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Feds indict 23 men in migrant smuggling cases

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 7, 2008 at 11:42 AM

IMMIGRATION
Feds indict 23 men in migrant smuggling cases
Federal prosecutors unveiled indictments charging 23 with attempted 
smuggling of more than 200 Cubans over the past year.
Posted on Wed, May. 07, 2008
BY ANDRES VIGLUCCI AND JAY WEAVER
aviglucci@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 the ante in a year-long crackdown on migrant smugglers, federal 
prosecutors on Tuesday unveiled a dozen indictments charging 23 men with 
attempting to sneak scores of Cubans into South Florida by boat.

The indictments, issued in a single day by a federal grand jury in Key 
West, represent the biggest blow delivered to the underground 
migrant-smuggling industry since a federal task force last year began 
targeting the loosely organized criminal rings that have long operated 
here with relative impunity.

The cases encompass 12 separate smuggling trips that took place over the 
past year, including one that landed 23 Cubans on Summerland Key last
month.

The other 11 operations ended with interdictions at sea by the U.S. 
Coast Guard -- a sign that investigators are reaping increasing success 
in disrupting smuggling ventures while they are underway, in part by 
cultivating informants who provide advance notice of trips.

''We do investigations and provide the Coast Guard information they can 
use in their interdictions,'' said Anthony Mangione, special agent in 
charge of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement for Miami and a 
participant in the smuggling task force. ``I think we're doing pretty 
well in intercepting these operations. We're getting better at it, and 
the Coast Guard is putting a lot of resources into this. I think you 
will see more and more of these cases.''

NOT LINKED

Prosecutors say the 12 indictments, issued by the grand jury on April 
25, are not linked, but represent typical small-scale operations that 
usually pay off big for the smugglers -- as much as $60,000 a trip for a 
boat captain, for instance. The 12 ventures carried a total of more than 
200 Cubans, according to the indictments.

Investigators believe there is no major organization behind the 
smuggling networks, but, rather, small groups that operate here and in 
Cuba to coordinate the illegal crossings, Assistant U.S. Attorney George 
Karavetsos said.

The newest cases underscore what authorities say is the recklessness of 
the smugglers and the high financial stakes involved in getting their 
passengers to U.S. shores.

One dangerously overloaded speedboat intercepted last year carried 39 
Cubans. In three instances, alleged smugglers are charged with ignoring 
orders to stop and leading the Coast Guard on high-speed chases in the 
dark that imperiled passengers.

Typically, the smugglers aren't paid until they deliver their Cuban 
passengers to dry land, where they are usually released and eventually 
receive legal residency under the Cuban Adjustment Act. If intercepted 
at sea, they are usually returned to Cuba.

One smuggling suspect, Orlando Magrinat, of Miami, ran his 36-foot 
Carrera S****t speedboat aground just off Summerland Key in the early 
morning of April 21 with 23 passengers on board while traveling at 40 
knots to evade a pursuing Coast Guard vessel, according to a criminal 
affidavit. The passengers -- who all managed to reach land safely -- 
said they had agreed to pay $10,000 apiece for the trip from Cuba to 
Florida.

U.S. Border Patrol agents and Monroe County Sheriff's Office deputies 
found all the passengers hiding in mangroves. Magrinat was found nearly 
five hours after the landing, also in the mangroves. Two migrants 
identified Magrinat as the boat operator, according to the affidavit.

The announcement of the indictments comes a month after prosecutors 
unveiled eight indictments charging 18 Cuban Americans with plotting to 
sneak more than 200 Cubans into South Florida by boat in separate 
operations since 2005.

STRATEGY ****FT

Until recently, immigrant smuggling across the Florida Straits received 
at best s****adic attention from prosecutors, and then typically only in 
cases involving deaths.

U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta began targeting migrant smugglers in 
the fall of 2005 after several people died at sea in botched operations.

Since then, investigators say, they have learned to apply techniques 
used to target drug smugglers and money launderers to the 
migrant-smuggling rings. They also credit improved sharing of 
information and coordination among agencies under Homeland Security.

''You are seeing a real maturing of the agency and the operations 
me****ng together as they're supposed to,'' ICE's Mangione said.

U.S. Coast Guard officials said there has been a dramatic upswing in 
migrant smuggling operations.

Coast Guard Cpt. Scott Buschman, commander of the Key West sector, said 
his crews tallied more than 300 go-fast boat smuggling incidents last 
year, up from about 200 in 2006.

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation/story/523771.html
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Feds indict 23 men in migrant smuggling cases
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-05-07 11:42:32 

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