Israeli police arrest 6 in suspected international organ trafficking ring
By Grant Slater, APWednesday, April 7, 2010
Israeli police arrest 6 organ trafficking suspects
JERUSALEM — Six Israelis were detained on suspicion of running an international organ trafficking ring and breaking promises to donors to pay for their removed kidneys, police said Wednesday.
Police also said they prevented several would-be donors from giving up their kidneys, intercepting some at Israel’s airport as they were preparing to travel abroad for surgery.
The traffickers offered up to $100,000 per kidney but in at least two cases didn’t pay the donors after the organs were surgically removed, police said.
The number of actual transplants was not known, Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. He added that “dozens” of potential donors answered newspaper ads placed by the ring.
The donors were flown to Europe, South America or Southeast Asia, where the organs were extracted. They often returned home empty-handed and with medical complications, police said. Israeli law bans organ sales.
One of the arrested suspects is a retired Israeli army general, police said. Further arrests were expected following a monthslong undercover investigation across the whole country, police added.
Police notified several potential donors shortly before surgery, as well as several people who had already traveled abroad and others who were stopped at the Ben-Gurion airport in Tel Aviv, Rosenfeld said.
He said the six suspects were arrested “at different times based on where it was most convenient and most necessary.”
In an unrelated case last year, an FBI sting in New Jersey exposed an organ trafficking ring that operated for more than a decade. Levy Izhak Rosenbaum, an American, was charged with conspiring to arrange the sale of an Israeli citizen’s kidney for $160,000.
Organ donors in that case were brought to the U.S. from Israel, where their kidneys were removed, according to the indictment.
The New Jersey case mushroomed from an investigation into money laundering and trafficking in kidneys and fake designer bags to a political corruption probe, resulting in 44 arrests.