Dealers, not pilgrims: Police say drugs brought to Italy via convent cocaine contact
By APWednesday, May 12, 2010
Police: ‘pilgrims’ didn’t pray, they smuggled
ROME — Italian police say drug smugglers pretending to be pilgrims slipped cocaine into Italy in their luggage as part of a trafficking ring coordinated by a convent’s doorman.
Carabinieri police say the nuns at the convent in the northern city of Piacenza didn’t have a clue about the smuggling operation and were stunned when the doorman, from an unidentified South American country, was arrested early Wednesday.
More than 30 other suspects were arrested. They include two alleged Milan-based mobsters from the Calabrian ‘ndrangheta crime syndicate, which investigators alleged imported cocaine from Colombia’s main drug cartels into Europe via Africa or on passengers flying from South America to Italy.
Police say they seized 30 kilograms of cocaine, which was refined in Italy for street sale. No estimate of the drug’s worth was given.
Tags: Arrests, Drug-related Crime, Europe, Italy, Rome, Smuggling, Western Europe