Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB)  (Photo | Twitter)
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NCB freezes Rs 9.20 crore immovable assets of prime accused linked to Mexican drug cartel

The case involves the seizure of over 95 kg of amphetamine and the discovery of a secret narcotics manufacturing lab in Gautam Buddha Nagar, Uttar Pradesh, in October last year.

Mukesh Ranjan

NEW DELHI: The Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) has attached a flat and a factory premises worth Rs 9.20 crore in Uttar Pradesh’s Noida of a “prime” accused involved in a 2024 trans-national drugs trafficking case linked to a Mexican cartel, officials said on Sunday.

The officials said that the federal anti-narcotics agency has recently secured a confirmation on the attachment from the designated competent authority and administrator constituted under the Smugglers and Foreign Exchange Manipulators (Forfeiture of Property) Act (SAFEMA) and the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act.

According to them, the case pertains to the seizure of over 95 kg of Amphetamine and the unearthing of a clandestine narcotics manufacturing laboratory in Gautam Buddha Nagar district of Uttar Pradesh in October last year.

Five people, including a Tihar Jail warden, a Mexican national part of a drug cartel operating from that country, a Mumbai-based chemist and two Delhi-based businessmen, were arrested by the NCB team then.

The agency, as part of the probe, attached immovable assets of one of the accused businessmen, also a “prime accused” in the case, worth Rs 9.20 crore.

“These included a luxury apartment in Jaypee Greens residential society and a factory premises in Kasna Industrial Area of Gautam Budh Nagar (Uttar Pradesh), which were acquired using proceeds from international narcotics trafficking,” a senior NCB official said.

The NCB and the Special Cell of the Delhi Police had jointly busted the factory, as the syndicate, including the five arrested people, was involved in “transnational smuggling” of synthetic drugs.

All the arrested are presently lodged in jail under judicial custody, the officials said.

The factory was “financed” by the CJNG - Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación - a notorious Mexican cartel, which transferred money to Dubai using cryptocurrency, the official claimed, adding: “The amount was then received in Delhi in cash by the accused through hawala, facilitated in three separate instalments”.

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