Former Cape Air Employee Pleads Guilty To Trafficking Cocaine Through CEK Airport; Transnational BLACK Crime Syndicate who traffick drugs into USA

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Former Cape Air Employee Pleads Guilty To Trafficking Cocaine Through CEK Airport


Former Cape Air Employee Pleads Guilty To Trafficking Cocaine Through CEK Airport​

Posted on June 28, 2023 by John McCarthy


CHARLOTTE AMALIE — A former airline employee admitted to drug trafficking charges in federal court in connection to attempting to transport cocaine through the St. Thomas airport.
Shakari Francis, 27, of St. Thomas, pleaded guilty before Chief U.S. District Court Judge Robert A. Molloy to possession with intent to distribute cocaine, U.S. Attorney Delia L. Smith said.
Francis faces a maximum sentence of 40 years imprisonment, not less than three years of supervised release and a maximum fine of $1,000,000.00, she said.
According to court documents, Francis worked at Cape Air as a ramp agent at the Cyril E. King Airport in St. Thomas. On January 11, 2023, Francis entered the airport using his secured access with two bricks of cocaine.
Francis later met Ahkoy Smith, a ticketed passenger on Spirit Airline’s flight to Fort Lauderdale, Florida in the restrooms located next to the concession area where Francis delivered the two bricks of cocaine to Smith.
Federal agents arrested Francis and attempted to arrest Smith as he boarded his flight. When approached by the agents,
Smith removed his backpack and threw it to the tarmac and ran onto the active runway. He was
apprehended by federal agents and placed under arrest and charged with possession with intent
to distribute cocaine. Smith entered a plea agreement with the United States to change his plea
from not guilty to guilty.

This case was investigated by Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). It is being prosecuted
by Assistant United States Attorney Everard Potter.

This prosecution is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) investigation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level drug traffickers, money launderers, gangs, and transnational criminal organizations that threaten the United States by using a prosecutor-led, intelligencedriven, multi-agency approach that leverages the strengths of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies against criminal networks.
 
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EARLIER

Two Men At King Airport Charged With Cocaine Smuggling​


By Mat Probasco
January 16, 2023

Two men were charged with allegedly attempting to smuggle cocaine from St. Thomas to Miami. (Shutterstock image)
Two men in their 20s face up to 20 years in prison after botching an alleged cocaine smuggling plan at Cyril E. King Airport on St. Thomas, officials said Monday.
Shakari Francis, 26, of St. Thomas, and Ahkoy Smith, 24, of Daytona Beach, Florida, were arrested Wednesday and charged with possession with intent to distribute cocaine.

Customs and Border Protection officers watched Francis follow Smith into the departures-area restroom. Francis, a Cape Air ramp agent, later admitted to giving Smith two bricks of cocaine weighing 2.25 kilograms, according to Justice Department officials.

WHO LET THE DOGS OUT?!? WOOF, WOOF

When Smith came out of the restroom to board his Spirit Airlines flight to Orlando, he saw Customs agents and a drug-detecting dog screening passengers. He fled but was soon caught, officials said. The dog found nearly 5 pounds of cocaine wrapped in black tape in his black Jordan backpack. He also admitted to possessing the drugs, said United States Attorney Delia L. Smith.

Both men face a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison if convicted.
The same day Francis and Smith were arrested, a Virgin Islands Port Authority officer and Henry E. Rohlsen Airport baggage employee pleaded guilty to attempting to put a 26-pound suitcase full of cocaine on a flight to Puerto Rico.
In August 2022, a Colorado man pleaded guilty to trying to bring a liquor box full of cocaine on his flight from the St. Croix airport. Customs agents said he had more in his trouser pockets.

In April, then-British Virgins Islands Premier Andrew Fahie and that territory’s Ports Authority director were arrested at a Miami airport for allegedly attempting to set up a brazen cocaine smuggling scheme using Tortola as a hub for shipments to Miami. Part of the alleged plan involved allowing smaller shipments to be caught by police to give the appearance of authentic drug enforcement efforts. The Port Authority director’s son was arrested on St. Thomas for his alleged part in the plot, which included being paid in both cash and cocaine.

In February 2022, a St. Thomas man was arrested for allegedly trying to sneak 5.5 kilograms of cocaine from one side of Cyril E. King airport to another. A day later, a St. Croix airport employee was sentenced to five years in prison for attempting to smuggle 2 kilograms of cocaine through the St. Croix Henry E. Rohlsen Airport onto a Miami-bound American Airlines flight.

In November 2021, a subcontractor working at the St. Thomas airport was sentenced to 37 months for stashing cocaine in the departures area restroom.
 
Colorado man pleaded guilty to trying to bring a liquor box full of cocaine
Kareme :rasb2

Colorado Man Pleads Guilty to Cocaine Charge​


By Source staff
August 26, 2022

Kareme Holst, 46, of Colorado, pleaded guilty in District Court before Magistrate Judge Emile A. Henderson III to possession with intent to distribute cocaine, U.S. Attorney Delia Smith announced Friday.
Holst’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for Dec. 12.
According to court documents, on Oct. 19, Holst was referred to secondary inspection while attempting to board a flight from St. Croix’s Henry Rohlsen Airport to Miami. Holst’s possessions, including a case of liquor, were X-rayed, and the box appeared to contain six round jars with an unknown substance.
Upon further inspection of the box, officers discovered six jars of solid coconut substance, and inside each jar was a plastic bag containing a white powdered substance. A search of Holst’s suitcase also yielded an additional plastic bag containing a white powdered substance that was found in a pocket in a pair of pants.
Laboratory analysis later confirmed that the white powdered substance was cocaine weighing approximately 2.7 kilograms, according to the press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Holst faces a term of not less than five years and not more than 40 years imprisonment, according to Smith. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other factors. This case was investigated by the Homeland Security Investigations and Customs and Border Protection and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Rhonda Williams-Henry.
 
a subcontractor working at the St. Thomas airport was sentenced to 37
https://www.justice.gov › usao-vi › pr › subcontractor-employee-working-cyril-e-king-airport-sentenced-37-months-federal-prison

Subcontractor Employee Working at Cyril E. King Airport Sentenced to 37 ...

Nov 23, 2021St. Thomas, USVI - United States Attorney for the District of the Virgin Islands Gretchen C.F. Shappert announced today that Keilin Lopez Lopez, 22, resident of St. Thomas, V.I., was sentenced to 37 months imprisonment followed by a four-year term of supervised release for possessing with intent to distribute approximately 4 kilograms of cocaine.
 
Port Authority director’s son was arrested on St. Thomas

British Virgin Islands Premier, Port Director Charged with Drug Trafficking and Money Laundering Crimes in U.S.​

Mike Schuler
Total Views: 2148
May 2, 2022

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Federal prosecutors in Miami, Florida have charged three people, including British Virgin Islands (BVI) Premier, Andrew Alturo Fahie, and Managing Director of the BVI Ports Authority, Oleanvine Pickering Maynard, with cocaine trafficking and money laundering crimes for allegedly conspiring to smuggle tons of Colombian cocaine bound for Miami through BVI ports, the U.S. Department of Justice has announced.
The Port Director’s son, Kadeem Stephan Maynard, has also been charged.
In exchange for their participation, the defendants would make millions, which would be funneled through different businesses and bank accounts to hide the money’s source, the Justice Department said.
According to the allegations contained in a criminal complaint affidavit, during March and April, Fahie, Oleanvine Maynard, and Kadeem Maynard participated in a series of meetings with the purported drug trafficker to broker the deal. Fahie and Oleanvine would secure the required licenses, shield cocaine-filled boats while in BVI’s ports, and grease the palms of a potentially problematic government official, says the affidavit.

They discussed bringing 3,000 kilograms of cocaine through a BVI port as a test run, followed by 3,000 kilograms once or twice a month for four months. Fahie and Oleanvine would get a percentage of the cocaine’s sales, allegedly amounting to millions of dollars.
Fahie and Oleanvine were arrested last week in Miami. According to the allegations, they were here to pick up a $700,000 cash advance on their deal. The third defendant, Kareem Maynard, was arrested in St. Thomas.
Fahie and Oleanvine made their initial federal court appearances on Friday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jonathan Goodman. They are scheduled for pretrial detention hearings this week in federal magistrate court in Miami.
Criminal complaints contain mere allegations and defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.


 
a St. Thomas man was arrested for allegedly trying to sneak 5.5 kilograms of cocaine from one side of Cyril E. King
Twas l'il TYREE



St. Thomas, United States Virgin Islands – U.S. Attorney Gretchen C.F. Shappert announced that a St. Thomas man was arrested on February 19, 2022, in St. Thomas, USVI on a criminal charge related to his alleged possession with intent to distribute cocaine.

According to court documents, on February 19, 2022, Tyree Morton transported cocaine, weighing approximately 5.5 kilograms, including packaging, from a location within the Cyril E. King airport to another location within the airport.

Morton is charged with possession with intent to distribute more than 500 grams of cocaine, in violation of Title 21, United States Code, Sections 841(a) & (b)(1)(B)(ii). If convicted, he faces a maximum penalty of 40 years imprisonment. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Homeland Security Investigations is investigating the case.
 
Rohlsen Airport baggage employee pleaded guilty to attempting to put a 26-pound suitcase full of cocaine on a flight to Puerto Rico.

Different​

ST. CROIX MAN PLEADS GUILTY TO STASHING FIVE KILOGRAMS OF COCAINE IN LIFE VEST COMPARTMENTS ONBOARD AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT TO MIAMI​


Thursday, March 3, 2022

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Virgin Islands

ST. THOMAS, USVI – U.S. Attorney Gretchen C.F. Shappert announced that
Luis Ortiz, Jr., 25, of St. Croix pleaded guilty on March 1, 2022, before Magistrate Judge Ruth Miller to Conspiracy to Possess with Intent to Distribute Five or more Kilograms of Cocaine. Ortiz remains on supervised release pending sentencing.
According to court documents, on June 20, 2019, Ortiz and a co-defendant recruited two individuals to smuggle five bricks of cocaine from St. Croix to Miami, FL, onboard American Airlines flight #2227 on July 11, 2019. On the evening of July 10, 2019, surveillance footage from the Henry E. Rohlsen Airport captured Ortiz, who was employed as a contractor to clean the aircrafts, boarding the American Airlines aircraft wearing an oversized jacket. While onboard, Ortiz walked directly to rows 17 and 18 and closed the windows of both rows. Eight minutes later, Ortiz exited the aircraft carrying packages that were consistent in size with the life vests that were removed from rows 17 and 18.
Later that morning, Ortiz’s co-defendant arranged with an American Airlines gate agent to preboard two persons who were later identified as the smugglers. Once onboard, Ortiz’s codefendant instructed one of the two smugglers to retrieve cocaine from the life vest compartments located under seats 17A and 17B.
Flight #2227 departed the Henry E. Rohlsen Airport at approximately 8:00 a.m., and upon its arrival in Miami at approximately 11:00 a.m., the two smugglers were arrested by Customs and Border Protection officers. Both pleaded guilty to Possession with Intent to Distribute Cocaine and were sentenced in the Southern District of Florida District Court.
At sentencing, Ortiz faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years of incarceration and a maximum fine of $10,000,000.00. Ortiz also faces a term of five years of supervised release and a special assessment of $100.00.
This case was investigated by Homeland Security Investigations, St Croix Resident Office,
and prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Delia Smith.
The investigation is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) operation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at
https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.
 
The same day Francis and Smith were arrested, a Virgin Islands Port Authority officer and Henry E. Rohlsen Airport baggage employee pleaded guilty to attempting to put a 26-pound suitcase full of cocaine on a flight to Puerto Rico.




Port Authority Officer and Airport Employee Who Sought to Smuggle 12 Kilos of Cocaine Through Seaborne Plead Guilty​


Crime Published On January 11, 2023 03:08 PM

ST. CROIX — United States Attorney Delia L. Smith announced today that Wayne Jeffers, 52, and Charles Rawlins, III, 39, both of St. Croix, pleaded guilty before United States Magistrate Judge Emile A. Henderson, III, to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled cocaine and possession with intent to distribute a cocaine.


According to court documents, in the early morning hours of May 11, 2022, Jeffers, a Virgin Islands Port Authority Officer stationed at the Henry E. Rohlsen Airport in St. Croix, placed a black suitcase containing 12 bricks of cocaine inside a ladder truck that was parked on the ramp of the airport. Later that morning, Rawlins, an airport ramp worker, removed the suitcase from the ladder truck and placed it on a baggage cart to be loaded on a Seaborne Silver aircraft destined for San Juan, PR.
The luggage containing the cocaine was later seized by Customs and Border Protection Officers. A drug analyzed conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Southeast Laboratory in Miami, FL, confirmed that the seized substance was cocaine with a net weight of 12.01 kilograms.
Rawlins and Jeffers each face a mandatory minimum term of 10 years imprisonment on their conviction. A federal district court judge will determine the appropriate sentence after considering the U.S. sentencing guidelines and other statutory factors.
The Customs and Border Protection, Homeland Security Investigations and the Drug Enforcement Agency investigated, and Assistant United States Attorney Daniel H. Huston prosecuted this case.


This effort is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) operation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multiagency approach. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.
 
British Virgin Islands (BVI) Premier, Andrew Alturo Fahie,

Fahie Trial Delayed to January​

By Mat Probasco
June 27, 2023
Fahie-takes-oath-of-office-FEB-2019.jpeg

Andrew Fahie after taking the oath of office as premier of the British Virgin Islands in February 2019. (Photo courtesy BVI government)
Former British Virgin Islands Premier Andrew Fahie has six more months to prepare for his defense against cocaine smuggling and money laundering charges as a Florida judge has delayed the trial to January.


Fahie’s attorney had asked the July 17 trial date be pushed back to at least Nov. 1 to process voluminous evidence collected during the alleged drug-running scheme as well as new information provided by two co-defendants who pleaded guilty June 12. Fahie also wants to know the identity of the person who secretly recorded him allegedly agreeing to the plot.


In a court filing published late Monday, Judge Kathleen M. Williams moved the trial to Jan. 8.


Former BVI Ports Authority Managing Director Oleanvine Pickering Maynard and her son Kadeem Maynard pleaded guilty to a single cocaine smuggling charge, agreeing to tell prosecutors all they know, according to court documents.


The Maynards have been held in a Florida detention center since the three were arrested April 28, 2022. Fahie, however, made bail 46 days later. He later received permission to broaden the conditions of his house arrest when a judge allowed him to leave his daughters’ Miami apartment for dental procedures and to visit his lawyer.


In addition to potential new evidence from the Maynards, Fahie’s attorney has filed a series of motions asking the court to compel prosecutors to reveal the names of people who recorded more than 8,000 minutes of audio tape.


Not knowing the secret source’s name and how much they were potentially paid to make the recordings hinders Fahie’s ability to adequately defend himself, his attorney argued.


The issue of the confidential source’s identity, transcription of the tapes, and multiple terabytes of evidence extracted from Fahie’s digital devices and other data has been a point of contention since at least October. Prosecutors delivered the most recent batch of tape transcriptions June 9, according to court records.


Prosecutors said the tapes contain Fahie agreeing to make Tortola a major transshipment point for cocaine while setting up shell companies to hide the proceeds. Allegedly thinking he was dealing with international drug cartels and a terrorist organization, Fahie was said to have both bragged about previous misdeeds and complained about not being compensated well enough.


Fahie was first elected to public office in 1999. He was investigated for money laundering in 2003 but faced no charges. In 2019 he replaced Orlando Smith as premier, the BVI’s highest elected office. U.S. federal investigators called Fahie “corrupt to the core.”


Fahie faces the possibility of life in prison if convicted.



 
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The Port Director
Oleanvine Pickering Maynard
The Port Director’s son, Kadeem Stephan Maynard

Former BVI Ports Director Pleads Guilty, Implicates Fahie​


By Mat Probasco
June 12, 2023


MYNARDS.jpg
Oleanvine Pickering Maynard and her son, Kadeem Stephan Maynard, have pleaded guilty to cocaine smuggling charges. (Source photo illustration)
Oleanvine Pickering Maynard, the former managing director of the British Virgin Islands Ports Authority, and her son pleaded guilty to conspiracy to import a controlled substance Monday, filing court documents implicating former BVI Premier Andrew Fahie in an alleged cocaine-running, money-laundering sting.
Pickering Maynard, 61, and Kadeem Stephan Maynard, 32, were arrested April 28, 2022, in a scheme to make Tortola a major drug-smuggling hub. They and then-BVI Premier Fahie planned to import thousands of pounds of cocaine from Central American drug cartels, according to Pickering Maynard’s guilty plea.
The plea agreement reached in a Florida courtroom Monday afternoon could have the mother and son spend 10 years in prison and forfeit a yet-undetermined amount of money or property. The plea deal also revealed more details of the smuggling plot.

In March 2022, Kadeem Maynard approached his mother and Fahie with a proposal to allow cocaine-laden shipping containers to layover in Tortola. The 3,000 kilograms of drugs per container — more than 6,600 pounds — would gain legitimacy by sitting in Tortola for a day or two before moving on to Puerto Rico and the U.S. mainland, according to court documents.

The international drug smuggler Maynard had met was not, in fact, from the Sinaloa Drug Cartel but the Drug Enforcement Administration — a confidential source, or CS.

“Fahie agreed to bribe officials managing the ports and airports in furtherance of the scheme, and the defendant and Kadeem agreed to obtain the necessary licenses and paperwork authorizing the CS’s vessels to port in the BVI without suspicion,” Pickering Maynard told prosecutors, according to the plea deal.
The agreement went on to detail more of the operations: “On April 7, 2022, the CS met in person with the defendant and Fahie in Tortola, during which Fahie agreed to the CS’s proposed cocaine trafficking scheme in exchange for 12 percent of the proceeds from the sales of the cocaine in Miami and New York, with 2 percent to be used for bribes. The CS said that a kilogram of cocaine would sell for $26,000-$28,000 per kilogram in Miami and $34,000-$38,000 per kilogram in New York.

Fahie used a calculator to determine that his 10 percent of a 3,000-kilogram load sold for $26,000 per kilogram would be $7.8 million. Fahie, the defendant, and the CS agreed that Fahie and the defendant would meet the CS in Miami, where the CS would provide a $500,000 upfront payment to Fahie and a $200,000 payment to the defendant. The defendant would then fly back to the BVI with the money.”
But neither Pickering Maynard nor Fahie made it back to Tortola.
WE BE BIZZNIZZ NIGGERS
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Pickering Maynard was arrested after stepping off a private plane at a Miami-area airport. She’d just inspected what she believed to be $900,000 in cash — $200,000 for her and $700,000 for Fahie — according to prosecutors. She allegedly assured confidential government informants that she and Fahie had helped others set up shell companies to help hide illicit proceeds.
They planned to hide the money to avoid detection, the plea states.
When Fahie was arrested stepping off the same plane earlier that stormy Thursday while in town to attend the Seatrade cruise ship conference, he allegedly said: “Why am I being arrested; I don’t have any money or drugs on me.”
The case against Fahie, who has maintained his innocence while out on bail, is scheduled for trial July 17.

U.S. federal agents said they had compiled 8,000 minutes of secretly-recorded audio tape on which, according to court records, the Maynards and Fahie agreed to work with a terrorist organization and Central American drug cartels to smuggle cocaine and hide cash payments.
Kadeem Maynard, who investigators said had bragged about two decades of drug running despite his young age, was arrested in St. Thomas the same day as his mother and Fahie. He was there inspecting a similar cash payment, prosecutors said. He’d allegedly asked to also be compensated in part in cocaine for resale.

The trio used code names in the would-be smuggling operation. Fahie was called Coach or Head Coach. Pickering Maynard was Rose or P. Her son went by Blacka, according to court records.

Pickering Maynard was originally charged with conspiracy to import a controlled substance (cocaine), conspiracy to engage in money laundering, attempted money laundering, and foreign travel in aid of racketeering, the same charges Fahie is still fighting.
Maynard was originally charged with conspiracy to import a controlled substance (cocaine), conspiracy to engage in money laundering, and attempted money laundering.
They had faced the possibility of life in prison and $10 million in fines if convicted on all counts.

Prosecutors said Fahie also bragged to undercover federal agents about decades of crimes, complaining he was often not fairly compensated. He allegedly offered to help smuggle firearms, as well. Fahie and his attorney have repeatedly sought the identity of the person who made the recordings.
Along with the audio recordings, prosecutors have also handed defense attorneys phone records, WhatsApp data, law enforcement reports from Puerto Rico, and bank records. Prosecutors also extracted “voluminous” video and other data from the defendants’ phones, according to court documents.
Prosecutors said Fahie and Pickering-Maynard allegedly boasted of a well-oiled smuggling and money-laundering machine at their disposal, bribing island authorities and forming shell companies to hide illegal activities.
Fahie was frustrated, according to prosecutors, at not being paid well enough for earlier illicit acts. Prosecutors have not yet released details about who is named on the tapes. On the bribe list, according to court documents, were police, port authority personnel, and at least one senior BVI government official — but exactly who was not yet clear. The plea agreement stipulated Maynard and Pickering Maynard must tell the truth about their crime and any associated crimes.
Pickering Maynard, a former candidate for the BVI’s Assembly, had previously headed the influential Department of Labour and Workforce Development.
The United Kingdom’s Commission of Inquiry report, issued shortly after the arrests, alleges potential widespread corruption within the British overseas territory — so much so that auditors recommended suspending the constitution and sacking elected officials.
But the published report did not name wrongdoers, only saying further investigation was needed. Recent investigations include whether public officials were manipulating labor laws in human trafficking schemes.
A long-serving employee in the premier’s office was arrested in October 2022 and charged with illegally sending a letter to U.S. officials seeking Fahie’s release, claiming he was immune. He was not.
A day after the arrest, the United Kingdom government released a report recommending direct control of the BVI by London, dissolving local government, and launching a full investigation of probable corruption. A deal brokered with now-Premier Natalio Wheatley averted loss of local control. Wheatley and other BVI officials have pledged to work with the U.K. Commission.
In 2015, as Pickering Maynard was campaigning for Tortola’s 7th District Assembly seat, she wrote about her abilities to navigate government hierarchies while remaining approachable and grounded.
“I am a lady that grew up poor in Long Look and I have worked more than half my life in the civil service in many capacities. I know more about the government than most of the politicians currently elected. I have a genuine interest in encouraging the people of our district to be better and to raise themselves up from oppression. I am open to criticism from all fronts because, I feel that is the only way for the people to be involved in the process. I am a friendly and approachable individual, who is open to talk and share with anyone no matter who they are,” she wrote on social media.

She did not win the election.
 
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