DR national jailed for involvement in international drug ring

A Dominican Republic national, who was part of an international drug ring that uses various Caribbean ports in their international efforts to distribute cocaine in the United States, has been jailed for more than 13 years.

According to court documents, Lazaro Viton Rodriguez, 55, was sentenced to 13 years and one month in prison for his role in an international conspiracy to distribute more than 2,000 pounds of cocaine for unlawful importation into the United States.

The documents noted that from 2014 through May 2019, Rodriguez participated in a drug trafficking network based in the Dominican Republic that transported cocaine from South America, through the Caribbean, to the United States.

The court was told that the drug trafficking network used vessels, such as sailing yachts and sport fishing boats, to transport the cocaine, often stopping in various Caribbean ports while transporting the cocaine to give a cover of legitimacy to each voyage.

One of these vessels, the Casablanca, was interdicted by the US Customs and Border Protection’s Marine Interdiction Unit in November 2018 as it entered US waters near Key Biscayne, Florida. Officers boarded and searched the Casablanca, seizing more than 327 kilograms of cocaine.

Rodriguez was involved in purchasing, registering, and maintaining vessels used by the drug trafficking network to transport cocaine. He assisted in registering vessels in the names of straw purchasers, constructed secret compartments on the vessels to hide the cocaine, and coordinated with crew members via satellite phone as they sailed to locations in the Caribbean to pick up cocaine.

Rodriguez pleaded guilty in November last year to participating in a conspiracy to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine for importation into the United States.

The case against Rodriquez had been supported by the Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) while acting Assistant Deputy Chief Melanie L. Alsworth and Trial Attorneys Samantha Thompson and Janet Turnbull of the Criminal Division’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section prosecuted the case.

SOURCECMC
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