Pubdate: Wed, 16 Sep 2009 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Authors: Evan Perez and Mike Esterl AIRLINE CREW CHARGED IN DRUG BUST U.S. Indicts 23, Including Nine American Workers, in Alleged Cocaine Trafficking Plot Federal prosecutors charged 23 people, including nine American Airlines' employees, with operating a smuggling ring that shipped thousands of pounds of cocaine in suitcases on flights from Puerto Rico to the U.S. mainland. Smugglers allegedly recruited members of the airline's ground crew at San Juan's international airport to ensure that drugs loaded onto aircraft avoided detection during shipment to several U.S. cities, according to a grand jury indictment filed in U.S. District Court in Puerto Rico. The smugglers allegedly transported more than 9,000 kilograms of cocaine on American flights beginning in 1999, according to federal investigators. The American employees would receive cocaine from traffickers, then buy suitcases and pack each one with about 30 kilograms, or about 66 pounds, of cocaine, according to the indictment. The suitcases were then packed in airline shipping containers with luggage tags and loaded onto aircraft. The DEA discovered the alleged operation in March, after a neighbor noticed American Airlines shipping containers at a house in a residential area. The neighbor called local police, who found cocaine inside the containers, according to a person familiar with the investigation. An American worker in Miami who, according to the indictment, coordinated the movement of suitcases onto conveyor belts in what were supposed to be secure airport areas, was among those arrested. The alleged ringleader, a former American cargo employee, surrendered at a federal courthouse in San Juan Tuesday afternoon. "The use of commercial aircraft to smuggle narcotics in and out of Puerto Rico...creates a serious threat to our national security," said Rosa Emilia Rodriguez-Velez, U.S. attorney for Puerto Rico. A spokesman for American, a unit of Fort Worth, Texas-based AMR Corp., said the airline has been working with authorities on the case. "These events are really, really rare," said Tim Wagner, an American spokesman. American is the biggest U.S. carrier in the Latin American and Caribbean regions, with a 37.2% market share there in June, according to U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics. The smuggling operation is one of several uncovered by U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents in recent years that allegedly used airline workers and commercial aircraft to ship drugs or launder cash proceeds from drug sales. Caribbean nations and territories, including Haiti and Puerto Rico, have become more significant conduits for Colombian cocaine and heroine as drug traffickers shift some operations from the main Pacific corridor and Mexico under pressure from law enforcement, and to avoid warring Mexican drug cartels, according to Bruce Bagley, chair of International Studies at University of Miami. Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory, is an attractive drug route because commercial flights to the U.S. aren't routinely subject to inspection, unlike flights from foreign countries. Mr. Bagley said conduits such as American Airlines workers appear to be "relatively small potatoes," with most drugs being transported by cargo ships and human "mules." In 1999, 37 American Airlines workers were among more than 50 people charged in a smuggling operation that investigators stumbled upon when a flight attendant unwittingly served heroin-laced coffee to an American pilot. Investigators said the smugglers had stashed drugs in aircraft floorboards and even in coffee pot filters. In 2003, federal airport inspectors in Miami found packages of cocaine stashed alongside coffee and snacks aboard a flight operated by Colombian carrier, Avianca S.A. Following a 2004 investigation, a former American Airlines security official at Haiti's main international airport pleaded guilty to participating in a ring that smuggled cocaine inside suitcases bound for U.S. destinations. In another case in Puerto Rico in 2004, nine American Airlines workers were among 20 airport employees indicted for helping move cocaine through the San Juan airport. All airport and airline employees in the U.S. and Puerto Rico undergo background checks for potential security threats and are continuously vetted, saon. Airport and airline employees also are subjected to random physical inspections, including their belongings, he added - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake