Thursday, April 16, 2020

Arrest of 13 Suspected Members of Turkey Drug Trafficking Group


A former supervisory special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in Virginia, Brian Shanahan spent more than 20 years investigating drug trafficking operations, arresting suspects, interviewing witnesses, and seizing assets. Known for being a dedicated professional, Brian Shanahan handled domestic and international cases for the DEA and spent some time in Turkey as a case agent for the organization.

In March 2020, authorities from Europe announced that they had arrested 13 individuals who are believed to be part of a drug trafficking group based in Turkey. These arrests were made after authorities from several European countries investigated the group for 2 years. According to Europol, two high-value targets were included among the 13 arrested individuals, and those arrested were captured in Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Turkey.

Along with the individual arrests, European authorities also seized 2.4 tons of heroin. It is believed that the group planned on shipping the drugs to Europe in construction materials or food containers that would be put either on trucks or cargo ships. The drugs most likely originated from the Middle East, based on reports, and were headed to the Netherlands. Cocaine, likely from Latin America, was also seized in the operation.

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Safely Storing a Sports Card Collection

Friday, March 27, 2020

New Platforms to Entertain Audiences at the Movies

Thursday, February 6, 2020

The Battle with Methamphetamine Rages on in America’s Heartland

 Brian Shanahan is a retired supervisory special agent with the DEA who worked on a wide range of cases and was responsible for many national and international investigative accomplishments. During his tenure with the DEA, Brian Shanahan was chosen for an overseas position in the DEA’s Ankara, Turkey office where he established and maintained alliances with Turkish authorities in narcotics enforcement efforts. In the US, the DEA has been struggling to curtail the use and distribution of methamphetamine since its inception in 1980.

During what was considered the peak of methamphetamine use in the US, Agency personnel were seizing drug caches mainly in the one-to-five pound range. That was in 2005, and the meth problem was considered an imminent crisis.

In 2019, far from having slowed, the problem is well beyond what anyone could have predicted. Agents recently seized 250 pounds of meth in a single raid in Minnesota, as a meth resurgence is becoming more lethal by the day. Most indications are that the drugs are sourced from Mexico these days, rather than made in the US. While domestic production has been significantly reduced to the point of being rare, foreign drugs are keeping the illicit economy alive and they show no signs of slowing down.