The UPS employees allegedly used their knowledge of the mail carrier's inner workings to ensure the contraband, packed in standard cardboard boxes, passed through its trucking and delivery systems and evaded security protocols and law enforcement, officials told the Post.
Local investigators tracked the accused ringleader, Mario Barcelo — a 20-year veteran of UPS and a dispatch supervisor in Tucson — for at least 10 years, the Post reported. Barcelo abused his position to bypass security measures and ensure the drugs were loaded onto the right trucks and delivered on time and without interference, authorities told the newspaper. He was arrested earlier this month.
Officials arrested another UPS supervisor and two company drivers this month, charging them with money laundering, drug possession, and distribution, the Post reported. Seven other people are facing charges for allegedly assisting with shipments and running stash houses, the newspaper said. The task force broke the case through a combination of wiretapping, going undercover as drug traffickers, organizing shipments of fake cocaine and cash, and placing GPS devices inside the boxes to track them from the alleged conspirators' homes to the UPS hub then out onto the road, the Post reported.
Source: Financial Digest (financialdigest.net)
bet those packages were on time
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