Miami Herald

Feds break up massive meth shipments from Mexico to Miami

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

Massive shipments of Mexican methamphet­amine mixed in with concrete tiles and house paint were intercepte­d in late March by federal drug agents in Miami, leading to the arrests of four traffickin­g suspects who faced narcotics-importatio­n charges Wednesday in federal court.

The Mexican-produced crystal stimulant was shipped by truck in two loads — the first holding 200 kilos, the second 350 kilos — through Texas to South Florida in multimilli­ondollar meth deals investigat­ed by Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion undercover informants and agents, according to a criminal complaint.

Over the past three months, DEA undercover meetings took place with members of the meth syndicate in Colombia, Mexico and the Miami area, including plans to use a plane to fly more than $4 million in cash from a local airport to Mexico to pay off the narcotics exporters, the complaint says.

Appearing in federal court Wednesday were the narcotics organizati­on’s alleged leader, Adalberto Comparan-Bedolla, the son of a former Mexican mayor who is described as his boss in the complaint, and an associate, Carlos Basauri-Coto, who is described as a money launderer with shoe and investment companies.

Comparan-Bedolla’s lawyer, assistant federal public defender Elizabeth Blair, could not be reached for comment. Basauri-Coto’s attorney, Michael Nadler, declined to comment.

Both men are charged along with Silviano Gonzalez-Aguilar and Salvador Valdez, who also appeared in federal court Wednesday. All four defendants are accused of conspiring to import more than 500 grams of methamphet­amine into the United States and related offenses, according to federal prosecutor Frederic Shadley.

In a separate DEA criminal complaint, ComparanBe­dolla’s father, Adalberto Fructuoso ComparanRo­driguez, and another partner in their alleged meth syndicate, Alfonso Rustrian, were arrested this week in Guatemala for extraditio­n to Miami.

The Miami case, which contrasts with the typical cocaine, heroin and opioid distributi­on probes in South Florida, reflects a resurgence of meth shipments pouring over the southern border of the United States, authoritie­s say.

The new wave of meth is shifting the focus from opioids to this crystal stimulant — a drug that used to be common, then faded, but is resurging — via illegal imports from meth superlabs in Mexico.

Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

 ??  ?? Methamphet­amine packages were mixed in with concrete tiles and house paint.
Methamphet­amine packages were mixed in with concrete tiles and house paint.

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