logo
Cocaine is still being smuggled in banana containers; Greek sting shows

Cocaine is still being smuggled in banana containers; Greek sting shows

USA Today2 days ago
Banana cargo boxes continue to be a popular way to smuggle cocaine overseas after Greek police said they seized nearly 600 pounds of cocaine from Latin America with an estimated value of more than 5.5 million euros, or $6.5 million.
Officials arrested three members of a transnational crime group who were shipping a container to a port at the northern city of Thessaloniki, the Greek Police's Ministry of Citizen Protection said in an Aug. 8 news release.
Following a tip from the United Kingdom's National Crime Agency and a court-issued order, officials located and seized the cache containing the drug, police said. One of the three suspects was arrested in connection with the case after refusing to submit to a legal police check, and officers later confiscated a small amount of cocaine at his home.
On X, police shared video of officers dismantling the banana shipment of cocaine, showing multiple brick-sized packages of the drug slowly falling down.
Police did not identify the three men arrested but confirmed their ages and their alleged roles within the criminal organization, including:
The three suspects were taken to face prosecution on Monday, Aug. 11. Police are seeking additional suspects who they say helped make the operation possible.
Banana shipments commonly used to ship cocaine
The failed Greek operation is not the first attempt to package cocaine inside banana cardboard boxes overseas.
In July, Russia's customs service said officials seized 1,800 pounds of cocaine hidden under banana shipment containers worth around $153 million, CBS News reported. Last December, Greek Police confiscated 205 pounds of cocaine at the Thessaloniki port after customs agents X-rayed a banana container.
Last year, officials in Paraguay confiscated more than 10 tons of cocaine worth nearly $500 million, seized from sugar and bananas in two South American drug busts. At least five people were arrested in connection with the trafficking cases in July 2024.
In February 2024, the UK's National Crime Agency seized 6.3 tons of cocaine worth over $570 million from a container at Southampton Port, about 80 miles southwest of London.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Colombians bid farewell to presidential hopeful Uribe after shooting at political rally
Colombians bid farewell to presidential hopeful Uribe after shooting at political rally

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Colombians bid farewell to presidential hopeful Uribe after shooting at political rally

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombians on Wednesday bid farewell to senator and presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe Turbay, who died more than two months after being shot during a political rally in the South American country's capital. Family, friends, members of Congress and a delegation of government officials from the United States honored Uribe, whose coffin was draped with Colombia's flag. The 39-year-old died Monday in the hospital where he had been since the June 7 shooting. Thousands of mourners paid their respects Tuesday. 'The bullets that took his life not only broke the hearts of his family, they reopened the fractures of a country that has yet to find peace,' Senate President Lidio García said, referring to Colombia's long history of violence against politicians. Uribe had become one of the strongest critics of Colombia's current government. In October, he joined the list of politicians seeking to replace Gustavo Petro, the first leftist to govern Colombia, in the May 2026 elections. Uribe was shot three times, twice in the head, while giving a campaign speech in a park in a working-class Bogota neighborhood. Authorities have arrested six people, including the teenager they say shot him, but they have not determined who ordered the attack or why. The shooting, caught on multiple videos, alarmed Colombians who have not seen this kind of political violence against presidential candidates since Medellin drug lord Pablo Escobar declared war on the state in the 1990s. Uribe's mother, well-known journalist Diana Turbay, was among the victims in that period. She died during a police rescue after being kidnapped by a group of drug traffickers led by Escobar seeking to block their extradition to the U.S. 'If my mother was willing to give her life for a cause, how could I not do the same in life and in politics?' Uribe, who was 5 when his mother was killed, said in an interview with a Colombian news outlet last year. The senator's family said he would be buried Wednesday at Bogota's Central Cemetery. The cemetery is the oldest in the city and the final resting place of figures such as Liberal leader Luis Carlos Galán, who was shot dead in 1989 while giving a presidential campaign speech in Bogota.

Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot
Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot

CNN

timea day ago

  • CNN

Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot

An American woman who was hired by her British lover as a would-be assassin, but then botched the attack and spent five years on the run, has been found guilty of conspiracy to murder. Aimee Betro, 44, from Wisconsin, attempted to shoot a man dead outside his home in Birmingham, England, on September 7, 2019, but failed because her gun jammed – leaving her would-be victim to escape unscathed through 'sheer luck,' according to prosecutor Hannah Sidaway, from the Crown Prosecution Service in the West Midlands. After a case that spanned continents and involved multiple crime agencies, including the FBI and the National Crime Agency, Betro was convicted Tuesday at Birmingham Crown Court. The court had heard that, despite living thousands of miles away, Betro had become entangled in a family revenge plot arranged by father and son, Mohammed Aslam and Mohammed Nazir, from Derbyshire, England. The plot stemmed from a fight the pair had with the owner of a clothing store in Birmingham in 2018. The court heard how the dispute with the store owner, Aslat Mahumad, led the two men to conspire to kill him, or a member of his family, the UK's PA Media news agency reported. His son, Sikander Ali, was the eventual target and victim, according to PA. Aslam and Nazir were jailed for their role in the murder plot last year, West Midlands Police said in a statement. Nazir was sentenced to 32 years in prison while Aslam landed 10 years, according to the CPS. 'Only Betro knows what truly motivated her or what she sought to gain from becoming embroiled in a crime that meant she travelled hundreds of miles from Wisconsin to Birmingham to execute an attack on a man she did not know. The jury clearly agreed this was a planned hit which failed,' the prosecutor said. Over the three-week trial, the court heard how Betro met her lover Nazir on a dating app in late 2018 and flew to meet him in person that Christmas, before returning to the US in January 2019, PA reported. In August 2019, she traveled to the UK again to carry out the planned killing the following month. On the day of the attack, Betro disguised herself in a niqab and waited outside her victim's house in a Mercedes purchased earlier that day, the CPS said. As the man pulled up to his home in his Black SUV, CCTV captured Betro leaving her vehicle, firearm in hand, and attempting to fire shots. As the weapon jammed, the man was able to escape in his car, reversing at speed and clipping the Mercedes' door on the way out of the cul-de-sac, according to the CPS. After the bungled attempt, the hitwoman abandoned her vehicle nearby, before returning to the property hours later in a taxi, the CPS detailed. She fired three bullets through the windows of the house, including a bedroom window. She then returned to her taxi, from which she sent taunting messages from a burner phone to the victim's father, reading 'Where are you hiding,' and ''Stop playing hide 'n' seek you're lucky it jammed.' The damaged Mercedes was later recovered with a key piece of evidence inside, a black glove containing Betro's DNA, the CPS said. Betro fled the UK within hours of the shooting. She was joined in the US three days later by her lover and co-conspirator, Nazir. The pair orchestrated another revenge plot, involving sending illegal ammunition to a man in Derby, England, in the hopes he would be arrested, according to West Midlands Police. The Wisconsin-native then decided to hideout in Armenia, where she was tracked down by Armenian police in July 2024 and extradited, the CPS said. 'This was a complex investigation and extradition process which required bringing together multiple agencies including the National Crime Agency and Armenian Courts. We worked together to make sure we had a watertight prima facie case in order to lawfully arrest Aimee Betro in a foreign country without her becoming aware and potentially fleeing again,' John Sheehan, head of the CPS Extradition unit, said. Betro will be sentenced on Thursday, August 21.

Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot
Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot

CNN

timea day ago

  • CNN

Would-be hitwoman from Wisconsin convicted in UK over failed murder plot

Crime UKFacebookTweetLink Follow An American woman who was hired by her British lover as a would-be assassin, but then botched the attack and spent five years on the run, has been found guilty of conspiracy to murder. Aimee Betro, 44, from Wisconsin, attempted to shoot a man dead outside his home in Birmingham, England, on September 7, 2019, but failed because her gun jammed – leaving her would-be victim to escape unscathed through 'sheer luck,' according to prosecutor Hannah Sidaway, from the Crown Prosecution Service in the West Midlands. After a case that spanned continents and involved multiple crime agencies, including the FBI and the National Crime Agency, Betro was convicted Tuesday at Birmingham Crown Court. The court had heard that, despite living thousands of miles away, Betro had become entangled in a family revenge plot arranged by father and son, Mohammed Aslam and Mohammed Nazir, from Derbyshire, England. The plot stemmed from a fight the pair had with the owner of a clothing store in Birmingham in 2018. The court heard how the dispute with the store owner, Aslat Mahumad, led the two men to conspire to kill him, or a member of his family, the UK's PA Media news agency reported. His son, Sikander Ali, was the eventual target and victim, according to PA. Aslam and Nazir were jailed for their role in the murder plot last year, West Midlands Police said in a statement. Nazir was sentenced to 32 years in prison while Aslam landed 10 years, according to the CPS. 'Only Betro knows what truly motivated her or what she sought to gain from becoming embroiled in a crime that meant she travelled hundreds of miles from Wisconsin to Birmingham to execute an attack on a man she did not know. The jury clearly agreed this was a planned hit which failed,' the prosecutor said. Over the three-week trial, the court heard how Betro met her lover Nazir on a dating app in late 2018 and flew to meet him in person that Christmas, before returning to the US in January 2019, PA reported. In August 2019, she traveled to the UK again to carry out the planned killing the following month. On the day of the attack, Betro disguised herself in a niqab and waited outside her victim's house in a Mercedes purchased earlier that day, the CPS said. As the man pulled up to his home in his Black SUV, CCTV captured Betro leaving her vehicle, firearm in hand, and attempting to fire shots. As the weapon jammed, the man was able to escape in his car, reversing at speed and clipping the Mercedes' door on the way out of the cul-de-sac, according to the CPS. After the bungled attempt, the hitwoman abandoned her vehicle nearby, before returning to the property hours later in a taxi, the CPS detailed. She fired three bullets through the windows of the house, including a bedroom window. She then returned to her taxi, from which she sent taunting messages from a burner phone to the victim's father, reading 'Where are you hiding,' and ''Stop playing hide 'n' seek you're lucky it jammed.' The damaged Mercedes was later recovered with a key piece of evidence inside, a black glove containing Betro's DNA, the CPS said. Betro fled the UK within hours of the shooting. She was joined in the US three days later by her lover and co-conspirator, Nazir. The pair orchestrated another revenge plot, involving sending illegal ammunition to a man in Derby, England, in the hopes he would be arrested, according to West Midlands Police. The Wisconsin-native then decided to hideout in Armenia, where she was tracked down by Armenian police in July 2024 and extradited, the CPS said. 'This was a complex investigation and extradition process which required bringing together multiple agencies including the National Crime Agency and Armenian Courts. We worked together to make sure we had a watertight prima facie case in order to lawfully arrest Aimee Betro in a foreign country without her becoming aware and potentially fleeing again,' John Sheehan, head of the CPS Extradition unit, said. Betro will be sentenced on Thursday, August 21.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store