The seizure of more than 76 kilograms of hashish at Miami International Airport has put the focus on the operability of international trafficking networks and the judicial response in South Florida.
Two European citizens, Joseph Mark Delacruz (24 years old, United Kingdom) and Sezer Ali Ilhan (20 years old, Germany), face federal charges for attempting to transport the drug to Brazil on separate flights, according to US authorities.
On February 11, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents were conducting outbound inspections at Miami International Airport. During the review, they discovered approximately 38.32 kilograms of hashish in two checked suitcases in the name of Delacruz. The substance, distributed in vacuum-sealed brick-shaped packages, was subjected to tests that confirmed its composition as concentrated cannabis, which has high levels of THC.
A parallel operation, supported by a K-9 detection dog, led to the location of two other suitcases belonging to Ilhan. Inside, officers found 37.77 kilograms of hashish. Both suspects were intercepted at the boarding gates before boarding their respective flights to São Paulo, Brazil.
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According to court documents, Delacruz stated that an individual handed him the suitcases at the exit of a Miami hotel and that he had to settle a debt by delivering that luggage, although he denied knowing the exact contents. For his part, Ilhan stated that two people provided him with the luggage at a Days Inn hotel and that he expected to receive USD 20,000 for taking it to its destination. He admitted knowing that he was transporting something illegal, but denied knowing that it was hashish.
U.S. authorities believe that both cases demonstrate a pattern of recruitment of international travelers by drug trafficking networks interested in diversifying their routes and methods of transportation. Investigators maintain that the use of commercial flights and the fragmentation of the cargo in different luggage seek to evade the controls implemented at the main points of departure from the country.
Federal Prosecutor Jason A. Reding Quiñones and Acting Special Agent José R. Figueroa, of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI Miami), confirmed the formal indictment by the federal grand jury. The cases are investigated and prosecuted by the Border and Immigration Crime Enforcement Section (BICE), created to strengthen security at points of entry and combat transnational smuggling networks in the region.







