Costa Rica Busts Migrant-Trafficking Ring
Costa Rican authorities on Tuesday broke up a ring connected to an international network that smuggled migrants from Cuba, Asia and Africa willing to pay up to $30,000 each for a chance to make their way to the United States, officials said.
Twelve people were arrested in raids and near the Costa Rican capital San Jose and in the northwestern province of Guanacaste carried out in cooperation with Colombia and the U.S. embassy, the government's Public Ministry said in a statement.
Investigators found that the network demanded $7,000 to $15,000 for Cubans to be smuggled, and up to $30,000 for those from Asian and African countries, with most aiming for the U.S.
The route used ran from Colombia, through the Central American isthmus, on through Mexico and to the United States.
The Costa Rican cell was allegedly tasked with picking up the migrants at the southern border with Panama and taking them to San Jose for a stay of a few hours or a night before moving them to Guanacaste, on the border with Nicaragua, where they continued their travel north.
Prosecutors said the ring moved up to 17 people at a time and made two or three trips a day.
During Tuesday's operation, authorities said they found 14 Cubans about to cross over to Nicaragua, and 12 Nicaraguans who were aiming to be transported to San Jose. They were taken to a Public Ministry office in the northwestern city of Liberia for investigation.