Selecting an attorney for legal cases is a very important decision. Please enter your information below to receive a Free Consultation from an attorney in your area:
Criminal
Defense News
U.S. Joins with Brazil, Panama, Colombia To Break Up Drug Ring
Washington -- U.S. authorities, working in partnership with law enforcement agencies in Latin America, have broken up an international drug ring responsible for smuggling more than 13,605 kilograms of cocaine per month from Colombia to the United States and Europe, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). In a May 17 statement, the DEA said a three-year investigation, dubbed "Operation Twin Oceans," netted more than 100 arrests, the seizure of 47,555 kilograms of cocaine and nearly $70 million in assets. The DEA said it worked with a coalition spearheaded by the Brazilian federal police, Panama's judicial police and Colombia's national police to break up what was known as the Pablo Rayo-Montano drug trafficking organization. The DEA also credited law enforcement agencies in Argentina, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Mexico, Spain, the United Kingdom and Venezuela with helping to achieve arrests in the case.
As part of Operation Twin Oceans, three islands off the coast of Panama owned by the Rayo-Montano organization were seized. Additional seizures also were made of yachts, fishing trawlers, art galleries, the largest fishing and boating store in Panama and other commercial properties and businesses owned by the Rayo-Montano group. The DEA said Pablo Rayo-Montano was the commander and controller of a criminal organization that used highly sophisticated methods to coordinate the movement of cocaine to the United States and Europe, while shipping illegal drug proceeds back to Colombia. The United States put Rayo-Montano on its Consolidated Priority Organization Target list in October 2005. That list identifies the leaders of the most significant international drug-trafficking organizations threatening the United States. Rayo-Montano was arrested May 16 at his residence in Brazil by the Brazilian federal police, the DEA said. It added that Rayo-Montano started as a simple drug transporter in Buenaventura, Colombia, almost 20 years ago and ultimately became head of a worldwide criminal cartel.
Rayo-Montano masterminded a cocaine trafficking hierarchy that included production, international transportation/smuggling and wholesale distribution of drugs and money laundering, said the DEA. DEA Administrator Karen Tandy said the Rayo-Montano organization had "its own private, rogue navy to run a drug business that was nearly as sophisticated as a small nation. As well-equipped and complex as this enterprise was, it was a matter of time before law enforcement caught on, and now Rayo-Montano's decadent, drug-funded lifestyle has caught up with him. This morning, his real estate holdings went from three islands to one jail cell."The DEA said that if convicted, the defendants in the case face sentences ranging from a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison to up to life imprisonment.
Miranda rule and Miranda rights are important
The rule, pronounced in Miranda v. Arizona, that confessions are inadmissible in a criminal prosecution if the police do not advise the suspect in custody of certain rights before questioning. The rights include: a. The right to remain silent and to refuse to answer any questions; b. The right to know that anything the suspect says can and will be used against the suspect in a court of law; c. The right to consult with an attorney and to have an attorney present during questioning; d. The right to have counsel appointed at public expense, prior to any questioning if the suspect cannot afford counsel.
Newsroom
News about Criminal cases in Montana and nationwide:
Definition:
Court-ordered payment to restore goods or money to the victim of a crime by the offender.
Miranda rule
Definition:
The rule, pronounced in Miranda v. Arizona, that confessions are inadmissible in a criminal prosecution if the police do not advise the suspect in custody of certain rights before questioning.
Fraud
Definition:
An intentional perversion of truth; deceitful practice or device resorted to with intent to deprive another of property or other right.
Legal Disclaimers All attorney listings are a paid attorney advertisement, and do not in any way constitute a referral or endorsement by an approved or authorized lawyer referral service. The information provided on Criminal Attorney Montana.com is not intended to be legal advice, but merely conveys
general information related to legal issues commonly encountered. Your access
to and use of this website is subject to additional Terms
and Conditions.