Germany: Three Berlin officials probed over cocaine smuggling operation
Three Berlin officials, including a police officer, are
under investigation for assisting an international cocaine smuggling operation,
German authorities announced on Wednesday.
The suspects are alleged to have aided smugglers by
obtaining official information from within the security forces official files
in exchange for a fee. The suspects are also alleged to have forged documents.
"Of the three suspects, one person is a police officer
within the Berlin police force," Berlin police and the public prosecutor's
office in the capital said in a joint statement. "The other two persons
are employed by a district office. The suspects are alleged to have made
queries in the information systems or produced forged documents in return for
payment. Arrest warrants were issued for two of the suspects, including a
police officer."
The prosecutors' statement did not specify in which office
the accused worked.
Five other officers probed in suspected cover-up
The statement also revealed that five other employees of the
Berlin police are being investigated for "obstruction of justice and
falsification of documents."
These suspicions arose during searches but are not directly
related to the initial investigation.
"In coordination with the Berlin public prosecutor's
office, proceedings have been initiated in this regard," the statement
continued. "Three of the five suspects are accused of attempting to 'cover
up' the aforementioned suspicions of bribery and false certification against
their colleagues.
"During the searches, various items of evidence,
including cell phones and other data carriers, were seized. The task now is to
evaluate this evidence in the course of further investigations."
On Tuesday, police revealed they had "broken the supply
chain" as they made 14 arrests in connection with smuggling several tons
of cocaine from South America to Germany.
Authorities also said the smugglers' trafficking route,
which had been in operation for 10 years, had been dismantled as part of an
international investigation.
In February, German and Belgian authorities seized a record
haul of more than 23 metric tons (25 US tons) of cocaine, with a street value
of billions of euros.
Cocaine seizures in the European Union reached record levels
in 2019, according to the latest data from the UN and EU drugs agencies.
In 2020, drug trafficking of cocaine "increased
significantly" — rising by 9.6% compared to the previous year — according
to government statistics.
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