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Crime
WorldUnited States & Canada

FBI sting reveals plot to smuggle cocaine in bananas to Hong Kong, other crimes globally

  • Sting that nabbed 800 people in more than 16 countries began by creating the ANOM messaging service for crooks
  • International law enforcement agencies intercepted some 27 million messages, exposing plots to smuggle drugs and other crimes

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ANOM is a messaging service secretly built by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

One drug trafficker texted another that he had a “job” and a proven way to get it done: two kilograms of cocaine from Bogota using the French embassy’s protected diplomatic pouch.

The pair were straightforward, because they were using the newest, safest mode of communicating: a special-purpose, highly encrypted, messaging-only mobile phone called ANOM that operated on a closed network.

“They have already got a few packages in,” Baris Tukel told buyer Shane Geoffrey May, according to US court documents.

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As proof, Turkel texted pictures of the pouch bound and stamped “Valise Diplomatique Francaise” and another shot of tightly wrapped drug packs.

“They can do it weekly,” he wrote.

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Little did they know that ANOM was produced and distributed by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, and every one of their messages – and those of thousands of other criminals around the world – were being copied directly to an FBI server.

Others had the same sense of security. They bickered over prices, and explained smuggling strategies.

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