Mule (smuggling)
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- ''For other uses, see mule (disambiguation)
Sometimes the goods are hidden in e.g. the bag or vehicle of an innocent person, who does not know about this, for the purpose of retrieving the goods elsewhere.
In the case of transporting illegal drugs (see illegal drug trade) the term drug mule applies.
Methods of smuggling include hiding the goods in a vehicle, lugguage or clothes, strapping them to one's body, or using the body as container.
The latter is mainly applied for heroin and cocaine, and sometimes for ecstacy ([link]). It is often done by swallowing latex balloons (often condoms, or fingers of latex gloves) or special pellets filled with the goods, and recovering them from the feces later (such a smuggler is called a swallower or internal carrier; the practice is also called body packing or body stuffing). It is a common, but medically dangerous way of smuggling small amounts of drugs: a mule may well die when a packet bursts or leaks.
People are sometimes X-rayed at airports etc. to check for drug pellets.
With regard to traffic from South America to the US, the US Drug Enforcement Administration reports: "Unlike cocaine, heroin is often smuggled by people who swallow large numbers of small capsules (50-90), allowing them to transport up to 1.5 kilograms of heroin per courier."[link]. However, elsewhere cocaine is smuggled this way.
Schapelle Corby, arrested in October 2004, claimed to be an unwitting drug mule. The Bali Nine are an example of a drug-smuggling ring.
Drug smuggling by a mule was the topic of:
- Maria Full of Grace (2004)
- Bolletjes Blues (2006)
See also
External links
- [2006 news item on swallowers]
- ["Drug smuggling by body packing: what radiologists should know about it." (abstract)]
- [The cocaine 'body-packer' syndrome: Diagnosis and treatment]
- [Fatal Heroin Intoxication in Body Packers in Northern Thailand during the Last Decade: Two Case Reports]
- [Child body packing]
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