New Delhi, Oct, 11
The Delhi Police, which is probing the city’s biggest-ever seizure of cocaine worth over Rs 7,000 crore, has issued look-out circulars (LOCs) against six people, including an Indian-origin UK national who fled the country before the latest recovery of 208 kg of the drug from west Delhi.
According to police sources, the UK national, Savinder Singh, came to India last month to supervise the transportation and delivery of the 208-kg consignment suspected to have been brought from South American countries.
Sources said Singh spent around 25 days in three separate locations in Delhi before fleeing to the United Kingdom soon after the arrest of the first four members of the syndicate. These arrests were effected on October 2.
“As of now, we have issued LOCs against half-a-dozen people, some of them foreign nationals. One of them is the person who kept 208 kg of cocaine hidden in west Delhi’s Ramesh Nagar and fled to the UK,” a police officer, who is privy to the investigations, said.
The officer said a dozen people suspected to be involved in the syndicate are on the radar of the Delhi Police.
Earlier, police had issued an LOC against the syndicate’s kingpin, Virender Basoya alias Veeru, who is believed to be staying in Dubai.
Basoya was allegedly running the syndicate with the help of India-based Tushar Goyal and UK-based Jitender Gill alias Jassi and Savinder Singh, police said.
Goyal and Gill have been arrested while Basoya and Singh are yet to be nabbed, the officer said.
In the second big drugs haul in a week, the Special Cell of the Delhi Police seized 208 kg of cocaine worth Rs 2,080 crore from a rented shop in west Delhi on Thursday.
The drug was kept concealed in plastic packets of snacks with ‘Tasty Treat’ and ‘Chatpata Mixture’ written on those. About 20-25 such packets kept in cartons were seized from the small shop in west Delhi’s Ramesh Nagar area.
Sources said the shop owner told police that Singh had contacted him via a property dealer and took the space on a monthly rent of Rs 5,000. The property dealer had also taken his commission.
Police questioned the shop owner and the property dealer on Thursday.
Police said Singh had kept the consignment in the shop with the help of someone known to him.