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  • 31
    Aug
    2012
    3:06pm, EDT

    Cocaine shipment through Newark leads to 3 arrests in Spain, officials say

    By Jim Gold, NBC News

    A cocaine shipment spotted by customs officers in Newark, N.J., helped lead to the arrest of three people in Barcelona, Spain, U.S. officials said Friday.


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    Special agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), along with the Spanish Guardia Civil, said they arrested Oleksii Stepanets, a Ukrainian national; Eduard Medvedev, a Russian national; and Edgar Palma Bofill, a Spanish national.

    Customs and Border Patrol officers at Newark Liberty International Airport intercepted a shipment of pulleys containing approximately 2.23 kilograms of cocaine on Aug. 21, ICE officials said. The shipment originated in Costa Rica and arrived in Newark on a commercial aircraft, they said. The shipment’s manifest said it was auto parts destined for an auto shop in Barcelona.


    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com 

    HSI Newark agents coordinated with agents in Madrid to assist the Spanish Guardia Civil in the arrests, officials said.

    Besides the arrests, police seized a total of 2.99 kilograms of cocaine and “precursor chemicals” used to process the drug, officials said.

    The arrests were linked to a previous seizure of 10 kilograms of cocaine at the Newark airport, officials said.

    The total wholesale value of the cocaine is over $500,000, they said.

    "This cooperation with foreign governments represents HSI's broad footprint that extends beyond our border," said Andrew McLees, special agent in charge of HSI Newark.

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    The investigation was the latest in a series of drug-smuggling interceptions reported by ICE. Among others, which yielded larger drug seizures:

    • Two U.S. citizens were arrested and 1,048 kilograms of cocaine with a street value of $72 million were seized Aug. 6 from a boat towing a vessel off the southern coast of Puerto Rico.
    • Two U.S. citizens were arrested and 450 kilograms of cocaine with a street value of $10 million were seized July 31 from a suspicious 30-foot fiberglass boat with two outboard engines sinking off the eastern coast of Puerto Rico.
    • Six Dominican Republic nationals aboard a 25-foot unmarked fiberglass boat heading toward Puerto Rico were arrested and 330 kilograms and 1 kilogram of heroin with an estimated street value of $8 million were seized in early June.

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    7 comments

    Jim Gold of NBC news seems to have failed to check what he wrote. He created a new Bureau within the US Government. The Bureau of Customs and Border Patrol. Since there is already a Customs and Border Protection and a separate Border Patrol this new Bureau will have overlapping authority. Sad that r …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: spain, drugs, newark, cocaine, crime, ice, barcelona
  • 16
    Apr
    2012
    6:43am, EDT

    World's armies circle as Arctic warms to reveal untapped supplies of oil and gas

    Lucas Jackson / Reuters, file

    U.S. Navy safety swimmers stand on the deck of the Virginia class submarine USS New Hampshire after it surfaced through thin ice during exercises underneath ice in the Arctic Ocean north of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska March 19, 2011.

    By The Associated Press

    YOKOSUKA, Japan -- To the world's military leaders, the debate over climate change is long over. They are preparing for a new kind of Cold War in the Arctic, anticipating that rising temperatures there will open up a treasure trove of resources, long-dreamed-of sea lanes and a slew of potential conflicts. 

    By Arctic standards, the region is already buzzing with military activity, and experts believe that will increase significantly in the years ahead. 


    Last month, Norway wrapped up one of the largest Arctic maneuvers ever — Exercise Cold Response — with 16,300 troops from 14 countries training on the ice for everything from high intensity warfare to terror threats. Attesting to the harsh conditions, five Norwegian troops were killed when their C-130 Hercules aircraft crashed near the summit of Kebnekaise, Sweden's highest mountain.

    The U.S., Canada and Denmark held major exercises two months ago, and in an unprecedented move, the military chiefs of the seven main Arctic powers — Canada, the U.S., Russia, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden and Finland — are to gather at a Canadian military base in May to specifically discuss regional security issues. 

    None of this means a shooting war is likely at the North Pole any time soon. But as the number of workers and ships increases in the High North to exploit oil and gas reserves, so will the need for policing, border patrols and — if push comes to shove — military muscle to enforce rival claims. 

    High stakes
    The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that 13 percent of the world's undiscovered oil and 30 percent of its untapped natural gas is in the Arctic.

    Shipping lanes could be regularly open across the Arctic by 2030 as rising temperatures continue to melt the sea ice, according to a National Research Council analysis commissioned by the U.S. Navy last year. 

    UK report analyzes risks of Arctic development

    What countries should do about climate change remains a heated political debate. But that has not stopped north-looking militaries from moving ahead with strategies that assume current trends will continue. 

    Russia, Canada and the United States have the biggest stakes in the Arctic. With its military budget stretched thin by Iraq, Afghanistan and more pressing issues elsewhere, the United States has been something of a reluctant northern power, though its nuclear-powered submarine fleet, which can navigate for months underwater and below the ice cap, remains second to none. 

    Lucas Jackson / Reuters, file

    U.S. Navy watch a display in the control room of the Virginia class submarine USS New Hampshire as it surfaces during exercises underneath ice in the Arctic Ocean north of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska March 20, 2011.

    Russia — one-third of which lies within the Arctic Circle — has been the most aggressive in establishing itself as the emerging region's superpower. 

    Rob Huebert, an associate political science professor at the University of Calgary in Canada, said Russia has recovered enough from its economic troubles of the 1990s to significantly rebuild its Arctic military capabilities, which were a key to the overall Cold War strategy of the Soviet Union, and has increased its bomber patrols and submarine activity. 

    Huebert said that has in turn led other Arctic countries — Norway, Denmark and Canada — to resume regional military exercises that they had abandoned or cut back on after the Soviet collapse. Even non-Arctic nations such as France have expressed interest in deploying their militaries to the Arctic. 

    Some Himalayan glaciers are actually growing

    "We have an entire ocean region that had previously been closed to the world now opening up," Huebert said. "There are numerous factors now coming together that are mutually reinforcing themselves, causing a buildup of military capabilities in the region. This is only going to increase as time goes on." 

    Noting that the Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the globe, the U.S. Navy in 2009 announced a beefed-up Arctic Roadmap by its own task force on climate change that called for a three-stage strategy to increase readiness, build cooperative relations with Arctic nations and identify areas of potential conflict. 

    Climate forecasters eye 3 million years ago

    "We want to maintain our edge up there," said Cmdr. Ian Johnson, the captain of the USS Connecticut, which is one of the U.S. Navy's most Arctic-capable nuclear submarines and was deployed to the North Pole last year. "Our interest in the Arctic has never really waned. It remains very important." 

    US 'inadequately prepared'
    But the U.S. remains ill-equipped for large-scale Arctic missions, according to a simulation conducted by the U.S. Naval War College. A summary released last month found the Navy is "inadequately prepared to conduct sustained maritime operations in the Arctic" because it lacks ships able to operate in or near Arctic ice, support facilities and adequate communications.

    US sees record for warmest March -- and first quarter

    The findings indicate the Navy is entering a new realm in the Arctic," said Walter Berbrick, a War College professor who participated in the simulation. "Instead of other nations relying on the U.S. Navy for capabilities and resources, sustained operations in the Arctic region will require the Navy to rely on other nations for capabilities and resources." 

    He added that although the U.S. nuclear submarine fleet is a major asset, the Navy has severe gaps elsewhere — it doesn't have any icebreakers, for example. The only one in operation belongs to the Coast Guard. The U.S. is currently mulling whether to add more icebreakers.

    US: 56 coral species face extinction danger

    Acknowledging the need to keep apace in the Arctic, the United States is pouring funds into figuring out what climate change will bring, and has been working closely with the scientific community to calibrate its response. 

    "The Navy seems to be very on board regarding the reality of climate change and the especially large changes we are seeing in the Arctic," said Mark C. Serreze, director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences University of Colorado. "There is already considerable collaboration between the Navy and civilian scientists and I see this collaboration growing in the future." 

    The most immediate challenge may not be war — both military and commercial assets are sparse enough to give all countries elbow room for a while — but whether militaries can respond to a disaster. 

    Heather Conley, director of the Europe program at the London-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said militaries probably will have to rescue their own citizens in the Arctic before any confrontations arise there. 

    "Catastrophic events, like a cruise ship suddenly sinking or an environmental accident related to the region's oil and gas exploration, would have a profound impact in the Arctic," she said. "The risk is not militarization; it is the lack of capabilities while economic development and human activity dramatically increases that is the real risk."

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    225 comments

    There ya go. Squeeze every last drop out of mother earth. And while you're at it, fight over it.

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    Explore related topics: oil, gas, warming, climate-change, arctic, ice, featured, melting, armies-military
  • 1
    Apr
    2012
    12:54pm, EDT

    Fishermen -- 675 of them -- rescued from runaway ice floe in Russia

    Russian Emergency Ministry / EPA

    Crews reach the area in Sakhalin, Russia, where they rescued 675 fishermen.

    By msnbc.com and news services

    MOSCOW -- 675 fishermen have quite the story about the one that got away -- the ice floe, not the fish. Turns out they were all on an ice floe along a beach on Sakhalin, an island in Russia's far east, when the floe separated and started taking them out to sea on Sunday.

    Within six hours of the first report, emergency services had rescued all 675 using two helicopters, eight ships and a hovercraft in the Sea of Okhotsk.


    One of the rescued fishermen, Vladimir Vasilenko, said they should have known better than to go out on such a day.

    "Of course the wind was blowing from the shore. We should have thought that something could happen, but people were going and we went as well," he said in a televised interview. "We also heard on the radio that it was the last chance for fishermen, and so we went fishing.".

    None of the rescued ice fishermen required medical treatment.

    Ice fishermen routinely get stranded on ice floes in Russia, especially in the spring as the temperatures rise. But Sunday's operation was unusual in the high number that had to be rescued.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    27 comments

    You guys are not real fishermen. You should understand that for many in Russia fishing is more than just a way of life, it's a religion. My second cousin would probably be on that chunk of ice if he lived there. BTW, you don't need a licence to fish unless u r a commercial fisherman. All you need is …

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    Explore related topics: russia, ice, featured
  • 23
    Jan
    2012
    6:49pm, EST

    'One day I will be back': Deported coach dreams of US return

    By msnbc.com staff

    Miguel Aparicio, a former Phoenix high school coach whose deportation to Mexico sparked a national outcry, says he has been struggling with his life since leaving Arizona.

    “I feel so depressed,” Aparicio recently told The Arizona Republic in Phoenix. “Sometimes when I’m dreaming, I wake up in the middle of the night and I think I’m in Phoenix. But then I look around and I realize, no, I’m not.”

    The former high school cross-country coach's story unfolded last summer when his deportation came on the day the Obama administration made a policy change that would allow thousands of undocumented residents like Aparicio to remain in the country.

    Read original story: Deportee struggles to readjust to life outside Phoenix 

    In June, Immigration and Customs Enforcement's director John Morton announced that prosecutors and immigration agents would consider a defendant's history and community ties when deciding whether to press for deportation.

    Aparicio's lawyer, Jose Luis Peñalosa, was quick to jump on the policy change, filing a motion on his client's behalf. But, it came too late and failed to win the man's stay of deportation, the Arizona Republic reported.

    Aparicio has been described in local news outlets as a coach who contributed a great deal of success and good to Phoenix-area schools, despite being an undocumented worker and having a DUI on his record. 

    These days, Aparicio spends his days tending 26 sheep on his family's farm in Guanajuato. He's also dreaming of his return to America, according to the newspaper.

    "I am just waiting to see if they change something about immigration," he told the Arizona Republic. "I am just hoping because I do not feel like the ICE officers were really fair with me. They just looked at the negative stuff. They did not look at the positive stuff. And I have a lot. I know for sure that one day I will be back."

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    20 comments

    People like this man are an insult to all the LEGAL immigrants in this country who have spent all the time, money and aggravation and stress of going through legat al channels to get here.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mexico, immigration, ice, deportation

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