News
Release
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 7, 2010
Contact: SA Waldo Santiago
Public Information Officer
Number: (787) 277-4700
DEA Caribbean Corridor and New York OCDETF Strike Force Arrests Five, Seizes 1.5 Metric Tons Of Cocaine Worth $46 Million
JUN 7 -- (SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico) - DEA Caribbean Corridor Strike Force (CCSF) agents, working jointly with DEA New York OCDETF agents and U.S. Coast Guard personnel, arrested last Friday five suspected Honduran smugglers and seized 66 bales of cocaine in San Juan, following an at-sea interdiction of the fishing vessel Two Brothers on May 24, announced Javier F. Peña, Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Caribbean Division, and Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez, United States Attorney for the District of Puerto Rico.
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DEA
agents ready to board the smugglers
vessel “Two Brothers” to
place crew under arrest. |
DEA
agents secure the 1.5 metric tons
of cocaine aboard the smugglers vessel “Two
Brothers” |
 |
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DEA,
ICE and PRPD agents get ready to
unload the 1.5 metric tons of cocaine
from the “Two Brothers” |
DEA,
ICE and CBP agents unload the cocaine
from the “Two Brothers” |
The
87-foot, Panamanian flagged, fishing vessel
was carrying 3,269 pounds of cocaine with
an estimated wholesale value of approximately
$46 million. DEA CCSF agents arrested the
five Honduran men in connection with the
seizure.
“These
arrests and multi-kilogram seizure are a
clear indication of the success of the Caribbean
Corridor Strike Force Initiative,” said
Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez,
U.S. Attorney for the District of Puerto
Rico. “We will continue maximizing
all of our combined resources to investigate
and prosecute those who in flagrant disregard
of our laws and way of life try to smuggle
illegal contraband into our area of jurisdiction.”
“With
every seizure the DEA led Caribbean Corridor
Strike Force continues to prove the value
of interagency cooperation” said Javier
F. Peña, Special Agent in Charge of
the DEA Caribbean Division. “DEA’s
partnership with ICE, CBP, FBI, USCG and
the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Caribbean
Corridor Initiative once more proves it effectiveness.”
As
a result of the joint investigative efforts
by DEA CCSF participants, the crew of the
Royal Netherlands Navy frigate Van Speijk,
along with an embedded U.S. Coast Guard Law
Enforcement Detachment, interdicted the Two
Brothers vessel in international waters on
May 24, approximately 34 miles northwest
of Oranjestad, Aruba. U.S. Coast Guard crews
boarded the Two Brothers, located the cocaine,
and detained the crewmembers of the fishing
vessel.
Following
successful coordination between DEA CCSF
agencies, the U.S. Attorney’s Office
in Puerto Rico, and Republic of Panama officials,
the Coast Guard Cutter Cushing escorted the
Two Brothers to San Juan on Friday, where
they turned over custody of the fishing vessel,
the contraband, and the detained crew to
awaiting DEA CCSF agents.
This
case has been assigned to Assistant United
States Attorney Carlos R. Cardona from the
Caribbean Corridor Strike Force (CCSF) of
the United States Attorney’s Office.
CCSF is led by the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) and is an initiative of the United
States Attorney’s Office created to
disrupt and dismantle major drug trafficking
organizations operating in the Caribbean.
DEA CCSF is a part of the High Intensity
Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) and Organized
Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF)
and investigates South American-based drug
trafficking organizations responsible for
the movement of multi-kilogram quantities
of narcotics utilizing the Caribbean as a
transshipment point for further distribution
to the United States.
The
CCSF is led by the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA). In addition to DEA, the following
agencies participate in the DEA CCSF: the
United States Attorney for the District of
Puerto Rico, U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE, Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), U.S. Customs and Border Protection
(CBP) and U.S. Coast Guard (USCG).
Coast
Guard Cutter’s Reef Shark and Cushing
are 87-foot and 110-foot patrol boats homeported
in San Juan.
The
defendants are presumed innocent and are
entitled to a fair trial and the government
has the burden of proving guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.
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