Attorney General Terry Goddard, Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu and
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Special Agent in Charge
Elizabeth W. Kempshall today announced the takedown of a violent drug
trafficking organization that is believed to have smuggled thousands of
pounds of marijuana across the U.S. - Mexico border and into Pinal
County over the past several years. This is believed to be the first
such top-to-bottom take down of a cross-border drug trafficking
organization operating out of Pinal County.
Twenty-one
individuals have been indicted and numerous arrested on charges
including possession and transportation of marijuana for sale, money
laundering, conspiracy and illegally conducting an enterprise as a
result of Operation “Los Tusa,” which concluded in recent days with
numerous arrests and seizures of marijuana, cash and weapons. Among
those arrested was the alleged leader of the organization, Robert
Hernandez, 38, of Arizona City.
“Coordinated law enforcement
that attacks organized crime from the top down is the key to securing
our border and keeping Arizona safe from smuggling violence,” Goddard
said. “I am committed to working with our law enforcement partners to
fight back against the cartels and the violence they perpetrate in our
communities.”

Operation Los Tusa began in December of 2008 when a routine traffic
stop by a Pinal County Sheriff’s Deputy in the Maricopa/Stanfield area
led to a search of the car and the seizure of $228,569 in cash.
Subsequent investigation by the Pinal County Narcotics Task Force and
DEA revealed what investigators allege was an elaborate drug smuggling
organization that brought marijuana across the U.S. - Mexico border,
through the Tohono O’Odham Nation and into Pinal County.
Investigators believe the organization had been operating in Pinal
County for at least three years, smuggling thousands of pounds of
marijuana per year. They further alleged that the drugs were
distributed from Pinal County stash houses to cities across the nation.
The organization allegedly smuggled the marijuana across the Arizona
desert from the border to southern Pinal County using a network of
vehicles and individual walkers who carried backpacks filled with 50 -
100 pounds of marijuana each. The walkers were allegedly met by drivers
in southern Pinal County who transported the drugs to stash houses
throughout the county for subsequent sale and distribution.
Several of the lead defendants were charged with use of minors to
commit drug offenses, for allegedly recruiting Pinal County residents
as young as high school students to meet the walkers and drive the
marijuana to stash houses.
In addition, several lead
defendants face charges of conspiracy to commit armed robbery relating
to their alleged scheme to impersonate law enforcement officers in
order to rob and possibly murder competing drug traffickers in the
southern Arizona desert. Among the items seized in the takedown of the
organization was a sedan that appears to have been altered to look like
a police vehicle and contained a hat with “FBI” written on the front.
“Drugs and violence go hand in hand. This deadly combination must be
met with combined law enforcement expertise at the local, state and
federal levels,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge Elizabeth W.
Kempshall. “Today’s operation is a major strike against a violent drug
trafficking organization responsible for smuggling multi-hundred pound
shipments of marijuana from Mexico into Southern Arizona. DEA shares
with its law enforcement partners the goal of completely destroying
this organization and any others like it that plague our streets and
communities and putting them where they belong-behind bars.”
Goddard, Babeu, and Kempshall all noted that the success in Operation
Los Tusa was the result of the rapid and coordinated responses of the
Pinal County Narcotics Task Force, Pinal County Sheriff’s Office, DEA
and the Arizona Attorney General’s Office.
“Pinal County has
always been a haven for drug and human smuggling. This historic take
down of criminal traffickers should serve as a signal of what our
citizens and criminals can expect to continue to take place,” said
Sheriff Paul Babeu. “This investigation was fully developed by local
law enforcement and due to the size and scope of this criminal
organization; we sought the assistance of the DEA and the Attorney
General’s Office. We are also appreciative of the assistance of the
Mesa, Tempe and DPS SWAT teams who joined our PCSO multi-agency SWAT
team during the execution of the high risk search warrants.”

Babeu continued by stating, “I thank all our law enforcement partners
for their amazing support and ask them to standby for further
operations. Together, we made sure the good guys won a big victory
against those who break our laws and corrupt our society with drugs. We
shall continue to attack criminal operations and take not only their
drugs - but their cash, their vehicles, their houses and send them to
prison.”
To date, Operation Los Tusa has resulted in the
seizure of $418,640 in U.S. currency, nearly 4,000 pounds of marijuana,
21 vehicles and several assault rifles. It has also led to the
identification and closure of multiple stash houses in Pinal County.