treatment,
spending more than half a billion pounds this year on treatment alone.

"By reducing demand, we reduce the impact of drugs on people's lives and cut
crime."

Covert Operation

News of the raids was apparently not released to help the Colombian authorities
with their investigations.

A Colombian official said information provided to Britain by the country's
Technical Investigation Department allowed the seizures.

Guillermo Anibal Ortega, director of the Colombia's attorney general's office
investigative unit, added: "This is a very important victory, because it
represents the most overwhelming blow against drug trafficking and money
laundering."

The drugs were allegedly sent from Colombia to Europe via countries such as
Ecuador and Mexico.
Member Comments
No member comments available...