Please enter your login details

You can also sign in with your Sowetan LIVE
and Sport LIVE account details.
   Sign Up   Forgot password?

Sign in with:

 
  • All Share : 40784.31
    DOWN -0.53%
    Top 40 : 3387.09
    DOWN -0.49%
    Financial 15 : 11117.02
    DOWN -1.12%
    Industrial 25 : 46858.79
    DOWN -0.34%

  • ZAR/USD : 9.9551
    DOWN -0.45%
    ZAR/GBP : 15.5991
    DOWN -0.21%
    ZAR/EUR : 13.3480
    DOWN -0.29%
    ZAR/JPY : 0.1046
    DOWN -0.12%
    ZAR/AUD : 9.5007
    UP 0.13%

  • Gold : 1373.0150
    UP 0.36%
    Platinum : 1425.2000
    DOWN -0.96%
    Silver : 21.7108
    UP 0.21%
    Palladium : 698.2500
    DOWN -1.24%
    Brent Crude Oil : 106.190
    UP 0.16%

  • All data is delayed by 15 min. Data supplied by I-Net Bridge
    Hover cursor over this ticker to pause.

Wed Jun 19 19:45:02 SAST 2013

Six arrested in New York for smuggling drugs in candy

Sapa-AP | 08 August, 2012 10:14
Chocolates. File photo.
Image by: MARIANA BAZO / REUTERS

A lost-luggage handler ran an Ecuador-to-New York smuggling ring that disguised drugs in chocolates and cocaine-soaked scuba diving certificates, and he stole valuables out of flyers' misplaced bags that he was hired to deliver, authorities said.

Jorge Guerrero arranged to ship innocent-looking but drug-laden packages on cargo planes from Guayaquil, Ecuador, to New York's Kennedy Airport, authorities said as Guerrero, his wife and four others pleaded not guilty to conspiracy and other charges. The packages went to parcel-delivery companies, where the conspirators picked them up, authorities said.

Seized shipments read like a bizarre shopping list: sugar and oatmeal cookies packed atop a pound of cocaine, chocolate candies laced with half a pound of heroin, and empanadas – a Latin American savoury pastry – stuffed with over three pounds of cocaine, all in professional-looking packages as if bound for store shelves, according to authorities.

Also listed was a stack of diving course diplomas that had been drenched in more than three pounds of cocaine, which was apparently to be extracted later.

Guerrero sometimes picked up the packages while on his trips for a baggage-delivery company, and he also exploited his job to mine jewellery, electronics and other items from the lost luggage to resell, authorities said.

"The Guerrero organization rarely overlooked an opportunity to earn a dishonest dollar," Special Narcotics Prosecutor Bridget Brennan said in a release. Her office and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement did the investigation.

Guerrero, 39, has worked for seven to 10 years for a Queens-based lost-luggage company, said his lawyer, Franklin Rothman. The company, which isn't charged in the case, declined to comment.

"Whatever this investigation yields, we haven't heard about the drugs being recovered from (Guerrero's) home," Rothman said.

Guerrero's wife, Cecilia, 33, was an "active partner" and money manager in his smuggling scheme, Assistant District Attorney William Novak said.

Her lawyer, Bryan Konoski, argued that the charges against her don't make her out to be a major player.

"There's no allegation that she's out there wrapping up drugs into chocolate bars" or making drug deals, he said.

The Guerreros have been married for 17 years and have three children, ranging from four to 12, who are in relatives' care now, Konoski said. She is an Ecuadorean citizen. He is a US citizen originally from Ecuador.

The drugs sell for about 10 times as much in the US as they do in Ecuador, while the stolen clothes and electronics stood to fetch more in Ecuador than they do here, authorities said.

More than 50 handbags bearing such names as Louis Vuitton and Prada, 50 watches, 30 pairs of sunglasses by designers including Versace and Dior, 15 cameras, and other pricey goods were found at Guerrero's Queens home, along with three ledgers logging items he had fished from luggage and sold, authorities said.

SHARE YOUR OPINION

If you have an opinion you would like to share on this article, please send us an e-mail to the Times LIVE iLIVE team. In the mean time, click here to view the Times LIVE iLIVE section.