China Daily (Hong Kong)

Drones used to smuggle smartphone­s

- By ASKA CHEONG in Hong Kong askacheong@chinadaily­hk.com

A cross-border smuggling ring using high-tech equipment to ship smartphone­s across the Hong Kong-Shenzhen border has been busted, marking the first of such cases.

The gadget-savvy criminals used drones to fly wires between buildings on the Hong Kong and mainland sides. Once secured, and using an electric winch and pulley system, the wires formed a high-level crossing to convey contraband from Hong Kong to Shenzhen.

The 26 members of the cross-border smuggling ring was found to be shuttling bags of mobile phones worth some 500 million yuan ($79.5 million), mostly refurbishe­d iPhones.

The crime ring and its ringleader, surnamed Wu, were detained after a joint operation between Hong Kong and Shenzhen law enforcemen­t officers.

According to the Shenzhen Customs Office, the suspects temporaril­y attached wires using flying drones to carry the wires from two rented rooms on the 25th floor of a residentia­l building in Luohu district, Shenzhen, to a home in Lin Ma Hang village on the Hong Kong side. Their accomplice­s in the special administra­tive region then threaded the wires through a pulley placed on the rooftop of the home.

Once a bag was attached to the wires in Hong Kong, the Shenzhen operatives would use an electric winch to retract the wires. They worked from midnight to the early hours to avoid suspicion, and the two rooms were covered with carpets to reduce the noise of the motor.

Chen Liang, spokespers­on for Shenzhen Customs, said the ring’s every move had been thought through carefully, as neighbors were apparently unaware of the illegal activity.

A total of 20 smartphone­s would be placed inside a small canvas bag and then sent from Hong Kong, ascending high above street level during their journey.

About 10,000 to 15,000 smartphone­s could be smuggled in one day using this delivery method. For each successful­ly smuggled smartphone, at least 20 to 30 yuan could be earned. Revenues could be as high as 100 yuan for each new phone. It was estimated that smugglers could make over 10 million yuan per month, despite only working for 15 days.

Acting on tips, law enforcemen­t officers from both sides smashed the operation in February 2018 after months of investigat­ion.

A total of 260 Shenzhen Customs officers raided the rented rooms and arrested several suspects who had just finished retracting the wires to get the bootlegged goods. Also confiscate­d at the two rented rooms in Shenzhen were 4,000 smartphone­s and tools used to smuggle them. These included several motors that were burned out from overloaded shipments and backup motors. Hong Kong Customs detained three people connected to the activity, and confiscate­d 900 smartphone­s and associated tools.

The gang, said to be operating since 2016, were comprised mostly of friends and relatives of Wu, the ringleader from Heyuan, Guangdong province.

 ?? ASKA CHEONG / CHINA DAILY ?? Shenzhen Customs displays on Wednesday some of the drone equipment seized from a gang that used it to run wires to the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region to ferry smuggled phones.
ASKA CHEONG / CHINA DAILY Shenzhen Customs displays on Wednesday some of the drone equipment seized from a gang that used it to run wires to the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region to ferry smuggled phones.

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