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Suitcases Full of Cash On Plane (New Mexico)
ABQ journal ^ | 12/5/03

Posted on 12/05/2003 8:16:14 PM PST by knak

A tip from an Albuquerque aircraft charter company led Moriarty Police to an airplane with an unusual cargo— suitcases full of more than $1 million in cash.

Moriarty Police Chief Bobby Garcia said the two currency-filled suitcases seized from an airplane at the city's airport on Nov. 27 weighed more than 300 pounds. They contained $1,169,896, Garcia said Wednesday.

No arrests have been made in the ongoing investigation.

The events that led to the cash seizure began when a private plane requested an emergency landing at the Moriarty Municipal Airport due to engine problems around noon on Thanksgiving.

Garcia said Kamlesh Rana, 34, of Connecticut was piloting the 1978 Piper six-seater airplane. Rana told police he was instructed by his supervisor, Carlos Cruz, who owns the Piper aircraft, to fly his passenger from New Jersey to Arizona.

According to the flight plan, Rana and his passenger, Yuri Folks, 31, were traveling from New Jersey with a final destination of Glendale, Ariz., Garcia said.

Once the plane landed in Moriarty, however, Rana could not restart the plane. Garcia said Rana then called Bode Aviation in Albuquerque to request a charter for him and his passenger.

Bode Aviation refused to comment on the events that took place. However, Garcia said the dispatcher at the aviation company became suspicious when Rana told her he had one passenger, whose name he did not know, and 300 pounds of cargo.

After speaking to Rana, the Bode dispatcher phoned Moriarty Police to alert them of her suspicions, Garcia said.

Officers arrived on scene and separated the pilot and passenger for questioning, he said. Neither knew the other's name.

"It was odd that the pilot did not know the name of the passenger, since they had been flying together from New Jersey," he said.

Officers requested permission to search the aircraft and asked if there was anything on the plane they should know about. Both men denied there was anything unusual on the plane, removed their personal belongings and agreed to the search.

Once their items were removed a large suitcase remained in the rear cargo area. Folks and Rana both denied that the suitcase belonged to them.

Police removed the suitcase from the airplane, opened it and discovered, "a substantial amount of cash wrapped tightly in cellophane," Garcia said. At that point police requested assistance from the Drug Enforcement Agency and the FBI, Garcia said.

A drug-sniffing dog from the State Motor Transportation Department was brought to the scene to search the aircraft, Garcia said. He said the dog "hit on the plane's front cargo compartment," directly behind the engine. Another suitcase filled with cellophane-wrapped cash was discovered in the front cargo area.

Garcia said no narcotics were found on board the airplane or in either of the suitcases. However, he said the suitcases could have residual narcotics on them, which would alert the drug-sniffing dog.

The money has been kept in a local Moriarty bank since being confiscated. It will be turned over to the FBI as evidence, Garcia said.

Bill Elwell, spokesman for the FBI in Albuquerque, said the pilot was questioned by FBI agents and released.

Folks, however, was not in possession of the necessary documentation to be in the United States, and it has been determined that he is here illegally, said Leticia Zamarripa, public information liaison for the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection in El Paso. "He is being detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement at this time," Zamarripa said.

The FBI believes Folks may be a citizen of Jamaica. Elwell said a judicial process will determine what happens to the money unless one of the parties involved can prove it is legally theirs and they have a reason for having it.

"Can it be legal cash? I don't know," Elwell said. Elwell said there is nothing illegal about carrying, or transporting, large sums of money. However, it is highly suspicious.

He said "nine times out of 10 we are thinking (in these situations) that this could be drug money."

Elwell said he could not comment further due to the pending investigation of the case.

The questioning of the pilot when he tried to rent another plane was routine, according to aviation officials.

Thomas Linn of A-1 Executive Jet Worldwide Charter in Scottsdale, Ariz., said if someone phoned in to request a charter and was not one of the company's regular customers, some preliminary checking would be conducted over the phone.

"We would do some checking for verification of address, passenger list, and (ensure) all passengers are in possession of a current, valid U.S. government-issued identification card," Linn said.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Arizona; US: Connecticut; US: New Jersey; US: New Mexico
KEYWORDS: 200311; 20031127; aircraft; airportsecurity; aliens; assetforfeiture; bodeaviation; carloscruz; cash; cruz; ctcell; folks; homelandsecurity; illegals; jamaica; kamleshrana; money; newjersey; njcell; rana; smuggling; wod; yurifolks
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1 posted on 12/05/2003 8:16:15 PM PST by knak
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To: knak
Darn Vicente Fox can't buy another gated estate.
2 posted on 12/05/2003 8:18:22 PM PST by cyborg (mutt-american)
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To: knak
Probably drug money destined for the bank account of the DNC Chair, The Honorable Bill Richardson, Governor of New Mexico. ::eyeroll::
3 posted on 12/05/2003 8:19:45 PM PST by DesertDreamer
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To: knak
It's messed up that we live in a society where the authorities automatically go after a suitcase full of cash, regardless of whether it is known to be involved in anything illegal. I'm wondering what the threshold of suspicion is, that is, how much cash can I carry without being detained by the gendarmes on suspicion of drug smuggling?
4 posted on 12/05/2003 8:22:13 PM PST by squidly
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To: DesertDreamer
Right on, Buddy. The ironic thing is that this money probably came straight from Rush Limbaugh's pockets.
5 posted on 12/05/2003 8:25:16 PM PST by GoodThinking
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To: knak
A drug-sniffing dog from the State Motor Transportation Department was brought to the scene to search the aircraft, Garcia said. He said the dog "hit on the plane's front cargo compartment," directly behind the engine. Another suitcase filled with cellophane-wrapped cash was discovered in the front cargo area. Garcia said no narcotics were found on board the airplane or in either of the suitcases. However, he said the suitcases could have residual narcotics on them, which would alert the drug-sniffing dog.

Do you get the feeling they train these dogs to sniff out money just so they can say it is drug money?

I feel so much safer now that it is a crime to carry large amounts of cash. < /sarcasm >

6 posted on 12/05/2003 8:29:14 PM PST by Between the Lines ("What Goes Into the Mind Comes Out in a Life")
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To: knak
Good thinking started on 10/26/2003. ZOTTTTTTT!!!
7 posted on 12/05/2003 8:31:58 PM PST by Coroner
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To: knak
. . . weighed more than 300 pounds . . .

Obviously small bills, lots of ones. Fifty thousand $20s wouldn't weigh anywhere close to 300 pounds. Never heard of a big time drug dealer conducting his transactions in one dollar bills. Give Rana back the money from his laundromat biz and leave the poor man alone!

8 posted on 12/05/2003 8:33:06 PM PST by LibWhacker
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To: squidly
I carried a million dollars in cash in the back of my car
one time. (I notified the Police and asked for an escort)
No problems at all.
tbird1
9 posted on 12/05/2003 8:33:48 PM PST by tbird1
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To: GoodThinking
Huh?
10 posted on 12/05/2003 8:33:58 PM PST by Ramius
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To: squidly
Well in my case my money would have been in my bag, which I would have been carrying (I carry a big purse:') and there would have been a fight to get it but they would not have had any doubt about who it belonged to.
11 posted on 12/05/2003 8:34:45 PM PST by CindyDawg
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To: squidly
Nobody onboard the aircraft claimed it was theirs.

I'm sure that if someone, anyone, would step forward and claim the cash, the Feds would love to speak to them and give them their money.

Until then, unfortunately, it must remain in the custody of the state for safekeeping. We can't have the wrong people get it, you know?
12 posted on 12/05/2003 8:36:44 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (There is nothing Democratic about the Democrat party.)
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To: tbird1
I carried about 600K in bearer bonds to a bank once. I let them know what was coming and that when I got there I was gonna be armed for bear. They didn't have a problem with it.
13 posted on 12/05/2003 8:37:17 PM PST by Ramius
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To: squidly
"It's messed up that we live in a society where the authorities automatically go after a suitcase full of cash, regardless of whether it is known to be involved in anything illegal."

Does give one cause to wonder, though:

1. Just how did either or both of these schlubs amass all this cash?

2. Or, alternatively, just how did two suitcases full of swag find their way onto this plane full of innocents?

In either event, one would have probable cause to suspect foul play was involved, I suppose. Unless Rana or Folks one had just emptied his mattress...

14 posted on 12/05/2003 8:38:20 PM PST by okie01 (www.ArmorforCongress.com...because Congress isn't for the morally halt and the mentally lame.)
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To: cyborg
Last week in Texas a truck carying frozen dinner roles was caught heading to Mexico with over $5,000,000. It took the authorities 12 hours to count.

The suit case weighed 300 pounds and contained over $1,000,000. It makes you wonder what denominations this money is in.

Agree, times are hard for V. Fox. The remittances may be a little less this month.
15 posted on 12/05/2003 8:38:28 PM PST by texastoo (What a Continent!!! (sarcasm))
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To: VeniVidiVici
I'm sure that if someone, anyone, would step forward and claim the cash

They should have give me a ring.

16 posted on 12/05/2003 8:38:40 PM PST by squidly
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To: Ramius
Its obvious that Rush had to pay for his drugs.
17 posted on 12/05/2003 8:39:01 PM PST by ocean
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To: LibWhacker
Oops . . . Seems I dropped a zero while doing my arithmetic. Fifty thousand dollars in $20 bills might very well weigh 300 lbs! Lock him up and throw away the key! </sarcasm>
18 posted on 12/05/2003 8:39:20 PM PST by LibWhacker
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To: Between the Lines
It's not a crime to carry lots of cash. It is a crime however to smuggle proceeds of illegal transactions. Seems to me that sufficient reasonable suspicion was developed in this case.
19 posted on 12/05/2003 8:40:54 PM PST by Ramius
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To: Coroner
A hibernating troll like Pedantic Lady perhaps? hmm....
20 posted on 12/05/2003 8:41:15 PM PST by cyborg (mutt-american)
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