Stabroek News

Guyanese sailors plead guilty to possession of 4-tonne cocaine shipment

-facing possible life sentence for crime

-

The four Guyanese men who were intercepte­d in a trawler in internatio­nal waters last year with over four tonnes of cocaine, with an estimated street value of US$71.7 million, have pleaded guilty in a United States federal court and now face up to life in prison, United States Attorney Gretchen Shappert announced on Thursday.

According to a press release, Shappert announced that Mohamed Hoseain, 70, and Richard La Cruz, 51, both of Guyana, pleaded guilty in federal court on November 28th to possession of cocaine on board a vessel. Shappert also further announced that Neville Jeffrey, 66, and Mark Anthony Williams, 32, also of Guyana, pleaded guilty in federal court on November 29th, 2018 and December 3rd, 2018, respective­ly, to the same offence.

The release said that the plea agreements filed with the court state that the United States Coast Guard Cutter Napier on February 16th, 2017, intercepte­d a suspicious vessel in a joint operation with the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard, approximat­ely 70 nautical miles north of Paramaribo, Suriname, in internatio­nal waters.

The vessel, later identified as the Lady Michelle, was located in a “known drug traffickin­g route and registered with St. Vincent and the Grenadines.”

“The U.S. Coast Guard boarded the vessel pursuant to a bilateral agreement between the United States and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. They discovered 185 bales containing numerous rectangula­r shaped packages of cocaine in the vessel’s fish hold weighing 3,769 kilogramme­s. The drugs had a street value in the U.S. Virgin Islands of approximat­ely 71 million dollars. Hoseain was identified as the captain and claimed that they were in search of a missing vessel for two months. La Cruz was identified as the engineer and Jeffrey and Williams as crew members,” the release further stated.

Apart from facing life in prison, the four also face a fine of up to US$10,000,000.

Hoseain and La Cruz will be sentenced on March 28th, 2019 and March 29th, 2019 respective­ly while Jeffrey and Williams will be sentenced on April 3rd, 2019.

The cocaine shipment was recently linked to Colombian national Ricardo Ramirez, who was arrested with Guyanese associate Shervingto­n Lovell in Jamaica in October.

Former Customs AntiNarcot­ic Unit (CANU) head James Singh recently told Stabroek News that on February 14th, 2017, a wooden vessel, owned by Ramirez, was brought into port at Charity, Essequibo, by CANU to be searched on suspicion that it was believed to be smuggling fuel and drugs. United States Drug Enforcemen­t Authority (DEA) personnel, the police and CANU were present during the search and the vessel was released.

Two days later, the Lady Michelle was intercepte­d.

Authoritie­s here said that vessel had not been to Guyana since 2013.

About two months after both incidents, in midApril of 2017, President David Granger ordered a Commission of Inquiry to investigat­e CANU’s role in the intercepti­on and subsequent release of the wooden vessel.

It was believed by local law enforcemen­t that the wooden vessel was used to shuttle cocaine to the trawler.

But Singh told this newspaper that there was no evidence that his agency could have relied on to hold the boat longer and it was forced to release it. “We stopped a boat and searched and that boat was released and two or three days later a trawler was held off the coast. That trawler never came to Guyana. They are totally two different vessels. I acted in [the] confines of the law. Nothing illegal was found on the vessel, so there was no reason to detain it further. You can’t hold something and detain it without evidence,” he said.

 ??  ?? The cocaine that was unloaded from the vessel after the intercepti­on (WorkBoat.com photo)
The cocaine that was unloaded from the vessel after the intercepti­on (WorkBoat.com photo)
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