| News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 2, 2005
Three Former Logan Ticket Agents Arrested
For Currency Smuggling and Laundering
Boston, MA... Three women who worked as ticket counter representatives for a major
commercial airline at Logan International Airport have been arrested on charges that they
laundered U.S. currency and smuggled cash out of the United States to the Dominican Republic.
June W. Stansbury, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in
New England; United States Attorney Michael J. Sullivan; Matthew J. Etre, Acting Special
Agent in Charge of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in New England; Colonel Thomas G.
Robbins, Superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police; and George N. Naccara, Federal
Security Director of the Transportation Security Administration at Boston Logan International
Airport, announced today that ANA TEJEDA-HOLMES, age 40, of 10 First Street, Salem,
Massachusetts, ANGIE MARINEZ, age 28, of One Brookline Place, Cambridge,
Massachusetts, and MARIANELA SOSA, age 41, of 349 Summer Street, Lynn, Massachusetts,
were arrested this morning on charges of Conducting Certain Financial Transactions with Money
Represented to be Proceeds of Specified Unlawful Activity, Evading Currency Reporting
Requirements, and Conspiracy to Evade Currency Reporting Requirements.
It is alleged that between February and September 2004, the three airline employees secretly
transported U.S. currency that was represented to be the proceeds of narcotics transactions from
Boston’s Logan International Airport to the Dominican Republic on passenger flights. It is
alleged that the women evaded security procedures at Logan International Airport to avoid
scrutiny of the cash and currency reporting requirements, and delivered the cash to another
person who was waiting at the airport in the Dominican Republic.
"Financial investigations such as this highlight the broad range of authorities available to
ICE to protect the safety and security of our nation," stated ICE Acting Special Agent in Charge
Etre. "The defendants allegedly carried out their money smuggling scheme through the
bypassing of procedures put in place for national security. ICE is committed to investigating
those individuals who potentially compromise our nation's security."
TEJADA-HOLMES, MARINEZ and SOSA will appear later today in federal court before a
U.S. Magistrate Judge. Upon conviction, the maximum sentence on the Conspiracy charge is 5 years
in prison and a $250,000 fine; 20 years in prison and a $500,000 for each of the Money Laundering
charges; and 10 years and a $250,000 fine for each of the Evasion of Currency Reporting
Requirements charges. Each of the charges also carry 3 year terms of supervised release.
The investigation is continuing.
The case is being investigated by Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Transportation
Security Administration with the assistance of the Massachusetts State Police and the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Aloke S.
Chakravarty in Sullivan’s Anti-Terrorism and National Security Section.
The details contained in the Indictment are allegations. The defendants are presumed to beinnocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. |