UPS DRUG TRAFFICKING
UPS WORKERS ARRESTED FOR ALLEGED DRUG TRAFFICKING AND VAPORS
United Parcel Service workers had used their intelligence to presumably helped the drug ring by importing and moving thousands of pound of shipment of drugs, fake vaporizers and cash cross the United States every week throughout this past decade.
The UPS workers allegedly moved thousands of contraband every week and packed them in regular cardboard boxes then passed them through UPS carrier's trucking and delivering systems. They had gotten away with this scheme for 10 years because they diverted the UPS delivery systems procedures by bypassing law enforcement and the security rules and regulations. This operation kept law enforcement from making any efforts to intercept of getting any boxes that had contained contraband. These packages were transported every week from Mexico to Tuscon, Arizona and also to the eastern part of the United States. When the packages were shipped to their destination, huge amount of cash were shipped back to the city of Tuscon, Arizona.
The workers had spent their cash on extravagant vacations, vehicles and properties.
The Department of Homeland Security and the Tuscon Police Department became aware of the connection between the drug suppliers and UPS workers scheme. Drug dealers had used the UPS workers to distribute their narcotics, so Homeland Security and law enforcement started to investigate. This investigation began in 2017 and went on for two years trying to find out how the organized crime groups used parcel shipping trucks as means to maneuver narcotics into the United States.
Their investigation had tracked down the alleged leader Barcelo, who had worked for UPS for 20 years. He was a dispatched supervisor for UPS. He was responsible for letting the drugs go through avoiding security. A total of 11 people were arrested in Tuscon, Arizona, UPS drivers, workers and supervisors. They were charged with assisting with shipments and operating cash houses, making drug equipment, drug smuggling, drug distribution and money laundering.
The investigation task force solved the case through teamwork from many efforts of wiretapping, arranged fake shipments of cash and cocaine, GPS devices were planted inside the boxes to track down the drug dealer's homes to the UPS hub and when they were back on the road, and also worked as undercover drug dealers.
They had seized a Range Rover truck, weed, cash, a boat, a corvette, ledgers hidden under a Jacuzzi, and in a storage locker they found 50,000 illegal THC vaporizer pens. These illegal vapor oil pens cause vaping-related lung disease that had killed 47 people as of November 20, 2019, in the United States.
The Detectives of Tuscon law enforcement had become irritated with UPS because they did not show any urgent interest to catch the criminals.
United Parcel Service workers had used their intelligence to presumably helped the drug ring by importing and moving thousands of pound of shipment of drugs, fake vaporizers and cash cross the United States every week throughout this past decade.
The UPS workers allegedly moved thousands of contraband every week and packed them in regular cardboard boxes then passed them through UPS carrier's trucking and delivering systems. They had gotten away with this scheme for 10 years because they diverted the UPS delivery systems procedures by bypassing law enforcement and the security rules and regulations. This operation kept law enforcement from making any efforts to intercept of getting any boxes that had contained contraband. These packages were transported every week from Mexico to Tuscon, Arizona and also to the eastern part of the United States. When the packages were shipped to their destination, huge amount of cash were shipped back to the city of Tuscon, Arizona.
The workers had spent their cash on extravagant vacations, vehicles and properties.
The Department of Homeland Security and the Tuscon Police Department became aware of the connection between the drug suppliers and UPS workers scheme. Drug dealers had used the UPS workers to distribute their narcotics, so Homeland Security and law enforcement started to investigate. This investigation began in 2017 and went on for two years trying to find out how the organized crime groups used parcel shipping trucks as means to maneuver narcotics into the United States.
Their investigation had tracked down the alleged leader Barcelo, who had worked for UPS for 20 years. He was a dispatched supervisor for UPS. He was responsible for letting the drugs go through avoiding security. A total of 11 people were arrested in Tuscon, Arizona, UPS drivers, workers and supervisors. They were charged with assisting with shipments and operating cash houses, making drug equipment, drug smuggling, drug distribution and money laundering.
The investigation task force solved the case through teamwork from many efforts of wiretapping, arranged fake shipments of cash and cocaine, GPS devices were planted inside the boxes to track down the drug dealer's homes to the UPS hub and when they were back on the road, and also worked as undercover drug dealers.
They had seized a Range Rover truck, weed, cash, a boat, a corvette, ledgers hidden under a Jacuzzi, and in a storage locker they found 50,000 illegal THC vaporizer pens. These illegal vapor oil pens cause vaping-related lung disease that had killed 47 people as of November 20, 2019, in the United States.
The Detectives of Tuscon law enforcement had become irritated with UPS because they did not show any urgent interest to catch the criminals.
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