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News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 31, 2004
MORE
THAN 130 ARRESTED IN INTERNATIONAL
NARCOTICS AND MONEY LAUNDERING INVESTIGATION
MAR
31 WASHINGTON, D.C. B Deputy Attorney General James Comey,
DEA Administrator Karen P. Tandy, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller,
and IRS Criminal Investigations Chief Nancy Jardini announced the
arrests of more than 130 defendants across the United States as part
of an investigation dubbed, “Operation Candy Box.” Today’s
arrests mark the culmination of a two-year multi-jurisdictional and
international Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force case that
was coordinated by the multi-agency Special Operations Division,
targeting a significant MDMA (Ecstasy) and marijuana trafficking
organization in both the United States and Canada.
| Deputy
Attorney General James Comey and DEA Administrator Karen Tandy
announce the culmination of Operation Candy Box
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The arrests today
include alleged ringleaders Ze Wai Wong, a Chinese national, and Mai
Phuong Le, a Vietnamese national. The indictments allege Wong was the
leader of a drug distribution ring operating in 18 U.S. cities and
Canada, while Le is accused of orchestrating the laundering of the
drug proceeds of the drug ring. According to indictments unsealed today,
the charges against the more than 130 defendants center around their
alleged roles in the various drug distribution cells, as money launderers
and couriers in both the United States and Canada.
“The importance
of today’s operation cannot be overstated,” said Deputy
Attorney General James Comey. “Through the work of many different
agencies, we have achieved a top to bottom decimation of a dangerous
drug organization and a complimentary attack on the fuel that drives
the organization - their money.”
Early this morning,
authorities began arresting over 100 indicted defendants and executing
approximately 35 search warrants in 16 U.S. cities, including Houston,
TX; Los Angeles, CA; San Francisco, CA; Oakland, CA; San Jose, CA;
Jacksonville, FL; New Orleans, LA; Baton Rouge, LA; Mobile, AL; New
York, NY; Boston, MA; Atlanta, GA; Alexandria, VA; Des Moines, IA;
Minneapolis, MN; and Salt Lake City, UT. Canadian authorities are expected
to execute approximately 50 arrest warrants on subjects identified
in related investigations in the Canadian cities of Ottawa, Toronto,
and Montreal.
| Representatives
of Canadian Law Enforcement at the Press Conference Inspector
Douglas Handy, Detective Chief Superintendant Dave Crane, Superintendant
Mike Gaudreau, and Inspector
Jeff McGuire.
|
"Out of all
the dangers of illegal drugs, ecstasy is of special concern because
it is aimed at our teens and youth masquerading as colorful candy,” said
DEA Administrator Karen Tandy. “Today we have decimated a criminal
organization that has poisoned our neighborhoods with up to a million
Ecstasy tablets per month and sent as much as $5 million in proceeds
abroad per month over five years. But for the families and loved ones
of those who would have taken these millions of dangerous pills in
the future, the impact of this operation is enormous,” she said.
This two-year investigation
has already produced 38 arrests and the seizure of 400,000 MDMA tablets,
1,170 pounds of marijuana, 6.5 pounds of methamphetamine, 12 handguns,
and $5.9 million in U.S. currency. Operation Candy Box targeted an
international organization involved in ecstasy and Canadian marijuana
(locally referred to as “BC Bud”) distribution to the United
States through command and control cells in Canada. According to the
court documents, the organization allegedly utilized a sophisticated
money laundering network of money remitters and travel agencies in
both the U.S. and Canada to launder drug proceeds.
“Today’s
arrests deal a substantial blow to a criminal organization involved
in illicit drug production, trafficking and money laundering,” said
FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III. “This victory is a direct
result of enhanced collaboration with our municipal, state, federal
and Canadian law enforcement partners, as well as our use of intelligence
to systematically dismantle a complex, multi-jurisdictional criminal
enterprise,” he concluded.
According to the
U.S. and Canadian court documents, Ze Wai Wong, 46, is alleged to be
a major distributor of Ecstasy throughout the U.S. and Canada, while
Mai Phuong Le, 38, is accused of directing the money laundering operation
responsible for repatriating the drug proceeds of Wong's organization
and of other traffickers. According to the court papers, U.S. money
remitter firms, including U.S. Tours and Travel (California and Texas)
and An Chau Services (Georgia) are alleged to have been used to launder
the illicit proceeds. It is alleged that the defendants were able to
make large cash deposits into the U.S. banking system while disguising
the illegal source of much of the money. The proceeds were later transferred
to various bank accounts world-wide, including in Vietnam, it is alleged.
Information obtained during the investigation indicated that the network
was capable of allegedly laundering as much as $5,000,000 per month.
Warrants are being served on financial institutions utilized by the
network in an effort to seize funds as well as to obtain transaction
records.
"The major
goal in a financial investigation is to identify and document the movement
of money during the course of a crime and the efforts employed to hide
and conceal the profits," said Nancy Jardini, Chief, IRS Criminal
Investigation. "The link between where the money comes from, who
gets it, when it is received, and where it is stored or deposited,
can provide proof of criminal activity. Finding and connecting those
links is what IRS brings to this cooperative effort today. However,
the combined efforts of law enforcement agencies in an investigation
of this magnitude produce a formidable force against narcotics trafficking
and money laundering."
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Royal
Canadian Mounted Police Chief Superintendant Raf Souccar
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Wong and Le are
accused of directing the operations from Canada, and both were arrested
in Canada this morning. However, U.S. indictments have also been returned
against both Wong and Le. An indictment unsealed today in the Central
District of California charges that Wong and Le operated a Continuing
Criminal Enterprise (CCE). An indictment in the Southern District of
New York names both Wong and Le in drug trafficking and conspiracy
charges, and the District of Massachusetts has indicted Le for similar
offenses.
Operation Candy
Box revealed allegations that bulk quantities of MDMA tablets
were being made in clandestine labs in Canada. In August 2003, three
fully operational tableting laboratories were discovered and dismantled
by Canadian officials.
Authorities also
identified a large network of couriers who allegedly utilized vehicles
with sophisticated traps to transport currency and Ecstasy. In one
incident, a vehicle bound for Canada via the border city of Burlington,
Vermont was searched and $750,000 in U.S. currency was discovered concealed
in the fuel tank. Information developed during the investigation suggested
that the organization was capable of distributing up to 1,000,000 Ecstasy
tablets per month in the U.S. and Canada.
Operation Candy
Box is a joint investigation involving the DEA, FBI, the U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS), the Department of Justice Criminal Division, various state
and local agencies, and in conjunction with the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police (RCMP), Toronto Police Department, Ontario Provincial Police,
and Ottawa Police Department.
The charges contained
in the indictment are just allegations. The defendants are presumed
innocent until and unless proved guilty in a court of law.
The following
federal, state, and local agencies participated in Operation
Candy Box:
Federal
Agency Participation:
Drug Enforcement
Administration
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Department of Justice, Criminal Division, Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Section
Department of Justice, Criminal Division, Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering
Section
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Internal Revenue Service
State Department, Bureau of Diplomatic Security
United States
Attorneys Offices:
Houston, TX - SDTX
Alexandria, VA - EDVA
Los Angeles, CA - CDCA
Jacksonville, FL - MDFL
New Orleans, LA - EDLA
Baton Rouge, LA - MDLA
Mobile, AL - SDAL
New York, NY - SDNY
Boston, MA - DMass
Atlanta, GA - NDGA
Des Moines, IA - SDIA
Minneapolis, MN - DMinn
Salt Lake City, UT - DUT
San Francisco, CA - NDCA
Canadian
Agency Participation:
Royal Canadian
Mounted Police
CFSEU (Greater Toronto Area)
Ontario Provincial Police
Ottawa Police Service
Canada Border Services Agency
State
and Local Law Enforcement Participation:
Massachusetts:
Massachusetts State Police
Boston Police Department
Boston Housing Police
Milton Police Department
Middlesex County District Attorney's Office
Vermont:
Vermont State Police
New York:
New York City Police Department
California:
Oakland Police Department
South Alameda County Narcotics Task Force
Union City Police Department
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department
California Department of Justice, Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement
Tustin Police Department
Newport Beach Police Department
Huntington Beach Police Department
Garden Grove Police Department
Westminster Police Department
Florida:
Jacksonville Sheriff's Office
North Carolina:
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department
Rock Hill Narcotics Task Force
Cabarrus County Sheriff's Office
Louisiana:
Kenner Police Department
Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office
Louisiana State Police
Alabama:
Mobile Police Department
Bayou La Batre Police Department
Baldwin County Sheriff's Office
Minnesota:
Minnesota Gang Strike Force
Anoka-Hennepin Task Force
Minnesota State Gaming Commission
Minnesota State Patrol
Texas:
Houston Police Department
Texas State Attorney's Investigators Office
Texas Department of Pubic Safety
Washington:
Bellevue Police Department
Maryland:
Prince George's County Police Department
Montgomery County Police Department
Calvert County Sheriff's Office
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