Canadian official said Indian authorities cooperated in the multinational investigation. / IANS
Indian authorities cooperated with the United States and other international law enforcement agencies during the multinational investigation that led to sweeping racketeering charges against three organized crime groups, a senior Canadian police official said.
The acknowledgment came after U.S. authorities announced charges against 37 defendants linked to transnational criminal organizations accused of murder, extortion, kidnappings and large-scale drug trafficking across North America and Europe. Twenty-four suspects have been arrested in the United States, Canada and Europe as part of Operation Hard Ball.
Also read: US operation targets global criminal syndicates
Royal Canadian Mounted Police Deputy Commissioner Lisa Moreland said Indian authorities assisted investigators during the years-long probe.
"What I can say to you is in this investigation, as you noted from our U.S. partners, that the Indian government was cooperating in this investigation. We work shoulder and shoulder with the FBI and other agencies to address this," Moreland said in an interview following the announcement.
She added: "Through the course of this investigation, it would highlight that that's where we're striving for."
The comments came as investigators from the United States, Canada and Europe unveiled indictments against three alleged criminal syndicates led by Lawrence Bishnoi, Jaggu Bhagwanpuria and Ravinder Singh Dhanda.
Prosecutors allege the organizations operated across multiple countries and were involved in targeted killings, extortion, kidnappings, narcotics trafficking and firearms offenses.
U.S. prosecutors alleged that both Bishnoi and Bhagwanpuria directed criminal enterprises from jail cells in India using contraband communication devices, while members and associates allegedly carried out operations in the United States, Canada, Europe and elsewhere.
Moreland said the operation demonstrated the importance of international cooperation against increasingly sophisticated criminal organizations.
"I think that the key message here is that no one agency can tackle these types of organized crimes by theirself," she said. "The partnerships that we've developed here in Canada... as well as our international footprint... collaborating everybody to tackle these."
She added that organized crime had become "borderless" because of technology, making cooperation among international agencies essential.
"And I think the key message here is that no matter where you rest in the world, we will come after you with the tools that we have developed to tackle organized crime," Moreland said.
The investigation involved the FBI, the RCMP, the Los Angeles Police Department, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and law enforcement agencies in Spain and several other countries.
The Justice Department also said assistance came from the FBI's Legal Attaché offices in New Delhi, Ottawa, Madrid and Mexico City, among others.
Discover more at New India Abroad.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Comments
Start the conversation
Become a member of New India Abroad to start commenting.
Sign Up Now
Already have an account? Login