Member alleged drug traffickers network was freed on bail by case 836 pounds coca
posted on: Feb 8 2012 13:14 by RDugey. Viewed 34 times.One of the Dominicans arrested by the National Directorate of of Drug Control (DNCD), accused of being part of a network that operated between the Roman and Puerto Rico, was released on bail in a case of 836 kilos of cocaine.
In the same situation is ecnontraba a Colombian. Both received this benefit after pay RD$ 4 million as economic guarantee set by a judge interim of the Santo Domingo province.
It's genital Toribio custodian, a native of Las Galeras, Samana, who had been sent to justice on several occasions for allegedly being linked to the drug business, especially in August 2011, occasion in which the DNCD decomisara a shipment of 1,071 packets of cocaine introduced to the country by a group of Dominicans and Colombians.
A document of the DNCD said Toribio custodian was released alongside the Colombian Enrique Torres Villamil by acting judge of the Court of permanent attention, Altagracia u000aMendoza Gutiérrez.
Details that this arrest occurred during what the DNCD defined in August of last year as 'Operation Storm', to stop an alleged band of Colombians and Dominicans, including Nelson and Miguel Toribio custodian, genital brothers; Francisco Alberto Astacio Torres and Carolina Díaz Almonte, as well as Colombians Raúl Torres Cubides, Torres Villamil, who fled and.
The Agency said that Toribio custodian had been arrested, also in September, 2009, along with several Dominicans and Colombians, one of them identified as a 'first class out' of the army of Colombia, who in the company of several of his compatriots would have landed an aircraft in the night on the highway of the Est to download a cache of cocaine, drug which was never located by authorities.
Six months later alleged drug Lord is arrested again by the DNCD, which accuses him of being part u000aa supposed band composed of Puerto Ricans, which was supplied cocaine for the Cali Cartel, the organization that, according to the anti-drug authorities, had what they define as a 'direct line' to send cocaine to Dominican Republic and subsequently to Puerto Rico.

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