
Nathan Jaccard
Editor, Latin America at Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP)
Periodista. Editor para América Latina de @OCCRP / Journalist. Latin America editor of @OCCRP / Autor de La Rosca Nostra y La Maldita Tierra
Articles
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2 months ago |
lrt.lt | Jared Savage |Aubrey Belford |Nathan Jaccard |Daniela Castro
ŠČ JS AB NJ DC Šarūnas Černiauskas, Jared Savage, Aubrey Belford, Nathan Jaccard, Daniela Castro, Siena.lt, NZ Herald, OCCRP 2025.02.17 08:00 A recent US sanctions notice has put the spotlight on an alleged narcotics ring from the small Baltic country, which purportedly includes a previously-convicted trafficker dubbed a “global kingpin” of the trade. The story was originally published by Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP).
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2 months ago |
nzherald.co.nz | Jared Savage |Daniela Castro |Nathan Jaccard |Aubrey Belford
Rokas Karpavicius, once convicted of importing drugs into New Zealand, is now alleged by US authorities to be running a global cocaine empire with fellow Lithuanians. Image / James O'Brien of OCCRPKEY POINTS:A leaked memo from the Colombian prosecutor’s office reveals an international police operation targeting a drug trafficking ring allegedly spearheaded by Rokas Karpis, who was previously sentenced in New Zealand for drug offences, and another Lithuanian named Virginijus Labutis.
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Dec 14, 2023 |
elnuevoherald.com | Kevin Hall |Nathan Jaccard |Jacqueline Charles |Juanita Vélez
Un gran camión cargado de sacos de papas entra en un almacén de la ciudad portuaria colombiana de Cartagena a finales de octubre de 2019. Una vez dentro, dos hombres descargan la verdadera carga: 700 kilos de cocaína. Entregan la droga a un socio de confianza que ha decidido transportarla a España. Él hace lo prometido... pero en un vuelo comercial de Iberia vigilado por la DEA.
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Dec 14, 2023 |
news.yahoo.com | Kevin Hall |Nathan Jaccard |Jacqueline Charles |Juanita Vélez
A large truck carrying sacks of potatoes pulls into a warehouse in the Colombian port city of Cartagena in late October 2019. Once inside, two men unload the real cargo: 700 kilos of cocaine. They hand the drugs over to a trusted partner who has elected to transport the drugs to Spain. He does as promised — but on a commercial Iberia flight under the watch of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
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Dec 14, 2023 |
ca.news.yahoo.com | Kevin Hall |Nathan Jaccard |Jacqueline Charles |Juanita Vélez
A large truck carrying sacks of potatoes pulls into a warehouse in the Colombian port city of Cartagena in late October 2019. Once inside, two men unload the real cargo: 700 kilos of cocaine. They hand the drugs over to a trusted partner who has elected to transport the drugs to Spain. He does as promised — but on a commercial Iberia flight under the watch of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
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