Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

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Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby thewestside » September 17th, 2008, 5:02 pm

Scores held in global drug bust
September 17, 2008


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Police in four nations have held about 200 people over alleged trans-Atlantic drug-trafficking involving a major Mexican drugs cartel.

US and Italian police seized 175, some of them picked up in Italy's Reggio Calabria region, where the N'drangheta mafia run the cocaine trade.

Other suspects were arrested in Mexico and Guatemala.

US Attorney General Michael Mukasey said the arrests came after a 15-month investigation into the Gulf cartel.

The cartel is already believed to have links to organised crime in Italy.

It is suspected of importing and distributing tonnes of drugs from Latin America into the US.

The US Drug Enforcement Agency said three alleged cartel leaders had been indicted.

Italian police say the coordinated investigation, Operation Solare, has proved to be one of its biggest operations against the mafia in recent years, and one of their most successful.

The N'drangheta is notoriously secretive and ruthless, characteristics which have protected its drug-trafficking hegemony until now, the BBC's Emma Wallis reports from Rome.

'Massive assault'

The US and Italian charges cover various crimes, including trafficking of cocaine and marijuana, kidnap charges, attempted murder, conspiracy to use a firearm in a violent crime and conspiracy to kill and kidnap in a foreign country.

Mr Mukasey said it was a "massive assault" on the drug cartel, and praised the international co-operation.

The suspects detained in the US were arrested in a dozen states, including 43 people picked up in Atlanta, Georgia.

Nicola Gratteri, the Italian public prosecutor for the anti-mafia district attorney's office of Reggio Calabria, said: "This operation exemplifies the European vision of the international fight against drug-trafficking."

More than 16,000kg (35,000lb) of cocaine, 450kg of methamphetamine, 9kg of heroin, 23,300kg of marijuana, 176 vehicles and 167 weapons have been seized.

Approximately $60.1m (£33m) in US currency was also taken.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7622099.stm
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby thewestside » September 17th, 2008, 5:03 pm

U.S. Busts Mexican Drug Ring With Appetite for Strong Euro
By Steve Scherer


Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. authorities made nationwide arrests against a drug trafficking ring led by the so-called Gulf Cartel, including alleged mafia members in New York who shipped cocaine to Italy seeking euros instead of dollars.

About 175 people were arrested and charged with drug trafficking and money laundering, U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey said today at an Atlanta press conference. Overall, the operation, dubbed Project Reckoning, has resulted in more than 500 arrests, the seizure of more than 16 tons of cocaine and $60 million, Mukasey said.

``These arrests are a substantial blow to the Gulf Cartel,'' Mukasey said, according to the text of his remarks. The Drug Enforcement Agency led the operation in collaboration with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other law enforcement agencies including Italy's Carabinieri police.

The Mexican Gulf Cartel is currently considered to be the world's biggest cocaine syndicate, Italy's chief mafia prosecutor Pietro Grasso said in an interview. The group had set up a distribution network in the U.S. and Europe -- in particular in Italy, Spain and Holland -- that includes as many as 1,400 individuals, according to Italian police.

The international breadth of modern crime was demonstrated by the involvement of the Calabrian 'Ndrangheta mafia, which imported cocaine through its members in New York, who in turn received their shipments from Mexico, Grasso said.

The European cocaine market is even more attractive than the American one because of robust demand and a strong euro, said Russell Benson, the regional director of the DEA in Europe and Africa. The euro has gained 16 percent against the dollar in the past three years and one euro today buys more than $1.40.

Euro vs Dollar

``Central and South American drug organizations are getting much higher profit per kilo of cocaine in Europe as a result of the euro's strength against the dollar,'' Benson said in an interview in Rome.

Italian police seized a 3.5-kilo sample cocaine shipment buried in the countryside near the town of Gioiosa Jonica, which is located on the toe of Italy's boot-shaped peninsula, Grasso said. Ten suspects were arrested in Italy today, and two Italian-born suspected mafia members were among those arrested in New York, police said.

``The Mexican cartel is currently the dominant force in cocaine trafficking,'' Grasso said. ``And the 'Ndrangheta is directly linked to them and is the main supplier of cocaine in Italy.''

No.1 on List

The U.S. Justice Department said in May that the 'Ndrangheta was at the top of its list of dangerous criminal organizations and drug traffickers. The business conducted by the 131 different 'Ndrangheta clans operating in Calabria is worth 44 billion euros ($62.6 billion) annually, Rome-based research group Eurispes said in May.

There is evidence that ties between Italy's mafias and its U.S. cousins have been renewed and reinforced in recent years. Italian authorities arrested almost 80 people in the biggest trans-Atlantic mafia crackdown in 20 years in February as part of an effort to cut renewed ties between New York's Gambino crime family and Sicily's Cosa Nostra.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... in_america
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby Azure9920 » September 17th, 2008, 5:10 pm

35,000 pounds of cocaine...

Wow.
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby thewestside » September 17th, 2008, 5:11 pm

175 Alleged Gulf Cartel Members and Associates Arrested in Massive International Law Enforcement Operation

'Project Reckoning' Leads to the Seizure of $60 Million and More Than 40 Tons of Illegal Drugs From One of Mexico 's Largest Drug Trafficking Cartels

WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Today, Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey announced that 175 individuals were arrested today and on Sept. 16, 2008, on charges related to an international drug trafficking cartel in a coordinated enforcement action by hundreds of international, federal, state and local law enforcement officials throughout the United States and Italy. Including the operations announced today, a long-term investigation of one of Mexico's largest drug trafficking cartels and its U.S. and international distribution networks has resulted in the arrest of more than 500 individuals in the United States, Mexico and Italy to date.

"Project Reckoning," a multi-agency law enforcement effort led by the DEA, targeted the Mexican drug trafficking cartel known as the Gulf Cartel. Among those indicted are the three alleged leaders of the Gulf Cartel: Ezequiel Cardenas-Guillen, Heriberto Lazcano-Lazcano and Jorge Eduardo Costilla-Sanchez. These individuals, each designated as Consolidated Priority Organization Targets (CPOTs) by the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF), have been indicted in U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia on charges that they conspired to import drugs into the United States from Mexico. A CPOT designation is reserved for significant narcotics traffickers who are believed to be the leaders of drug trafficking organizations responsible for the importation of large quantities of narcotics into the United States.

The Gulf Cartel is responsible for the transportation of multi-ton quantities of cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin and marijuana from Colombia, Guatemala, Panama and Mexico to the United States, as well as the distribution of those narcotics within the United States. The Gulf Cartel is also believed to be responsible for laundering multiple millions of dollars in criminal proceeds. Individuals indicted in the cases are charged with a variety of crimes, including: drug trafficking charges related to cocaine and marijuana; solicitation and conspiracy to kidnap; attempted murder; conspiracy to use a firearm in a violent crime; conspiracy to kill and kidnap in a foreign country; interstate and foreign travel in aid of racketeering; money laundering; and other related crimes.

To date, Project Reckoning has resulted in the arrest of 507 individuals and the seizure of approximately $60.1 million in U.S. currency, 16,711 kilograms of cocaine, 1,039 pounds of methamphetamine, 19 pounds of heroin, 51,258 pounds of marijuana, 176 vehicles and 167 weapons. Project Reckoning, a 15-month investigation, combined into one centrally coordinated effort several multi-district enforcement operations that all involved individuals with close ties to the Gulf Cartel. Operation Dos Equis, Operation Vertigo, Operation Stinger and Operation The Family as well as numerous local operations combined to form Project Reckoning.

"By spreading dangerous drugs and resorting to brutal violence, international drug cartels pose an extraordinary threat both here and abroad," said Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey. "The scope of the threat demands a deliberate and sustained response and the success we have had, such as the takedowns announced today, is due to the combined efforts of federal, state, local and international law enforcement. Although I am pleased with the efforts so far, we cannot and will not rest on these successes. The threat posed by international drug cartels is too great. It will take all of us working together to prevail."

"We successfully completed a hard-hitting, coordinated and massive assault on the powerful and extremely violent Gulf Cartel," said DEA Acting Administrator Michele M. Leonhart. "We have arrested U.S. cell heads, stripped the cartel of $60 million in cash, imprisoned their brutal assassins and significantly disrupted their U.S. infrastructure. DEA will continue our relentless attack against this cartel, aiming to dismantle them and stop the violence they inflict on Southwest Border communities."

"Metro Atlanta unfortunately continues to be a major drug distribution center for the Southeast and beyond. The DEA and our many other law enforcement partners continue to aggressively investigate all aspects of the drug trade," said U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia David E. Nahmias. "This major case is another example of their effective, coordinated efforts. The two cartel cells indicted in Atlanta acted like many shipping businesses, coordinating the transportation of truckloads of hidden drugs and millions of dollars in currency across the country and to and from Mexico. Through our sophisticated investigation and prosecutions, we have disrupted these organizations, seized large amounts of their poisons and proceeds, and now will work hard to lock up their members for many years to come."

"This operation exemplifies the European vision of the international fight against drug trafficking," said Dr. Nicola Gratteri, Italian Public Prosecutor for the Anti-mafia District Attorney's Office of Reggio Calabria, Italy.

These cases are being handled by attorneys in the Northern District of Georgia; Southern District of Texas; Northern District of Texas; Western District of Texas; District of New Jersey; Eastern District of Louisiana; District of New Mexico; Southern District of Florida; Eastern District of North Carolina; Southern District of New York; and the Criminal Division's Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section and Office of International Affairs. In addition, local prosecutions in this case will occur in the states of California, Georgia, Illinois, North Carolina and Missouri.

The investigative efforts in Project Reckoning were coordinated by the Justice Department's Special Operations Division, the DEA, FBI, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Marshals Service and attorneys from the Criminal Division's Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section. More than 200 federal, state, local and foreign law enforcement agencies contributed investigative and prosecutorial resources to Project Reckoning through the OCDETF. Significant assistance was also provided by a coalition of international investigative agencies spearheaded by DEA offices located in Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama and Italy with assistance from foreign counterparts in each of those countries.

An indictment is merely an allegation and is not evidence of guilt. A defendant is entitled to a fair trial in which it will be the government's burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

SOURCE U.S. Department of Justice

http://www.forbes.com/prnewswire/feeds/ ... 33580.html
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Looks like the Genovese were also involved

Postby thewestside » September 18th, 2008, 9:01 pm

Feds: Mafia, Mexican Drug Cartel Members In Business Together
By Jonathan Dienst
September 18, 2008


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NEW YORK - Federal drug agents said they have arrested dozens of suspects in an international drug operation that included reputed associates of the Genovese crime family and members of Mexican drug cartels.

As many as 175 people were expected to be charged Wednesday, including nine people in New York City. WNBC's cameras first captured parts of the police roundup.

Drug Enforcement Agents said because of the weak dollar, cocaine meant for distribution in New York was shipped to Europe where the cartels hoped to make bigger profits.

Officials said the main drug organization is known as the "Gulf Cartel," which investigators said shipped tons of cocaine, heroin and other drugs from Mexico and Colombia to the U.S.

Some of those shipments were forwarded via Italian organized crime groups. In addition to drug trafficking charges, investigators said some of the suspects face racketeering, kidnapping and attempted murder charges.

"Among those charged in today’s indictments are members of an organized crime group based in Calabria, Italy, who allegedly sold cocaine supplied by the Gulf Cartel via New York," U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey said.

Dubbed "Project Reckoning," investigators said they seized $57 million in cash, 16,000 kilos of cocaine, 51,000 pounds of marijuana as well as 116 weapons.

"We successfully completed a hard-hitting, coordinated and massive assault on the powerful and extremely violent Gulf Cartel," said DEA Acting Administrator Michele Loenhart.

Investigators said the suspects arrested in New York are expected to appear in federal court in Manhattan Wednesday afternoon.

"We are gratified by the decision of the Court of Appeals reinstating the jury verdict against the two defendants, who can now be sentenced for the extremely serious crimes that they committed," United States Attorney Benton J. Campbell said in a statement. "I commend the extraordinary efforts of the men and women of the Drug Enforcement Administration, New York, the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s New York Field Division, the New York City Police Department, and our law enforcement partners. I especially wish to thank the prosecutors, investigators, and staff of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York for their exceptional work on this important matter. "

In addition to New York, additional arrests were made in Georgia, Texas, New Mexico and Florida.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26758427/
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby thewestside » September 18th, 2008, 9:28 pm

International Bust Nabs over 200 Mafia Suspects
September 18, 2008


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More than 200 mafia suspects were arrested in an international operation conducted by authorities in Italy, the United States, Mexico, Panama and Guatemala, Italy's anti-mafia department said.

The bust on Wednesday, Sept. 17, included the arrests -- six in the US and 10 in Italy's southern Calabria region -- of 16 alleged members of a notorious crime family of the 'Ndrangheta, the Calabrian version of the mafia, the Rome-based National Anti-Mafia Directorate said in a statement.

Authorities also seized more than 15 tons of cocaine and $57 million in cash, the statement said.

The operation was led by the Italy's Carabinieri paramilitary police's special anti-organized crime unit ROS with the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

International drug ring

US authorities in Washington said 175 of the arrests were of individual suspected of participating in the Gulf Cartel drug smuggling ring.

The Justice Department also indicted three alleged leaders of the cartel, Ezequiel Cardenas-Guillen, Heriberto Lazcano and Jorge Eduardo Costilla Sanchez. They are charged with conspiring to ship drugs into the United States from Mexico and are the subject of an international manhunt, the Justice Department said.

Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni congratulated the Carabinieri for their work saying the operation also "shows the excellent co-operation" that exists between the Italian law enforcement agencies and those of other countries.

Authorities believe that Aquino-Colluccio 'Ndrangheta crime family members, based in Italy, the United States and Latin America, controlled a large cocaine-smuggling ring together with the so-called Cartel del Golfo (Gulf Cartel), a Mexican drug trafficking organization.

Mafia boss recently extradited

A major breakthrough in the investigation came when 'Ndrangheta boss Giuseppe Coluccio -- one of Italy's top 30 most-wanted criminals -- was arrested in Toronto and extradited to Italy in August.

Coluccio is suspected of drug-trafficking, blackmail and establishing a criminal alliance involving the 'Ndrangheta and the Sicilian Cosa Nostra mafia.

Far less known than the notorious Cosa Nostra, the 'Ndrangheta has grown in recent years to expand its activities beyond its heartland in Calabria, the "toe" of boot-shaped Italy.

The August 2007 killing of six Italians in Duisburg, Germany, believed to be part of a feud between two 'Ndrangheta crime families, made international headlines.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,214 ... 49,00.html
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby TeeKay » September 18th, 2008, 10:53 pm

Wow,15tons of coke.
This is the first ive heard of the Mexican Cartels and N'Dragheta working with eachother,especially even having their guy's in NY with the Genovese's.
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby Cold Bear » September 19th, 2008, 12:35 pm

This is probably why NYC is real dry right now.
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby thewestside » September 19th, 2008, 4:43 pm

TeeKay wrote:Wow,15tons of coke.
This is the first ive heard of the Mexican Cartels and N'Dragheta working with eachother,especially even having their guy's in NY with the Genovese's.


This bust is huge by any standards. A total of 507 arrested in Mexico, the U.S., Canada, and Italy and involving members or associates of the Gulf Cartel, the 'Ndrangheta, the Sicilian Mafia, and the American LCN. The Italians getting their supply from the Mexicans, rather than from the Colombians alone, is a new development at least as far as I can tell. As the reports have alluded to, the Mexicans were looking for a more profitable market in Europe, where the Euro is currently more valuable than the weak U.S. dollar.
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby mmd604 » September 20th, 2008, 7:27 pm

actually the shortage of cocaine is not just in new york its in canada too prices have doubled in vancouver B.C from 20k to 40k in the last year. I dont know if this is true for the rest of canada but it most likely is
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby Azure9920 » September 20th, 2008, 7:36 pm

mmd604 wrote:actually the shortage of cocaine is not just in new york its in canada too prices have doubled in vancouver B.C from 20k to 40k in the last year. I dont know if this is true for the rest of canada but it most likely is


Doubled? Haha, not around here(Toronto). We have our dry times, which is usually around....january-april, but other than that nothing out of ordinary.

The Feds are really cranking up their shit though, first this bust...then a big name drug dealer in Toronto from Italy. lol.
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby NewMission » September 22nd, 2008, 10:07 am

WWWAAAYYY to many people in the game now. More people=More Snitches. Lots of people around this way have ties to both cartels, Lots of money to be made.
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby razbojnik » September 22nd, 2008, 7:25 pm

Azure9920 wrote:
mmd604 wrote:actually the shortage of cocaine is not just in new york its in canada too prices have doubled in vancouver B.C from 20k to 40k in the last year. I dont know if this is true for the rest of canada but it most likely is


Doubled? Haha, not around here(Toronto). We have our dry times, which is usually around....january-april, but other than that nothing out of ordinary.

The Feds are really cranking up their shit though, first this bust...then a big name drug dealer in Toronto from Italy. lol.


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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby Azure9920 » September 23rd, 2008, 1:54 pm

razbojnik wrote:
Azure9920 wrote:
mmd604 wrote:actually the shortage of cocaine is not just in new york its in canada too prices have doubled in vancouver B.C from 20k to 40k in the last year. I dont know if this is true for the rest of canada but it most likely is


Doubled? Haha, not around here(Toronto). We have our dry times, which is usually around....january-april, but other than that nothing out of ordinary.

The Feds are really cranking up their shit though, first this bust...then a big name drug dealer in Toronto from Italy. lol.


Woodbridge?


http://www.thestar.com/article/480052
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby AlbaniaUnited » October 9th, 2008, 2:16 pm

shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit, 16,000 kilos. do you know how much money that is. mexicans are doing big things now a days. as far as what westside said. how is it a development if the italians are buying from the mexicans now instead of the colombians. the colombians i heard offer cocaine for crazy low prices. and one colombian said depending on the dealer, you can buy a kilo for $1000 but he might charge you more if you buy lets say 100 kilos because then he'll know your selling it for 25-50 grand. the mexicans however dont offer cocaine anywhere close to the price that the colombians do.
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Re: Mexican cartel/'Ndrangheta bust

Postby thewestside » October 9th, 2008, 5:58 pm

AlbaniaUnited wrote:shiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit, 16,000 kilos. do you know how much money that is. mexicans are doing big things now a days. as far as what westside said. how is it a development if the italians are buying from the mexicans now instead of the colombians. the colombians i heard offer cocaine for crazy low prices. and one colombian said depending on the dealer, you can buy a kilo for $1000 but he might charge you more if you buy lets say 100 kilos because then he'll know your selling it for 25-50 grand. the mexicans however dont offer cocaine anywhere close to the price that the colombians do.


It's probably been going on for some time but what I meant by this being a new development is that this is the first substantial case I am aware of where the Italian syndicates have been purchasing their cocaine from the Mexicans. I'm sure the Colombians are still their main suppliers though.
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