NYPD Abreu
Freed on Bail For Cocaine Importation From
DR In EDNY
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon DocCloud
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- ESPN
FEDERAL COURT,
Nov 9 – A New York City
Police Officer, Amaury Abreu,
has been indicted for
participating in importing and
distributing cocaine in the
U.S. District Court for the
Eastern District of New York.
EDNY prosecutors sought but
did not obtain his detention
pending trial.
Inner City
Press put the detention memo
online here.
Then it live tweeted the bail
proceeding:
Now at 4:50 pm,
detention hearing of NYPD
Amaury Abreu is starting
before EDNY Magistrate Judge
Sanket J. Bulsara (who minutes
ago bailed out Abreu's
co-defendant Junior Ortiz).
Erin Reid says US
is asking for detention - the
organization brought in a
steady supply of drugs,
through JFK. "He's an NYPD
officer, he abused that
position over several years."
AUSA: He gave the
DTO organization about its
competitors. He ran a warrant
check for a co-defendant. That
is provable. He lied about all
of this - he could be charged
under 1001.
Abreu's CJA
laywer Matthew Galluzzo: He
owns two houses on Long
Island, his wife is a dental
hygienist making $5000 a year.
His service weapon has been
seized. He should be released
rather than into the MDC.
Judge: Does he
have any other weapons?
Defense lawyer: I don't
believe so. Judge: The
charges are significant. It is
a presumption case. The US
says there has been an abuse
of trust. But the Bail Reform
Act requires me to consider
this is his first case, &
his job
Judge: Also,
Pre-Trial Services recommends
he be bailed. So, with home
confinement, I'm releasing
him.
$1 million bond,
with confession of judgment
due in 3 weeks and time excluded
to Dec. 18.
Before: "Between
at least January 2016 and
October 2020, Abreu, Bautista
and Valerio were members of a
multinational drug trafficking
organization (“DTO”) with
distributors in the New
York-metropolitan area and the
Dominican Republic. During
that time, the DTO imported
multi-kilogram quantities of
cocaine into the United States
through a variety of means,
including by sending drug
couriers on flights to the
United States, concealing
narcotics in mail and tractor
trucks that enter the United
States from Mexico, and
concealing narcotics in
produce shipments that are
imported into the United
States. Between January 2016
and February 2017, the DTO
sent a series of drug couriers
on flights to New York from
the Dominican Republic. When
the couriers landed in JFK
Airport in Queens, New York,
they were escorted through
customs and baggage claim by a
corrupt CBP officer who was
part of the conspiracy. After
they went through customs, the
couriers were met by a driver
who took them to a safe house
where they waited to be
paid.
2 Five couriers
connected to the DTO, the
corrupt CBP officer and the
driver were arrested at JFK
airport between January 2016
and February 2017. In total,
law enforcement agents seized
more than approximately 50
kilograms of cocaine and
$3,622 from the couriers at
the time of their arrests. In
addition, in approximately May
2018, the DTO sent a shipment
of approximately 250 kilograms
of cocaine concealed in boxes
of produce imports from the
Dominican Republic to the Red
Hook Port in Red Hook,
Brooklyn, New York. CBP
officers at the port
identified and seized the
cocaine. In approximately July
2019, the DTO sent a shipment
of approximately 66 kilograms
cocaine concealed in boxes of
produce imports from the
Dominican Republic to a
warehouse in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. CBP officers
identified and seized the
cocaine. Between the airport
seizures, the Red Hook Port
seizure and the Philadelphia
seizure, since 2016 law
enforcement agents have seized
more than 350 kilograms of
cocaine belonging to the DTO.
B. The
Defendants’ Crimes Abreu,
Bautista and Valerio all
played key roles in the DTO
between January 2016 and
October 2020. i. Amaury Abreu
Abreu, a police officer with
the New York Police Department
(“NYPD”), abused his position
by providing information to
the DTO about law enforcement
procedures and performing
warrant checks on members of
the DTO using the NYPD arrest
database. In addition, on at
least one occasion, Valerio, a
high-ranking member of the
DTO, gave Abreu cocaine to
distribute. Messages between
Abreu and the DTO’s leadership
reflect Abreu’s efforts to
assist the DTO’s leadership in
concealing the DTO’s criminal
activities, and to keep the
leadership advised of ongoing
law enforcement operations
that might impact the DTO’s
business. For example, in
January 2016, Abreu messaged
the DTO’s leadership, in
substance, “Today I’m going to
find out the thing I couldn’t
yesterday because there were
too many people at the
office.” One day later, Abreu
messaged the DTO’s leadership,
in substance, that an
associate of the DTO was
“fine, because here in New
York you don’t see information
from another state when we run
a license from another state
only if they’re wanted so if
they stop him tell him to say
he lives in Pennsylvania and
not in New York and it’s cool
. . . .” On or about March 11,
2016, the DTO’s leadership
sent Abreu a message
containing Gustavo Valerio’s
full name, date of birth and
social security number. An
audit of the NYPD’s arrest
database revealed that, that
same day, Abreu searched for
Valerio’s name in the database
– despite having no legitimate
law enforcement purpose for
doing so. A few 3 days
later, presumably after
learning that his warrant
check was clear, Valerio
travelled to the Dominican
Republic. In May 2016,
Abreu sent messages to the
DTO’s leadership asking about
a license plate that Abreu had
provided, “in case anything
happens.” A member of the
leadership responded in
substance, “that’s my guardian
angel brother I don’t leave it
anywhere thanks so much.” On
or about August 12, 2016,
Abreu sent messages to the
DTO’s leadership informing
them of “a little clean-up of
the enemy’s people on
Wednesday . . . .[t]wo for
sure, but they’re keeping it
quiet until they clean up,
because it was the Feds.”
These messages likely referred
to a law enforcement operation
that occurred on August 11,
2016, when federal agents
arrested several individuals
associated with a rival drug
trafficking organization to
the DTO. There is evidence
that, in addition to assisting
the DTO, Abreu was directly
involved in the DTO’s
operations. For example, as
noted above, Valerio, a
high-ranking member of the
DTO, gave Abreu cocaine to
distribute on at least one
occasion. Valerio also
exchanged messages with the
DTO’s leadership indicating
that, as part of his
money-collection duties on
behalf of the DTO, he
collected money from Abreu.
There is strong evidence of
Abreu’s ongoing connection to
the DTO. Indeed, phone records
confirm that Abreu has been in
almost daily contact touch
with the DTO’s leadership
between 2018 and as recently
as November 3, 2020. Travel
records show that Abreu
traveled to meet with the
DTO’s leadership in the
Dominican Republic in January
and February 2020." Watch this
site.
***
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