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Thursday, 18 February 2010

Thomas Corry, 52, of Aughrim, Scariff, Co Clare, pleaded guilty to four charges

Thomas Corry, 52, of Aughrim, Scariff, Co Clare, pleaded guilty to four charges of having cocaine, cannabis resin and prescription drugs with total value €2,053 for sale or supply. He was found with the drugs and other contraband when he was stopped near the prison before he was due to start a night shift on March 16, 2009.
On the evening of hisarrest, a carrier bag found in his car contained the drugs and a large quantity of other contraband which included 31 mobile phones, 34 phone chargers, 22 sets of blue-tooth headsets, 90razor blades, six razor handles, a penknife, screwdriver, and two litres of alcohol. Passing sentence Judge Ray Fullam said Corry had participated in planned, premeditated criminal activity with the potential to destroy life. Judge Fullam added: "He acted corruptly and perverted his function as a prison officer and undermined the security of Limerick prison." Corry with almost 30 years service, and who served as president of hislocal rugby club in Scariff, admitted smuggling contraband into the prison over a five-year period, having identified flaws in the security system. Garda Monica O’Reilly told state prosecutor, John O’Sullivan she received confidential information the accused planned to smuggle drugs into the prison when he was due to start work at 8pm on March 16, 2009. As Corry drove along Roxboro Road towards the prison he was stopped at a garda check point set up near the back entrance gate. Garda O’Reilly and Garda Deirdre Foley approached Corry and found a carrier bag in the front passenger seat of his car. It contained the contraband and €400 in cash which was Corry’s payment for agreeing to bring in the goods.
When questioned at Roxboro Road Garda Station Corry said he was bringing the contraband into the prison as he had done previously, having got a phone call.
He told gardaí: "When you get the call you get the call." He had picked up the bag from another man when they met at Park Road. He usually got €50 or €100 for similar errands and the €400 he got that day was the biggest. He informed gardaí that mobile phones were the most desired contraband sought by prisoners and cannabis was also popular. It was better to pull with the prisoners than against them, he told gardaí.
Corry also claimed to gardaí he had certain difficulties in his relationships with colleagues and as a result befriended prisoners. He began to liaise too much with prisoners and fell by the wayside smuggling about three or four times a year.
While he knew sometimes what he was smuggling, other times he preferred to turn a blind eye to what he was bringing into the prison, he said. While there was no intimidation when he started to smuggle into the prison, about three years ago prisoners began to mention his son and an assault on him in the city. This made him feel more vulnerable because he then began to feel 100% under their control, he claimed. Garda O’Reilly said Corr outlined in detail certain flaws in the prison security system which enabled him to carry on his smuggling. Most of the time, he would hand over the smuggled goods to a prisoner, other times he would hide it where a prisoner would pick it up. He used the money he earned for cigarettes and buying diesel. On the evening of his arrest, there was so much stuff in the carrier bag he had decided to bring it in bit by bit if he could not get it in all at the one time.
Garda O’Reilly in reply to Anthony Sammon, for the defence, said Corry only began to fear getting caught when security got tighter. There was an amalgamation of fear of getting caught and the people he was dealing with. Garda O’Reilly said Corry co-operated and wanted to tell them the totality of his wrongdoing after his arrest.
Character evidence was given by Barry Gibbons who told of Corry’s work with young players at Scariff rugby club where the accused had served as club president.

John Edney, 57 denies a charge of conspiring to supply a class A drug

John Edney, 57, of Main Road, Sutton-at-Hone, Kent, told the jury at Blackfriars Crown Court: "I don't hold with drugs in any way".
It is alleged Mr Edney brought three 4x4 vehicles and insured them in false names for a gang to use.
He denies a charge of conspiring to supply a class A drug, namely cocaine.
The court previously heard that 1,554kg (3,425lb) of the drug was found when a boat sank off the Irish coast.
Bales of cocaine
Prosecutors argue that Mr Edney conspired together with Michael Daly, Alan Wells and others to supply the drug.
Retired Metropolitan Police detective Daly, 49, and Wells, 56, have admitted their part in the conspiracy.
Three other men - Perry Wharrie, Martin Wanden and Joe Daly - were convicted in Cork, Ireland, while a fourth, Gerard Hagan, pleaded guilty.
Martin Heslop, defending, asked Mr Edney: "Were you ever involved in any conspiracy to import cocaine or serious drugs into the UK?"
He replied: "No, not at all".
Mr Heslop continued: "Did you have any idea at all that they [the vehicles] may be connected to a drug smuggling operation?"
"Absolutely not," Mr Edney said.
He added: "I don't hold with drugs in any way. To be involved in any such operation was out of the question."
The men behind the plot tried to land 62 bales of cocaine using a rigid hull inflatable boat (RHIB), the court previously heard.
But in rough seas the vessel ran out of fuel and began to sink, leaving members of the gang to swim ashore

Indonesian prosecutors have demanded that an Iranian married couple be jailed for eight years

Indonesian prosecutors have demanded that an Iranian married couple be jailed for eight years for possessing 4.1 kilograms of methyl amphetamine (locally known as sabu-sabu).
“The defendants are proven guilty of violating the 1997 drugs law,” prosecutor Saimun told a hearing at the Tangerang District Court on Thursday.The defendants, M. Javad and Sonia Roudgart, are also facing a Rp 2 million fine each, tempointeraktif.com reported.
Customs and excise officers initially arrested Roudgart at Soekarno-Hatta Airport in Tangerang, Banten, for allegedly smuggling 3.1 kilograms of crystal meth from Thailand, on July 16 last year.The officers later managed to apprehend Javad, who arrived at the airport using a different flight, with one kilogram of meth.

drugs smuggler has been arrested in Switzerland with 123 condoms stuffed with cocaine weighing 1.7 kilograms in his stomach


drugs smuggler has been arrested in Switzerland with 123 condoms stuffed with cocaine weighing 1.7 kilograms in his stomach, border guards say.Michel Bachar, a spokesman for federal border guards, said the 123 condoms represented the equivalent of a 5.5 metre long string of sausages or 3.5 litres of milk in volume."It's exceptional,'' he told AFP today, underlining that the contents of just one of the condoms could have killed the carrier.The man was among six people in a French-registered car who were stopped after they ran through a red light and sped past a border post near Geneva last Sunday.X-rays revealed that four of them were carrying a total of nearly three kilograms of cocaine in their stomachs, in five centimetre condom packages coated with wax or resin.At least two other similar cases were uncovered on the Swiss side of the border in the past four months.Nine people were arrested in France in a similar case last week on suspicion of taking part in cocaine trafficking between Spain and France.Swiss border guards recovered all of the swallowed cocaine capsules after several days.

James Taylor, 43, who was employed as a prison officer at HMP Liverpool at the time of the alleged offences, has also been charged with misconduct

James Taylor, 43, has been charged with two counts of possession of cocaine with intent to supply, one count of possession of cannabis with intent to supply, and two counts of possession of a class C controlled drug.Taylor, who was employed as a prison officer at HMP Liverpool at the time of the alleged offences, has also been charged with misconduct after he was arrested in a joint investigation Merseyside Police and the prison service.He is due to appear before Liverpool City Magistrates Court on Monday.
This week prison insiders revealed that mobile phones were regularly smuggled in and used by inmates to threaten their victims on Facebook.

Tuesday, 9 February 2010

almighty Latin Touch Boy Nation gang activity at a suspected methamphetamine lab busted last month on La Porte’s east side.

Those were among the new details released after Friday’s initial court appearances of Dustin Hine, 23, and 21-year-old Briana Lucas.Both defendants are charged with Class A felony dealing methamphetamine and Class C felony illegal drug lab: possession /sale of precursors.According to court documents, members of the La Porte Metro Operations Unit, Indiana State Police and U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency on Jan. 27 responded to the 400 block of Lincoln Way where officers were prepared to make an arrest after seeing evidence that a large quantity of pseudo ephedrine was being purchased at a nearby pharmacy.The cold medication is a main ingredient of methamphetamine.Once allowed inside, detectives found an active meth lab consisting of the drug cooking inside several soda bottles that had smoke coming out of plastic tubes from the pressure released by the cooking process, court documents revealed.
Among the other items seized were ingredients for meth such as red lye, fuel lithium battery strips and cooking utensils such as funnels and coffee filters, police said.
Pseudo ephedrine was also found in a coffee grinder and several glass tubes.There was sodium hydrochloride recovered from a white plastic jar. Court documents also revealed that gang symbols such as ALTBN and five-point crowns were sprayed on the walls in red paint.The letters stand for “almighty Latin Touch Boy Nation,’’ police said.Hine and Lucas were both ordered held in the La Porte County Jail on $5,000 cash only bond to await the conclusion of their cases.If convicted, Hine and Lucas both could face anywhere from a 20- to 50-year sentence on one of the counts.

illegal alien carrying a MAC-10 machine gun.


video captures two illegal aliens armed with rifles and scopes. The next video captures illegal alien drug mules who are carrying backpacks filled with marijuana. The black jugs filled with water help them hide at night time. The final video captures an illegal alien carrying a MAC-10 machine gun.

Terrell J. Anderson, 20, ran away when he saw detectives approach him

Terrell J. Anderson, 20, ran away when he saw detectives approach him, police said. Officers chased him through the apartment building, during which Anderson tossed away 71 bags of heroin, police said. Police recovered the drugs, as well as $110 in cash, which police said they believe is from drug sales.
Anderson was charged with possession of heroin, possession with intent to distribute, possession with intent to distribute within 500 feet of a park and within 1,000 feet of a school, resisting arrest and obstruction of justice, police said. He also had two warrants for his arrest. Anderson was lodged in the Atlantic County Jail on $25,000 bail.
Anderson previously served about nine months in prison on various drug charges in Atlantic County, according to the state Department of Corrections Web site. He was released in July.

Nelson Wilfredo Rios was sentenced to 13-and-a-half years in prison for helping a Mexican drug cartel smuggle several pounds of cocaine

Nelson Wilfredo Rios was sentenced to 13-and-a-half years in prison for helping a Mexican drug cartel smuggle several pounds of cocaine at a time into the United States, prosecutors said. The 49-year-old recruited other Virginians to help carry the drugs across the border in secret compartments hidden in their cars, authorities said. He also personally drove car loads of cocaine across the border. Rios pleaded guilty to importing cocaine in September. He is a citizen of El Salvador and will be turned over to immigration authorities for deportation proceedings after serving his prison sentence.
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