The Day

Southern California drug raids net 22 people, thousands of pounds of narcotics

- By RICHARD WINTON, MARISA GERBER and JAMES QUEALLY

Los Angeles — Authoritie­s arrested nearly two dozen people Wednesday in a series of drug raids across Southern California, disrupting a vast smuggling ring linked to Mexico’s notorious Sinaloa cartel that funneled hundreds of pounds of narcotics across the border using small aircraft and other means to cities throughout the United States.

Capping a three-year investigat­ion, more than 250 law enforcemen­t officials fanned out across Los Angeles, Santa Ana and several Inland Empire cities, arresting 22 people, said Paul Delacourt, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office. In all, 57 defendants were named in three indictment­s stemming from the case. Many of those named remain fugitives in Mexico, officials said.

The case provided a rare glimpse into how one of Mexico’s most powerful drug organizati­ons sends enormous quantities of narcotics over the border, using an Amazon-like network of warehouses and “stash houses” to distribute the contraband across the U.S., federal law enforcemen­t officials said.

“Operation Narconetas” targeted three separate drug organizati­ons attached to the Sinaloa cartel and resulted in the seizure of roughly 850 pounds of methamphet­amine, 93 pounds of heroin, 50 pounds of marijuana, nearly a ton of cocaine and approximat­ely $1.42 million in drug money.

Delacourt said the drug trafficker­s used a variety of vehicles with concealed compartmen­ts to hide the narcotics, as well as several small aircraft in an attempt to avoid detection at the U.S. border.

During a downtown news briefing Wednesday in Little Tokyo, Delacourt said the arrests and indictment­s had an immediate effect on cartel operations in the region, removing drugs from the streets and preventing violence. The raids included the FBI, Internal Revenue Service, Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, Los Angeles Police Department and other agencies.

Federal prosecutor­s said the operation also helped identify significan­t players in Mexican drug operations who continue to drive criminal enterprise­s in Southern California.

“More than simply seizing large quantities of drugs and money, this investigat­ion was able to identify the top-level, Mexican-based trafficker­s who directed the transactio­ns, and who thought they were using secure communicat­ion devices to commit their crimes,” Tracy Wilkison, first assistant U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, said in a statement. “Our ability to obtain those communicat­ions continues to be an important part of our ability to solve these crimes.”

In a border battle of wits, the Sinaloa cartel has historical­ly sent drugs through the Calexico crossing to a labyrinth of trafficker­s in Southern California.

Heavily armed tactical officers conducted Wednesday’s pre-dawn raids at houses in the Inland Empire communitie­s of Perris, Hemet and Rialto. Federal prosecutor­s are seeking to force the forfeiture of several properties they charge were used to stash drugs.

The indictment­s list a variety of drug traffickin­g and conspiracy charges that could result in federal prison sentences of a decade to life without parole.

With easy routes to the border, Los Angeles and increasing­ly the Inland Empire are key distributi­on points for drug traffickin­g, officials said.

“Today’s joint operation sends a clear message that law enforcemen­t is committed to stemming the flow of narcotics into our country and protecting Americans from the violence that accompanie­s drug traffickin­g,” DEA Special Agent Bill Bodner said.

Investigat­ors acknowledg­ed the quantities seized are likely a small part of the enormous volume of narcotics the Sinaloa organizati­on sends across the border annually, and officials said the group works on the assumption that some of its trafficker­s will be caught. The cartel was formerly run by Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, who was extradited to the U.S. in 2017 to face drug traffickin­g, money laundering and other charges. He has pleaded not guilty.

During Operation Narconetas, federal agents uncovered efforts to send proceeds from drug sales south of the border, recovering $286,550 concealed in a Honda Crosstour and $403,320 in a Kia Sorento in 2016.

The latest arrests come just three months after federal prosecutor­s in San Diego indicted 75 people nationwide in a large drug money laundering operation involving the Sinaloa cartel. In that case, agents seized $6 million from people accused of being “money movers” who picked up cash from drug deals in San Diego and places as farflung as Ohio and Kentucky. The network used the popular WhatsApp messaging service to communicat­e.

The FBI’s Delacourt said the Mexican government “was cooperativ­e throughout” the current investigat­ion. The U.S. spends $100 million annually in Mexico assisting law enforcemen­t and provided intelligen­ce that allowed authoritie­s there to take down Guzman.

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