Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
NW Raiders from the Fort Lauderdale Police Department. The NW Raiders is a police crime unit with the Fort Lauderdale Police Department in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.. Focused primarily on crack cocaine, the NW Raiders were the first police unit in the United States to employ "reverse stings" and ram vehicles in undercover drug enforcement activities.
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration raided a home linked to the Sinaloa cartel. The drugs' street value could be $15 million to $20 million. 1 million pills with fentanyl seized by DEA in ...
Stack began an investigation into Rose Marks and family in 2007 before retiring from the Fort Lauderdale Police Department. [3] [5] A subsequent federal investigation, "Operation Crystal Ball", resulted in a sixty-one-count indictment, unsealed on August 16, 2011, charging Marks and eight family members with crimes spanning twenty years. [1] [6 ...
Penny Abernathy, "The Expanding News Desert: Florida", Usnewsdeserts.com, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (Survey of local news existence and ownership in 21st century) University of Miami; University of Florida. "Cuban Exile Newspapers at the University of Miami" – via Digital Library of the Caribbean. "Florida".
May 11—LENOIR — A drug bust resulted in the seizure of approximately 58 grams of fentanyl, worth a total street value of $11,600, a 9mm handgun, over $24,000 in cash, and to the arrest of ...
The Supreme Court blew up the massive bankruptcy reorganization of opioid maker Purdue Pharma, finding that the settlement inappropriately included legal protections for the Sackler family ...
Sal Magluta. Salvador "Sal" Magluta (born November 5, 1954) is a Cuban American former drug kingpin and powerboat racer who, along with his partner Willy Falcon, operated one of the most significant cocaine trafficking organizations in South Florida history. The duo became known as Los Muchachos, Spanish for "The Boys".
It’s just after 5 a.m. on a Monday in November. Fischer, a 31-year-old construction worker, has to get from his home on the outskirts of Rapid City, South Dakota, to Fort Collins, Colorado — some 350 miles away — and he has to get there by noon. He’s wearing a Kangol hat, jeans, a T-shirt and, for warmth, a hoodie and a jacket.