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Top Ten Cities for arresting Americans


The top 10 cities where Americans were arrested and the number taken into custody:
1. Tijuana: 520
2. Guadalajara: 416
3. Nuevo Laredo: 359
4. London: 274
5. Mexico City: 208
6. Toronto: 183
7. Nassau, Bahamas: 108
8. MƩrida, Mexico: 99
9. Nogales, Mexico: 96
10. Hong Kong: 90

Arrests WorldWide (Drug Enforcement)

Arrests WorldWide (Drug Enforcement)

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2,500 citizens are arrested abroad. One third of the arrests are on drug-related charges. Many of those arrested assumed as U.S. citizens that they could not be arrested. From Asia to Africa, Europe to South America, citizens are finding out the hard way that drug possession or trafficking equals jail in foreign countries.
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Showing posts with label Sydney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sydney. Show all posts

Friday, March 21

David Wren, Gregory William Jones,John Michael Wilson have been charged with importing a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug Heroin

Gregory William Jones, 48, of Balmain in Sydney's inner west, and John Michael Wilson, 54, of central Sydney, both appeared via videolink at Parramatta Bail Court.
Both have been charged with importing a commercial quantity of a border controlled drug and attempting to possess a commercial quantity of heroin.Neither man applied for bail and it was formally refused.Both are due to appear at Central Local Court on March 26.A third NSW man, 57-year-old David Wren from Dapto, appeared at Wollongong Magistrates Court on the same charges.He made no application for bail and was remanded in custody to appear at Central Local Court on March 25.
A fourth man, from Adelaide, is due to face the same charges in Adelaide Magistrates Court on Tuesday.It's the second major drug bust by the AFP, NSW Crime Commission and Customs in as many weeks.There have been about 200 separate heroin busts across Australia this year, netting 63kg of the drug.Australian authorities seized cash and drugs worth almost $10 million in raids across three states.
Authorities allege the syndicate concealed 28 kilograms of heroin, with a potential street value of $8.4 million, in three wooden chests of drawers bound for Adelaide.
The chests were intercepted in Sydney in February, then tracked to an address in Camden Park in Adelaide and back to Shellharbour, near Wollongong in NSW, by a joint-agency taskforce made up of the Australian Federal Police (AFP), NSW Police, NSW Crime Commission and Customs.
The taskforce seized the heroin and more than $1.5 million in international currency in raids in Sydney, Adelaide and Brisbane on Thursday.
Police said they believed the cash, found in various locations, including the glovebox of a car, was the "proceeds of previous (drug-related) activity".

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Wednesday, March 12

50 year old man, and two women, aged 25 and 28 arrested $87 million worth of cocaine found hidden inside green tea packets

50-year-old Hurstville man and two women from Allawah, aged 28 and 25, were charged with importing and attempting to possess a commercial quantity of cocaine.
The Hurstville man will also be charged with dealing with proceeds of crime worth $1 million or more under section 400.3 of the Criminal Code Act 1995.
The 28-year-old woman will appear in Sutherland Local Court today, while the other two people were refused bail to appear in Central Local Court today.
It will be alleged in court that the syndicate concealed the cocaine in one kilogram portions inside packets labelled as green tea. The packets were contained in 10 boxes inside a shipping container of furniture.
As a result of inquiries by JACG investigators, Customs officers inspected the shipping container upon its arrival in Sydney from South East Asia on Tuesday, 4 March and discovered the concealment.
Over the past week, JACG members monitored the delivery of the consignment to a factory warehouse in Auburn in Sydney's west.
Yesterday, search warrants were executed throughout the day at nine locations in Hurstville, Allawah, Rockdale, Auburn, Glebe and the Sydney CBD, during which the two women were arrested. The 50-year-250 kilograms of the powder was found hidden inside green tea packets, on a furniture shipping container, which arrived in Sydney on March 4.Sydney police and customs have seized $87 million worth of cocaine, found on a shipping container from South-east Asia, making it the fourth largest bust in Australian history.
'That's one quarter of a tonne of cocaine that won't be on the streets of Sydney tonight dealing misery,' said NSW Police Commissioner, Andrew Scipione.The breakthrough is the result of an eight week investigation by the Joint Asian Crime Group.The drugs were substituted and monitored for a week before search warrants were executed on nine Sydney properties, resulting in the arrests of a 50 year old man, and two women, aged 25 and 28. All are facing drug importation charges, which carry a maximum penalty of life in prison.Police have praised the operation, saying law enforcement in this country is up to the challenge of catching traffickers.
'This is further evidence of the Federal Police and the state police and customs and a number of other agencies working together to get the result that we've seen today,' said Mr Scipione.Police aren't ruling out the possibility of more arrests relating to the million dollar drug haul.

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Saturday, March 8

Lauren Cullen prosecution did not oppose Cullen's application for bail, saying she was the mule in an extensive commercial operation.

Lauren Cullen, 24, is one of three people charged with trafficking a commercial quantity of a controlled drug.She was arrested at the Adelaide Airport in December, after arriving on a flight from Sydney.It is alleged police found half a kilogram of cocaine and the same amount of methamphetamine hidden inside shampoo and baby powder containers inside her luggage.Today, the prosecution did not oppose Cullen's application for bail, saying she was the mule in an extensive commercial operation.
Cullen is subject to strict home detention conditions and must adhere to a curfew.Her two co-accused remain in custody.

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Sunday, February 17

smuggling almost 900 grams of heroin in internally concealed packages

Australian Federal Police (AFP) have arrested a woman for allegedly smuggling almost 900 grams of heroin in internally concealed packages.Australian Federal Police said the 39-year-old Australian woman was stopped by customs officers on a flight from Thailand to Sydney on Thursday. She produced two internally concealed packages containing white powder, believed to be heroin, police said.The woman was taken to hospital, where a medical examination recovered 165 heroin packages totalling about 880 grams.She has been charged with importing a border-controlled drug and is due to appear at Sydney Magistrates Court today.

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Friday, January 4

Nicholas Jake Barton


Nicholas Jake Barton, 34,great-grandson of Sir Winston Churchill was sentenced today to three years in an Australian prison for his role in a £5 million drug racket.
whose mother Arabella was the wartime leader’s granddaughter, pleaded guilty in November to involvement in the scheme to manufacture thousands of ecstasy pills.
He admitted to knowingly taking part in the supply of a commercial quantity of a prohibited drug, a charge carrying a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.
Barton, who bears a resemblance to Sir Winston, was arrested in June 2006 at his beachside flat in Sydney following a three-month undercover police investigation.
Police found in a property he had sub-let about 250,000 ecstasy tablets, 26 lbs of MDMA - the powder used to make the drug - as well as drug-making equipment and £40,000 in cash during the raids.
But District Court judge Colin Charteris found Barton had only a "belated" and limited role in the supply of the ecstasy tablets.
“The fact the defendant is descended from a hero of the 20th century does not affect the sentence I must impose," said Justice Charteris, adding that it "was of historical importance only".

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Tuesday, January 1

Lidcombe and Homebush arrests



Police arrested three men at homes in Lidcombe and Homebush, where they found the drugs as well as three firearms, a silencer, ammunition and magazines, precursor chemicals allegedly used in the manufacture of illegal drugs, and a number of MDMA tablets.
All three were charged with possession of prohibited drugs and/or firearm offences.
The arrests followed a joint operation involving officers from New South Wales and South Australia yesterday which resulted in the arrest and charging of two men and a woman at Adelaide Airport. Have been charged in relation to the seizure of cocaine and ice with an estimated street value of $1.3 million.
Drugs with an estimated street value of $700,000 were allegedly detected in the luggage of a female passenger travelling on a flight from Sydney.

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Friday, December 28

Zambian women

two women, aged 31 and 29 years, had aroused the suspicion of the Customs officers at the Sydney airport and during questioning admitted concealing drugs insides their bodies, according to an Australian Federal Police statement.Three African women carrying contraband drugs were recently caught by the law-enforcement agencies in Dubai and Sydney, Australia, according to sources
The Zambian women, part of the increasing phenomenon of Asians and African drug ‘mules’, were found to have swallowed capsules filled with heroin in the hope of flushing it out after reaching their destination safely. Dubai is just a transit point in the worldwide drug smuggling network. Because of the emirate’s tough anti-drug laws and zero-tolerance policy, Customs authorities in European countries do not usually suspect people travelling from or transiting through Dubai.

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