| News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 16, 2004
DEA
Disrupts Colombian Drug Ring Criminals
Smuggled Heroin into East Coast Cities

One hundred heroin-filled balloons that were swallowed and transported
internally by drug couriers. |
JAN
15- DEA Administrator Karen P. Tandy together with United States Attorney
Christopher Christie of the District of New Jersey, United States Attorney
David N. Kelley of the Southern District of New York and United States
Attorney Marcos Daniel Jimenez of the Southern District of Florida, today
announced the disruption of a major Cali, Colombia-based heroin trafficking
organization. Dubbed "Operation Streamline," the investigation
targeted the Orlando Ospina trafficking organization that smuggled more
than 990 pounds of high grade (75%-80% pure) heroin a year into Miami,
FL for distribution to New York, NY; Philadelphia, PA; and Newark, NJ.
During the last two
days, law enforcement officers in Colombia and the United States executed
11 search warrants and 11 arrest warrants resulting in the seizure of
1.7 pounds of heroin. Eight of those arrested in Colombia will be extradited
to face U.S. prosecution. Before today's enforcement action, authorities
had arrested 17 individuals and seized 108 pounds of heroin in connection
with this operation.
Operation Streamline
began in Miami, Florida in early 2002 and expanded to the following major
cities: Charlotte, NC, Newark, NJ, New York, NY, and Philadelphia, PA,
and the following South American countries: Argentina, Colombia and Nicaragua.
The original targets, Orlando and Carlos Ospina, were arrested by DEA
in Florida during May, 2003.

Part of a corrugated cardboard box that was used to smuggle straws
filled with heroin. The traffickers wedged the straws into the spaces
inside the corrugated cardboard to conceal them inside the walls
of the boxes. |
"Drug
trafficking reaches across international boundaries and jurisdictions.
Law enforcement must do the same. The success of this multi-national,
multi-jurisdictional investigation exemplifies the cooperation between
law enforcement agencies throughout the United States and the governments
of Colombia and Argentina," said Ms. Tandy.
"As drug cartels
are forced to be more creative in their methods of smuggling drugs and
cash, the DEA's techniques at catching them are too," U.S. Attorney
Christopher J. Christie said. "The cartels are feeling more and more
isolated in their ability to export, particularly when we have the assistance
of governments of those export countries like Colombia combined with U.S.
detection and intelligence techniques," stated United States Attorney
Christie.
"This indictment
is yet another step forward in combating the significant problem of narcotics
trafficking in the United States. This effort has resulted in the seizure
of multi-kilogram quantities of heroin and the prosecution of eleven individuals
for their participation in a large-scale heroin operation. We will continue
to prosecute such violators vigorously, focusing especially on organizers
and other major narco-trafficking targets no matter where they are,"
stated United States Attorney Jimenez.
The traffickers used
both traditional and non-traditional smuggling routes and methods. For
example, they smuggled approximately 220 pounds of heroin over three months
from Cali, Colombia, to Nicaragua, by secreting the drugs in drinking
straws and placing them in boxes of seafood. From Nicaragua, the drugs
were shipped to a seafood company in Miami, FL, where they were received
by the Miami cell headed by Orlando Ospina, and transported to New York
City for distribution. The organization also used internal body couriers
to transport drugs from Cali and Bogotá, Colombia; and Buenos Aires,
Argentina to major east coast cities.
The traffickers also
used traditional and non-traditional methods to transport their narcotics
proceeds from the United States back to Colombia. In the non-traditional
method, $100 bills were rolled into a cylinder shape, pressed and then
swallowed by couriers. Most of the couriers were able to swallow 1,000
bills and thus could smuggle $100,000 per trip. The organization also
operated a check-cashing business in Cali, Colombia that could launder
approximately $25,000 a day in proceeds. Additionally, the organization
used Western Union wire transfers to send drug proceeds in $1,000 increments
from the United States to Colombia.

Bundles
of drinking straws with heroin hidden inside them. The heroin was
seized during Operation Streamline. |
This
two-year Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) operation
was coordinated by DEA's Special Operations Division (SOD), a joint law
enforcement program which is comprised of agents and analysts from the
DEA, FBI, IRS and the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, as
well as attorneys from the Department of Justice's Criminal Division.
It would not have been accomplished without the steadfast and tireless
efforts of the following foreign and domestic law enforcement and prosecutors'
offices:
Federal, State
and Local Partners
- Bureau of Immigration
and Customs Enforcement
- U.S. Attorney's Office - Southern District of Florida
- U.S. Attorney's Office - District of New Jersey
- U.S. Attorney's Office - Southern District of New York
- U.S. Attorney's Office - Eastern District of Pennsylvania
- U.S. Department of Justice - Narcotics and Dangerous Drug Section
- Newark Police Department
- New Brunswick, NJ Police Department
- Mercer County Prosecutors Office
- Middlesex County Prosecutors Office
- Essex County Sheriff's Department, Bureau of Narcotics
- Bayonne, NJ Police Department
- New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice
- New York City Police Department
- New York State Police
- North Carolina State Police
International Law
Enforcement Partners
- Colombian National
Police/DIJIN
- Gendarmeria Nacional Argentina
For additional information
please contact DEA - Public Affairs at 202-307-7977.
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