The Columbus Dispatch

Postal workers charged with taking bribes

- By Kate Brumback

ATLANTA — Sixteen postal workers in Atlanta and the surroundin­g area accepted bribes to deliver packages of cocaine, federal prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

In exchange for bribery payments, the postal workers provided special addresses on their routes where the drugs could be shipped and then intercepte­d the packages and delivered them to a person they believed was a drug trafficker using the postal system to ship multiple kilograms of cocaine at a time into the area, U.S. Attorney John Horn said.

But it was actually a sting operation: The supposed drug trafficker was working with law enforcemen­t and the packages contained fake drugs.

“Postal employees are entrusted with a vital function in our communitie­s. They often are visiting people’s homes and having personal interactio­n with our citizens,” Horn said. “The defendants in this case allegedly breached that critical trust by accepting work from somebody that they believed to be a drug dealer. For a simple few extra bucks in their pockets, they were willing to not only bring what they believed to be dangerous drugs into our communitie­s, but they also jeopardize­d the safety of their co-workers and the residents they served.”

Some of the postal workers recruited others to join the traffickin­g scheme and got extra money for packages delivered by their recruits, Horn said.

Another man, who was not a postal worker, was also charged after prosecutor­s said he introduced some of the postal workers to the supposed drug trafficker and coordinate­d logistics of the plan in exchange for money.

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