Greek police seize nearly 1.2 tonnes of cocaine

·

Greek police say they seized nearly 1.2 tonnes of cocaine and arrested 8 alleged members of an international drug trafficking gang.

Almost all of the cocaine, 1.18 tons, was found during a Friday afternoon raid at a house in the western Greek port of Astakos, police spokesman Theodoros Chronopoulos said Saturday.

The drugs were carefully packaged in 1,040 nylon bags, ready to be distributed to intermediaries, Chronopoulos said.

Four more home raids in the Athens area yielded a small amount of cocaine, some cannabis, an AK-47 assault rifle and three pistols. Police also seized over 233,000 euros ($257,000) in cash and impounded five vehicles.

Major General Petros Tzeferis, head of the Attica Security Directorate, said the cocaine came from the Caribbean and was destined to countries in Europe and northwest Africa.

Tzeferis said the investigation took six months and Greek police were aided by colleagues in Albania and Spain, as well as the Drug Enforcement Administration office at the U.S. Embassy in Athens.

Chronopoulos said the drug gang’s leaders were two permanent residents of Spain, with several Albanian citizens as underlings. Police were looking for nine alleged members not yet under arrest.

Two of the people already detained were guarding the stash at the house in Astakos, Chronopoulos said. Three other suspects who allegedly rented a van to pick up the packaged cocaine also were arrested.

Tzeferis said that some of those arrested were already known to police. Four had prior arrests; one had been arrested five times, for armed robbery, attempted murder and drug offences.

Tzeferis added that the gang’s estimated earnings from drug dealing “exceed 50 million euros” ($55 million).

Sourced via AP.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Court hears Jon Adgemis’ pub empire eyed for rescue months before collapse

Plans to revive the collapsed pub empire of Jon Adgemis were being explored months before his bankruptcy. Read more here.

Victoria targets fuel price gouging with new app crackdown

The Victorian government will “name and shame” petrol stations charging the highest fuel prices under a new update to its Servo Saver app.

US President Donald Trump deletes AI ‘Jesus’ image after backlash

Donald Trump has deleted a controversial AI-generated image depicting himself as Jesus Christ following backlash from religious leaders.

Fuel crisis forces Qantas to slash capacity and raise fares

Qantas will cut domestic flights and adjust its network amid soaring fuel costs and uncertainty linked to the Middle East conflict.

Tributes flow for retail pioneer Theo Karedis after death at 90

Tributes are flowing for retail and liquor industry pioneer Theo Karedis, who has passed away peacefully at the age of 90.

You May Also Like

St Nicholas Greek Orthodox church in Canberra finishes storm restoration

Canberra's only Greek Orthodox church has received a $1 million makeover after hail ravaged the 50-year-old building in January.

Cyprus fails to qualify for Eurovision final

In a surprise result that has left fans reeling, Cyprus has failed to qualify for the Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2025.

Anthony Koutoufides visits Melbourne’s Greek Centre

Greek Community of Melbourne President Bill Papastergiadis OAM has warmly welcomed Anthony Koutoufides to the Greek Centre today.