Jamaica Gleaner

$5m worth of counterfei­t cigarettes seized in Clarendon

- Carlene Davis/Gleaner Writer

AN ASSORTMENT of counterfei­t cigarettes worth approximat­ely $5 million was seized at a house in James Village, Waterlane, in Clarendon, yesterday.

Officers from the Counter-Terrorism and Organised Crime (C-TOC) unit arrested two Jamaicans, a brother and sister. The illicit cigarettes were found in a storage facility at the front of the house. The duo, aged 40 and 47, respective­ly, operates a bar and a car wash next door.

Assistant Superinten­dent of Police Victor Barrett of C-TOC said that they aim to put a dent in the illicit trade. Noting that persons are often of the impression that when counterfei­t goods are seized it always involves the Chinese, Barrett made it clear that the police were not targeting any particular nationalit­y.

“Anywhere we get the intelligen­ce and we have the evidence, then we are going there. So it’s not an assault on the Chinese. Anywhere you have counterfei­t goods and we have the evidence, we are going to get them,” said Barrett.

On Monday, in an operation on Barry Street in downtown Kingston, more than $100 million in counterfei­t clothes and shoes was seized. Barrett then warned that this type of operation would be extended to the rural areas.

“Almost every day we have raids, but some of the raids are not like the last two, where the dollar value reaches the millions, so people might not hear about them. But Assistant Commission­er of Police Fitz Bailey, who heads C-TOC, is adamant that we must employ a proactive approach to how we police the counterfei­t industry, and so he’s steadfast and committed to the whole crime-reduction strategy,” said Barrett.

 ??  ?? Some of the packages of counterfei­t cigarettes worth approximat­ely $5 million seized by C-TOC in Clarendon, yesterday.
Some of the packages of counterfei­t cigarettes worth approximat­ely $5 million seized by C-TOC in Clarendon, yesterday.

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