'Air Cocaine' smuggling trial starts in France

Air force pilots go on trial after they fled Dominican Republic following spectacular drugs bust on a private jet


Afp February 18, 2019
French Jean Fauret (R) and Bruno Odos (C), respectively pilot and co-pilot, arrive on February 18, 2019 at the Assize Court of Aix-En-Provence, southern France ahead of a court hearing in the trial over 'Air Cocaine' plot to smuggle planeload of drugs. - Four Frenchmen -- two pilots, their passenger and the alleged broker behind the deal -- face a long-delayed trial in what the French media have dubbed the "Air Cocaine" affair. The men were arrested in March 2013 on the tarmac at the airport in the Caribbean resort of Punta Cana, when according to Dominican authorities they were preparing to take off with 26 suitcases carrying 680 kilograms of cocaine. PHOTO:AFP

AIX-EN-PROVENCE: Two former French air force pilots went on trial in France on Monday six years after they fled the Dominican Republic following a spectacular drugs bust on a private jet in the Caribbean nation.

In what has become known as the "Air Cocaine" case, Pascal Fauret and Bruno Odos are accused along with seven other defendants of trying to smuggle 680 kilogrammes (1,500 pounds) of the drug out of the country.

Dominican police found the narcotics packed into 26 suitcases onboard a Falcon 50 jet as it prepared to fly from the Dominican beach resort of Punta Cana to Saint-Tropez in the south of France in March 2013.

While out on bail, the two men managed to flee the Dominican Republic to French territory in the Caribbean in mysterious circumstances, but were re-arrested upon their return to the French mainland in November 2015.

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They, along with two passengers, were found guilty in absentia and sentenced to 20 years in jail for drug-trafficking in the Dominican Republic in 2015.

All of them deny they knew that the cocaine was on board the flight.
The French court will hear scores of witnesses and experts over seven weeks and the defendants face up to 30 years in prison.

Only one suspect, Ali Bouchareb, is in detention in the case while the other eight were granted bail pending the trial.

COMMENTS (1)

Bunny Rabbit | 5 years ago | Reply I am not angry . I am sad when educated aware people resort to such things . Clearly they are making much money . then where was the need for such smuggling to make more .
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