Spanish police smash network trafficking Cubans to US
mySarawak | 28/07/2014
MADRID: Spanish police said yesterday they had smashed a ring suspected
of trafficking people, mainly Cubans, from Spain to the United States
through Mexico, with the arrest of 14 people.
The group, based on the Spanish resort island of Tenerife, charged
1,000-1,500 euros (US$1,350-2,000) for fake Spanish residence permits
which allow the holder to enter Mexico without a visa, police said in a
statement.
"Once in Mexico the clients used the group's contacts in the north of
the country to try to illegally cross the border with the United States,
and once there seek residency under the Cuban Adjustment Act," it said.
Under the so-called "wet foot/dry foot" policy of the Cuban Adjustment
Act, Cuban migrants who make it onto United States soil are allowed to
remain while those intercepted at sea are returned to their home or a
third country.
The group solicited clients for its services from a travel agency which
it ran in Tenerife, the largest and most populous island of the Canary
Islands located off the west coast of Morocco.
Police detained 11 Cubans and three Spaniards as part of the
investigation and seized 12 fake Spanish residency permits as well as
13,000 euros and US$3,250 in cash. — AFP
Source: Spanish police smash network trafficking Cubans to US : my
Sarawak – News coverage around Sarawak, Sabah and Malaysia -
http://www.mysarawak.org/2014/07/spanish-police-smash-network-trafficking-cubans-to-us.html
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