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'Massive' Smuggling Ring Dismantled In Arizona

Smuggling Ring In Arizona

AMANDA LEE MYERS   10/31/11 07:06 PM ET   AP

PHOENIX — Arizona authorities have disrupted a Mexican drug cartel's distribution network, arresting dozens of smugglers in dismantling a ring responsible for carrying more than $33 million worth of drugs through the state's western desert every month, officials said Monday.

The ring is believed be tied to the Sinaloa cartel – Mexico's most powerful – and responsible for smuggling more than 3.3 million pounds of marijuana, 20,000 pounds of cocaine and 10,000 pounds of heroin into the U.S. through Arizona over the past five years, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Their efforts in that time generated an estimated $2 billion, according to ICE.

ICE's Homeland Security Investigations and the Pinal County Sheriff's Office arrested 22 suspected smugglers tied to the ring on Thursday, the latest of three busts they say have brought it down following a 17-month investigation dubbed "Operation Pipeline Express."

In the three busts combined, the agencies have arrested 76 suspected smugglers and seized more than 61,000 pounds of pot, about 160 pounds of heroin, about 210 pounds of cocaine, nearly $760,000 in cash, and 108 weapons, including assault rifles and shotguns. The other busts came in mid-September and mid-October.

Although the agencies released some information about Thursday's bust last week, they held back most of their information for a Monday news conference in which they displayed dozens of guns and hundreds of pounds of pot seized for members of the media.

The smuggling ring operated by using backpackers and vehicles to move drugs from the border to a network of so-called stash houses in the Phoenix area. The drugs were then sold to distributors from states across the country.

Authorities say the ring virtually monopolized smuggling routes along an 80-mile section of the Arizona-Mexico border from Yuma to just east of the small Tohono O'odham Nation town of Sells.

Some of the officials at the news conference in Phoenix lauded the bust as a significant blow to the Sinaloa cartel, while others acknowledged that it affects only a portion of the cartel's massive operation, which still has cells operating in the state.

"It's a body blow but it doesn't knock them out by any sense of the imagination," Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeau said. "This literally is just a fraction of what's going on."

It's only a matter of time before either the Sinaloa cartel or another operation reclaims the area affected by the bust, said Matthew Allen, ICE's special agent in charge for Arizona.

"This is not a closing chapter in this book," he said. "We have every expectation that command and control in Mexico is working to re-establish their presence, and it's our job to go after them."

Authorities began investigating the smuggling ring in June 2010, when a Pinal County sheriff's deputy stopped two smugglers hauling 1,500 pounds of pot in Stanfield, about 50 miles south of Phoenix. At least one of the smugglers gave investigators detailed information about the ring.

Allen said that those arrested range from low-level drug haulers and scouts to those who were in command.

"This is how you attack international organized crime and transnational criminal organizations, by focusing on the people, the leadership and the illicit pathways that they exploit," he said. "Our goal is to take them out by their roots."

The case is a reminder of how important it is for the federal government to gain operational control over the border, Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne said.

"I find it completely unacceptable that Arizona neighborhoods are treated as a trading floor for narcotics," Horne said. "Children are not safe when their homes are located near the other homes that are used as distribution centers for drugs. Our highways are not safe when criminal organizations battle each other, sometimes violently and at risk to innocent bystanders, for control of loads of drugs being transported in vehicles."

Authorities need to send a message to cartel leaders through continued busts, Babeau said.

"We have to stand up to bring the fight to the cartels to say, `This is America. You're not bringing your violence, you're not bringing your drugs and your trash to our country. We're going to stop you,'" he said.

___

Follow Amanda Lee Myers on Twitter at http://twitter.com/#!/AmandaLeeAP

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PHOENIX — Arizona authorities have disrupted a Mexican drug cartel's distribution network, arresting dozens of smugglers in dismantling a ring responsible for carrying more than $33 million wort...
PHOENIX — Arizona authorities have disrupted a Mexican drug cartel's distribution network, arresting dozens of smugglers in dismantling a ring responsible for carrying more than $33 million wort...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
anthonytaurus
don't f&f me. you dont' know what I'll say next
12:23 PM on 11/06/2011
And, in real news, 50 drug smuggling rings look to pick up the slack in that area.

Do they really believe that stopping one small group is going to even help? LOL, no, it's not. I can point out 5 smuggling rings in NYC and I can tell you, depending on the area, who would take over the operation after the first group gets popped. The transition is almost seamless. At the end of the day, every user knows at least 5 to 10 dealers. One gets caught, they just scroll through their other list of names.

The war on marijuana is a joke. The cartels are laughing all the way to the bank, thanks to the DEA and US federal government for wanting to play cops and robbers in a game they could never win.

In 1936, there were about 100,000 marijuana users. In 2011, there are about 25,000,000 marijuana users (who admit it). 50,000,000 more have at least tried marijuana (those who admit it).

You prohibitionist clowns have been failing for over 75 years.
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12:51 PM on 11/06/2011
Of those 25 million marijuana users, how many do you suppose have lied about it in their application to purchase a firearm?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
08:44 PM on 11/02/2011
Excellent work by local, state, and federal officers. We need to keep arresting and imprisoning anyone who works with the drug cartels. These animals need to know that their activities, while tolerated south of the border, will result in severe punishment on our side.
11:41 AM on 11/02/2011
The "War on Drugs" has failed why do we keep paying for it? When will we learn?
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11:48 AM on 11/02/2011
Are you suggesting that we eliminate the penalties that we normally assess against those who use or traffic cocaine, or heroin, or methedrine?
12:14 PM on 11/02/2011
Why are you so reluctant to substantiate your assertion that gun owners are racist, "Bunnieman"? It’s because you can’t, isn’t it? It troubles you that I won’t be bullied by you, doesn’t it. Will you now find solace in a misspelled word or improper use of a comma? I’m truly sorry that it isn’t working out for you. Have a fantastic Wednesday.
01:29 PM on 11/02/2011
Did you get your permit?
12:44 PM on 11/02/2011
Never. Sigh...
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11:02 AM on 11/02/2011
This is not about drugs, not about borders, not about smuggling. It is about money. Take the money out of the equation and all the rest of the problems are diminished or gone completely. The phony war on drugs has been waged for 30 years under both republicans and democrats with some big busts, some arrests but no cessation in the flow of drugs across the border. Instead we now have an entrenched mafia style organization on both sides of the border with vast sums of money corrupting the police, judges and politicians. Take away the money by decriminalization and use the obscene sums wasted on enforcement for treatment and education. The cartels won't go away completely, we have given them the time to branch out into other criminal activities but the major source of their cash will be gone and they won't be able to afford to arm young thugs or pay bribes on the scale they do today.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
orbo
10:00 AM on 11/02/2011
The US can never stop the ongoing smuggling coming into this country. Those smugglers are like cockroaches you can never kill or get rid of them. You may get a small portion but the others always stay 10 steps ahead of the Customs Enforcement.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:46 AM on 11/02/2011
If our border is so secure, as the DHS and administration keep telling us, then how can $33 MILLION in drugs be smuggled across the border EVERY MONTH? And even the ICE head agent in AZ said it is only a matter of time before another Sinaloa cartel takes over the smuggling.

Secure border? Don't make me laugh - and this is a sad, sick joke on the people who live in the border states.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
anthonytaurus
don't f&f me. you dont' know what I'll say next
12:33 PM on 11/06/2011
The border is very secure. You're just not considering the idea that border agents are in on the deals. The cartels give American authorities a few "tips" so they get to look like they're doing something. This amounts to about 5%, maybe less, of marijuana being caught on the border. The people that we "trust" to do their jobs at the border are taking major kickbacks. A lot of times what happens is that the drugs are caught, confiscated, and then "destroyed" which really means resold.

I always ask, when was the last time you've seen marijuana get destroyed in the US? Not just the baby plants that they catch in the forests. I'm talking about full grown, ready to harvest/cure/distribute marijuana. You'll never see it.
10:59 PM on 11/01/2011
illegal aliens dont carry drugs into the United States do they?
11:01 AM on 11/02/2011
No and they won't touch them once the get here. They know it's illegal.
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03:08 PM on 11/01/2011
IF AMERICANS WOULD NOT DO DRUGS ~~~NO PROBLEMO !! AND WE NEED TO LEGALIZE MARIJUANA
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tenaxproposit
C.U.L.L the herd
01:11 PM on 11/01/2011
Funny, the american people who use illicit drugs disagree. They say, bring all your drugs here!!! There are (including pot users) Tens of millions of them.

They do it year in year out and have since the early 1970's when nixon launched this foolish crusade.

How about a paradigm shift to focus on education and treatment? You know, treat the problem at its source? WHERE DEMAND IS? not where the SUPPLY is. this is the same problem we have with economic policy. We think if we provide more we will win, more police, more guns, more laws, more money, and...all we get is more drugs....
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:50 AM on 11/02/2011
There is too much money to be made in provate prisons - too much money laundering by our own banks - too much to be made by the companies who supply the surveillance drones and equipment for fighting this so-called "war on drugs" for any money to be left over for treatment and follow-up and counseling and other programs.
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tenaxproposit
C.U.L.L the herd
01:11 PM on 11/02/2011
Umm...yeah, that is why I asked for a paradigm shift...

But you are correct, corruption will destroy this nation under the guise of "free enterprise"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rooster Coburn
Less Gov't + More Responsibility = A Better World
12:46 PM on 11/01/2011
Banning stuff people want to use/consume always works out so well!
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azlegalcitizen
INDEPENDENT
01:03 AM on 11/01/2011
iF ANY OF YOU LIBS READ ALL OF THIS ARTICLE MAYBE YOU WILL UNDERSTAND WHY WE BORDER STATE CITIZENS ARE MAD AS HE*L WITH THE FEDS IN THEIR TOTAL DISREGARD FOR OUR SAFETY AND SECURITY. A MEXICAN DRUG RING WAS FOUND BY A SHERIFFS OFFICER, NOT A FED, JUST A PLAIN OLD SHERIFF'S OFFICER DOING HIS JOB WHILE OBAMA'S MEN ARE OUT SUING US IN FEDERAL COURTS. 33 MILLION A MONTH IS THE TAKE FOR THIS SINOLA MEXICAN CARTEL.... WE IN AZ ARE THE ONES WHO PUT UP WITH THE HIGHWAY GUN BATTLES, STASH HOUSES, DRUG BUSTS ALL OVER THE METRO CITIIES. YOU LIBS COME ON DOWN TO AZ AND FIGHT THE MEXICANS. MAYBE MICHELLE COULD TAKE HER NEXT EXPENSIVE MULTI MILLION DOLLAR VACATION HERE TO SEE THE MEXICAN CARTELS IN ACTION FOR HERSELF. HERE COWARDLY HUSBAND SURE WON'T COME HERE.
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01:24 AM on 11/01/2011
Say, wasn't it a plain old Arizona sheriff's officer who looked the other way when Jared Loughner bought his Glock? Just wondering.
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azlegalcitizen
INDEPENDENT
02:39 AM on 11/01/2011
no AZ sheriff had anything to do with Jared buying a gun, he had not been declared mentally ill and had no criminal record and could have bought a gun legally anywhere in the usa. yes that "left win nut" is what he friends described him sure shouldn't have a gun, everyone gets 20/20 hindsight don't you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rooster Coburn
Less Gov't + More Responsibility = A Better World
12:44 PM on 11/01/2011
How would law enforcement even know when a legal gun sale took place? J.L. was not a "prohibited person" under state or federal law so local law enforcement would not even be notified.
03:05 AM on 11/01/2011
Is your caps lock broken? New keyboards are very inexpensive these days.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BrokeInSoCal
12:55 AM on 11/01/2011
another great job by ICE.
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azlegalcitizen
INDEPENDENT
01:06 AM on 11/01/2011
ICE DID NOT DO THIS DRUG BUST A SHERIFF'S OFFICER OF PINAL COUNTY SPOTTED THE FIRST TRUCK AND INVESTIGATIONS WERE DONE BY THE PINAL SHERIFF'S OFFICE, ICE CAME IN FOR THE PHOTO OPS THIS WEEK.
01:54 AM on 11/01/2011
The Sheriff officer made a bust and ICE spent a year doing the investigation which culminated in this large bust. What is your problem? Law enforcement worked together and accomplished something good. And what is with all the caps? Too much effort to hit the shift key or what?
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06:56 AM on 11/01/2011
This type of operation does not take just a group of Sheriff's. It take Intell and other agency to bring this type of criminals down.

ICE's Homeland Security Investigations and the Pinal County Sheriff's Office arrested 22 suspected smugglers tied to the ring on Thursday, the latest of three busts they say have brought it down following a 17-month investigation dubbed "Operation Pipeline Express."
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11:11 PM on 10/31/2011
I told you so. They will be here soon, and the head of our kid's in their hands. Now you know why Joe Arpio is so crazy about illegals immigrants. I am sorry for the good and hard worker legal immigrants to.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dr Juan
Ron Paul -More Liberty, Less Government, No Fed
10:17 PM on 10/31/2011
80 mile section of border? That is a only a small tiny fraction.
Who still is pumping drugs across the rest of rest of the border?
And what about boats along east and west coasts and planes overhead, not to mention semi's.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
anthonytaurus
don't f&f me. you dont' know what I'll say next
12:44 PM on 11/06/2011
It will never matter how secure our borders are when it's the border agents that facilitate the smuggling of these drugs. You're talking about millions per month. You don't think the cartels are paying off people on the US side? The border is about as secure as the agents who look the other way with their hands out. And, don't make the mistake of believing those independent groups aren't in on it as well. There's too much money to be made on all sides.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
10:16 PM on 10/31/2011
with the Mexican drug Cartels moving into the US, I can fully understand the latest Gallop polls.

http://www.gallup.com/poll/150341/Record-Low-Favor-Handgun-Ban.aspx
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11:26 PM on 10/31/2011
Your misspelling of "Gallup" causes me to suspect that you do not understand their polls at all.
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azlegalcitizen
INDEPENDENT
01:08 AM on 11/01/2011
WE CAN DO WITHOUT YOU CHILDISH NASTY COMMENTS.