September 28, 2009 Washington D.C.
$41 million in U,S Currency seized by ICE and International Partners
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
special agents along with Colombian and Mexican law enforcement officers between Sept. 9 and 18 made the
largest bulk cash container seizure in Colombia and the United States - more than $41 million in U.S.
currency that was secreted in shipping containers found in ports in Colombia and Mexico. The seizures are
part of an ongoing ICE investigation by ICE's Attaché Office in Bogota, Colombia.
"ICE's bilateral cooperation between its foreign
law enforcement partners has significantly furthered ICE's mission to disrupt the criminal organizations that
are smuggling narcotics into the United States and smuggling bulk cash shipments out, which they use to fund
additional criminal activities," said the Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary for ICE John
Morton. "This seizure of more than $41 million has surely put a dent in the illegal activities of the
individuals involved."
"We recognize both the U.S. government and the
Mexican authorities as our best allies in the fight against organized crime and thank and congratulate ICE
for their support and collaboration," said General Oscar Naranjo Trujillo, director general of the Colombian
National Police. "We also praise the dedicated and professional work of 152,000 Colombian policemen that work
day and night towards security and coexistence amongst Colombians and the work of the members of the Customs
and Tax Police and the Anti-Narcotics Directorate. We are determined to bring to justice the suspected owners
of these illegal funds, as well as other drug traffickers that through their illegal activities damage
Colombia and its allied countries."
Alfredo Gutierrez, chief of
Mexico's Tax Administration Service, said, "The data we collect electronically from the trade community on a
regular basis and the data we receive from and crosscheck with our international partners is now processed
through highly sophisticated systems and cutting-edge technologies. Our personnel have been trained to make
the best of these instruments and the results are there."
On Sept. 9, 2009 Colombian customs inspectors and
Colombian National Police (CNP) officers seized $11.2 million in U.S. currency hidden in two shipping
containers, each containing 20 big bags filled with ammonium sulfate. Sixteen of the 40 bags contained
$700,000 in $20 dollar bill denominations. The containers left on a vessel from the port of Manzanillo,
Mexico, to the west coast port of Buenaventura, Colombia. According to Colombian customs inspectors, this
seizure is the largest amount of cash ever seized by police at a port in Colombia.
On Sept. 10, 2009 a second seizure of U.S. currency
estimated at $11.2 million was also seized at the port of Buenaventura. Additionally on Sept. 11, 2009 ICE Attaché Mexico
City special agents reported that information developed by ICE Attaché Bogota agents resulted in a third
seizure of U.S. currency estimated at $11 million found hidden inside two shipping containers containing
sodium sulfate at the Port of Manzanillo, Mexico.
On Sept. 14, 2009 ICE special agents along with
Colombian authorities discovered in Buenaventura three other shipping containers containing approximately $5
million in $100 and $50 dollar bill denominations concealed within bags labeled as sodium sulfate. These
shipping containers also originated in Manzanillo.
On Sept. 18, 2009 a second seizure was recovered in
the amount of $2.15 million in $100 dollar bill denominations concealed within two containers with similar
bags containing sodium sulfate aboard a vessel that arrived in Manzanillo.
The ports of Buenaventura and Manzanillo are key
points of a well-known route used for smuggling cocaine northward to Mexico and then on to the United States,
and for sending cash back into Colombia.
The ICE Attaché Bogota office is the lead U.S. law
enforcement agency in this bulk cash smuggling investigation, with assistance from ICE Attaché Mexico City,
the Colombian National Police, Colombian Department of Treasury, Mexican Customs, and the Mexican Assistant
Attorney General for Special Investigations and Organized Crime (Siedo).
Since its inception in 2005, Operation Firewall
efforts have resulted in approximately 524 arrests and 3,275 seizures in the United States and abroad
totaling over $260 million. Over $100 million has been seized by foreign authorities. In Jan 2007, Colombia
authorities working in conjunction with ICE and other federal authorities found approximately $85 million in
U.S. currency, euros and gold bars in five stash houses in Cali, Colombia. This is the largest cash seizure
in Colombian history.
 Source: U.S Immigration and Customs
Enforcement
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