The Civil Guard has carried out an operation in which a total of 23 people have been arrested and another 6 are being investigated for their alleged involvement in a criminal organization dedicated to drug trafficking, specifically, through a ‘teledroga’ service that passed on shipping costs to consumers.
From the region of Sierra Norte and Dos Hermanas (Seville), the detainees carried out drug sales in Seville, Córdoba, Cádiz, and Huelva, the Civil Guard reported in a statement.
To do this, they used a network of distributors in each of these provinces and whose deployment had a direct impact on the sale price, through the charging of shipping costs to the consumer.
After preparing the doses in their own homes, they supplied the substance to the different collaborators in charge of carrying out the sale.
The specialty of the dismantled organization was the sale of ‘rebujito’ – a mixture of heroin and cocaine -, although they also distributed ‘tucibi’, known as pink cocaine.
The client placed the order by telephone and the organization transferred the merchandise to the agreed place, which implied an increase in the price for transportation.
In addition, the group had security guards at the different fixed points of sale, with the aim of alerting them to the arrival of police teams and hiding the substance to avoid being surprised.
The agents have carried out twelve entries and searches in Sevillian homes in Dos Hermanas, Cazalla de la Sierra, El Priorato, El Pedroso and Marchena, in addition to making some of the arrests in the towns of Peñaflor, Constantina and Alanís (Seville). ).
Investigators have found a total of 90,255 euros in banknotes of various values, as well as different types of drugs, including more than four kilos of heroin, 316 grams of cocaine and more than four kilos of cutting substance.
In addition, tools have been found for dosing the doses, as well as a shotgun – which was listed as stolen -, ammunition of different calibers, a bulletproof vest and an extendable police defense.
The detainees, along with the identification of those investigated and the objects seized, have been sent to the single Investigative Court of Cazalla de la Sierra, which has taken charge of the proceedings.