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Monday 13 August 2012

Drugs in India, US


NEW DELHI: The recent seizure of party drug ketamine in Jaipur by the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) has made a number of U.S. citizens on the bench. The IRD, which is to share information on the case of the U.S., has discovered that more than 100 shipments of the drug were mailed to several people in the U.S. in small amounts.

Since all deliveries are documented, the DRI is the identification of each individual and share the details with the U.S.. The decision is expected to break the chain of international cartel between the U.S. and India. The New Delhi zonal unit DRI had seized 100 kilos of ketamine from an employee of 50 years old, Rajasthan Tourism Development Corporation (RTDC) and his son on Friday pharmacist. "The accused, identified as Mukesh Bharadwaj (employee RTDC) and his son Rahul, packing 250gm anywhere between one kg of ketamine in small parcel and the same people in the U.S., either by a courier company or the top of India's postal services, "additional DG, DRI (New Delhi area) RK Sharma said.

The IRD has seized several documents detailing these shipments. Through these documents, the agency is to identify recipients of shipments and share information with the U.S., so these people can be detained and questioned.

"Since we have used the postal and courier services, the recipient each and every one is identified. Hope this will help us learn more about the operators of international drug cartels and break the chain between the U.S. and India, "said an official of DRI.


Research has also found that the defendant had gotten almost all your medicines in Delhi. The sources said that the defendant acquired the drug in a kilo Rs 1 lakh and sold on the international market of Rs 10 lakh a kg.

They made a Rs 2 lakh clean each kg after sharing the profits with middlemen. "We are in the process of identifying the person who bought ketamine from Delhi and arrested soon," he said.


The agency suspects that Mukesh, by dint of being employed in the tourism department, used his contacts in the tourism sector to get customers and visitors a way to find a market in the U.S.. "We hope that the interrogation will shed some light on the drug transactions related to tourism. This is a big problem the world faces the parties where drugs are channeled through the tourists to different places," said DRI official. This is the second major bust of ketamine by DRI in three weeks. Previously the agency had busted an international cartel and seized 650 kg of ketamine in New Delhi. 

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