Khám xét nhà 4 nữ tiếp viên, lộ tin nhắn bí mật, chuyên gia bóc tách động thái của hãng hàng không
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Four female flight attendants have just been released because the investigation agency determined that they currently have no criminal signs related to the act of illegally transporting banned substances. After this information was announced, a former flight attendant asked fans to apologize to their colleagues.
On March 22, after many days of detention for investigation, the Ho Chi Minh City Public Security Bureau issued a decision to release 4 flight attendants because there were not enough grounds for criminal prosecution. Specifically, initially identified 4 flight attendants who did not know that inside 327 tubes of toothpaste received shipping, there were 157 tubes that were mixed and hidden by the subject.
Before this information, a girl claiming to be a former flight attendant of the Vietnam National Airlines uploaded a clip to defend her colleagues.
At the beginning of the clip, she affirmed that she did not say that carrying the goods was right, but "No matter how wrong the law is to handle it". What she is upset about is that a part of netizens are throwing stones regardless of the reason even though 4 flight attendants have been released and the authorities have not come to a final conclusion: "You still want to have at least one life. someone died in this story."
She affirmed that what fans are doing is creating karma. Those who have been giving negative comments owe the 4 flight attendants an apology and also the National Airlines a sincere apology.
It can be seen that, after the incident of 4 flight attendants, a series of information related to the aviation industry was brought out for dissection. In it, the world's flight attendants used a "trick", taking advantage of this privilege to trade banned substances.
Using privileges to trade prohibited goods
In October 2022, when Terese White, 41, was still a flight attendant for Mesa Airlines, she was preparing for a flight from Dallas to San Diego (USA).
Midway through, she left the SoCal airport and returned later that day to travel from San Diego to Boston. Here, the 41-year-old flight attendant uses a separate card for the crew to pass through the security gate without having to check.
"You have a KCM card, just scan it, show your company ID and driver's license and go straight through. But sometimes, you're still randomly selected to check," said former flight attendant White.
And right on an unlucky day, White became the chosen name.
When going through the scanner, White appeared nervous, shaking. Noticing the anomaly, the security staff asked her to go into a private room to check. There, they found that 1.5kg of fentanyl was wrapped around the female flight attendant's abdomen.
Initially, White admitted it was a "pack of pills to lose weight". But then, according to the investigation agency's conclusion, the drug was in fact fentanyl.
According to the US Drug Administration, fentanyl has been implicated in the deaths of more than 70,000 Americans in 2021. The agency seized more than 379 million doses of fentanyl in 2022.
White pleaded guilty in December 2022, facing 20 years in prison. The former flight attendant is currently awaiting sentencing at the end of March on charges of "possession with intent to distribute fentanyl".
In fact, White is just one of the flight attendants who have used their "privilege" as a tool to transport drugs.
Commenting on this incident, lawyer Dennis Ring said that "this phenomenon is common among flight attendants".
"Many flight attendants realize that crew members are given priority over passengers when using security measures, so they think it's an opportunity to get rich illegally. After receiving a large sum of money from drug trafficking organizations, they use their own privileges to transport drugs around the United States, "said lawyer Ring.
According to the same lawyer, more than 50% of flight attendants who transport or sell drugs are often unaware of the serious problem they have. That is one of the main reasons why criminal organizations want to hire flight attendants to transport prohibited goods.
"They didn't know they were breaking federal law," Ring added.
According to an unnamed former flight attendant, some of her colleagues returned from Mexico with a lot of drugs. In White's case, the former flight attendant said that the arrest was "random" and said that "security measures with the US flight crew left many holes".
"She was only checked very casually. If the drug package was hidden in the suitcase instead of wrapped around her, it is possible that White would not have been arrested," the former flight attendant said.
HOT: 4 tiếp viên hàng không được thả tự do, 2 nghi phạm mới bị bắt, sắp lộ diện, danh tính gây tò mò Hoàng Phúc18:39:22 22/03/2023Công an cho 4 nữ tiếp viên hàng không hãng Vietnam Airlines, những người mang hơn 11kg chất cấm từ Pháp về sân bay Tân Sơn Nhất, được phép về nhà nhưng vẫn phải phối hợp điều tra.
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