Four members of the Jamaica Constabulary Force were arrested Tuesday at Charlotte Douglas International Airport in North Carolina for allegedly smuggling eight kilograms of cocaine into the United States.
The four constables were intercepted before boarding their connecting flight to Florida.
The four, among them a wife and husband, were detained by the Department of Homeland Security and were later transferred to Mecklenburg County Jail, where they were placed in federal custody awaiting trial.
Two of the cops are assigned to Granville Police Station, another to Freeport Police Station, and the fourth to the Center for Investigation of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse (CISOCA).
Reliable sources told the Jamaica Observer that the four had called in sick and used the opportunity to travel overseas.
When the Observer contacted the Mecklenburg Sheriff Department the paper was advised that one of the policemen is currently in federal holding, and details of his case will have to be revealed through the US Marshals Office since it is a federal case. However, it was emphasized that all their paperwork would be at the federal level until they appear in court, which is normally 24 hours after they are booked.
Eight kilograms of cocaine has a street value of approximately US$68,000 or J$9.5 million.
According to US federal sentencing guidelines, someone convicted of a first offence of trafficking 500 to 4,999 grams of powdered cocaine faces between five and 40 years in prison, as well as fines of up to US$5 million.
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