Audio By Carbonatix
Fourteen current and former law-enforcement officers are among 20 defendants charged in Mississippi and Tennessee with accepting bribes from drug traffickers for police protection in what officials called "a monumental betrayal of public trust".
The arrests follow a years-long investigation by federal agents who posed as narcotics dealers. Two of the defendants were Mississippi sheriffs.
Federal officials set up the sting after hearing complaints from real drug traffickers about having to pay bribes to officers.
The bribery network allegedly extended beyond the Mississippi Delta region into Memphis, Tennessee, and Miami, Florida.
- slot pulsa 5000
- slot deposit pulsa
- slot deposit 5000
- https://randspallets.com.au/contact/
- https://intersmart.ae/web-development/
- https://cvworld.in/seo-services/
- https://www.silversea-media.my/about-us/
- https://www.ausfitprojects.com.au/testimonials/
- https://albarakatrust.org.uk/water-donation-for-balochistan/
- https://astrologerparduman.com/blogs/
- https://gluesys.com/
"The original complaints that began the investigation were from drug dealers," US Attorney Clay Joyner for the Northern District of Mississippi told a news conference on Thursday.
Some of the officers had received bribes of between $20,000 (£15,000) and $37,000, the prosecutor added.
The sting involved undercover federal agents posing as drug dealers with fake narcotics, which the defendants allegedly believed to be 25kg (55lb) of cocaine.
FBI deputy director Andrew Bailey said the accused officers had "sold out the public".
"They betrayed the trust that the public placed in them, disgraced the badge and undermined the hard work of good law enforcement officers across this state and region," Bailey told the news conference.
The arrests come as US officials have embarked on air strikes in South America against alleged drug traffickers.
Latest Stories
-
Rethinking intelligence in the age of Artificial Intelligence
5 minutes -
‘Every day is about survival’ – Workers demand action beyond May Day celebrations
6 minutes -
Clear leadership demonstrated in managing recent power crisis – Dr Theo Acheampong
9 minutes -
Accountability is defective in the energy sector – Ben Boakye
11 minutes -
From detection to creation: Why education must move beyond AI plagiarism
12 minutes -
Ghanaians keep paying for inefficiencies in the power sector – Prof Bokpin
12 minutes -
Ghana’s power system not robust, outages inevitable – Ben Boakye
13 minutes -
Beyond insults: The I.D.E.M playbook for political parties in the age of the ‘social media minister’
16 minutes -
Germany backs Moroccan sovereignty in Sahara dispute
36 minutes -
Beyond Competence: How capacity shapes professional access and influence
36 minutes -
Chamber of Mines calls on BoG to release full breakdown of mining export proceeds
45 minutes -
We appeal to Ghanaians for patience as we replace more transformers – Energy Minister
1 hour -
Power stability has improved since 2025 compared to 2024 – Jinapor
1 hour -
Akosombo substation fire should never have happened – Ben Boakye
1 hour -
Savannah region: Yazori Chief issues election boycott threat over underdevelopment concerns
1 hour