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Osaka Customs finds 90 bags of cocaine inside body of Brazilian woman
Osaka Customs finds 90 bags of cocaine inside body of Brazilian woman

Tokyo Reported

time07-06-2025

  • Tokyo Reported

Osaka Customs finds 90 bags of cocaine inside body of Brazilian woman

OSAKA (TR) – Officials here this week announced the arrest of a 35-year-old Brazilian for allegedly attempting to smuggle cocaine by swallowing more than 70 rubber bags of the illegal drug earlier this year, reports NHK (June 3). At around 10:00 a.m. on April 16, Jessica Ramos de Souza allegedly attempted to smuggle for profit about 675 grams of cocaine inside 87 thin rubber bags from Brazil into Japan via Kansai International Airport. The contraband has a street value of about 16.88 million yen, according to Osaka Customs. Customs officials became suspicious of de Souza due to a grim expression on her face. When they inspected her, they found 13 bags of cocaine wrapped in a sock between her legs. A subsequent X-ray examination at a medical institution revealed a total of 74 rubber bags containing an average of 7.8 grams of cocaine inside her body. The suspect has been accused of violating the Customs Act for the 74 bags in her system and the Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Control Act for the entire load of 87 bags. Regarding the former act, she denied the allegations. 'There's no doubt that I smuggled cocaine, but it wasn't for profit,' she said. According to police, 46 of the 87 bags were found in her stomach. Another 28 bags later passed through her stomach and were collected after officials waited for them to be naturally excreted. The thirteen bags found between her legs had somehow passed out of her body before arrival at the airport, officials said. According to Osaka Customs, this is the fifth case since last December in which someone has been arrested for attempting to smuggle cocaine from Brazil inside their system. Customs officials are continuing the investigation, believing that an international smuggling organization is behind the case.

Osaka Customs finds 90 bags of cocaine inside system of Brazilian woman
Osaka Customs finds 90 bags of cocaine inside system of Brazilian woman

Tokyo Reported

time07-06-2025

  • Tokyo Reported

Osaka Customs finds 90 bags of cocaine inside system of Brazilian woman

OSAKA (TR) – Officials here this week announced the arrest of a 35-year-old Brazilian for allegedly attempting to smuggle cocaine by swallowing more than 70 rubber bags of the illegal drug earlier this year, reports NHK (June 3). At around 10:00 a.m. on April 16, Jessica Ramos de Souza allegedly attempted to smuggle for profit about 675 grams of cocaine inside 87 thin rubber bags from Brazil into Japan via Kansai International Airport. The contraband has a street value of about 16.88 million yen, according to Osaka Customs. Customs officials became suspicious of de Souza due to a grim expression on her face. When they inspected her, they found 13 bags of cocaine wrapped in a sock between her legs. A subsequent X-ray examination at a medical institution revealed a total of 74 rubber bags containing an average of 7.8 grams of cocaine inside her body. The suspect has been accused of violating the Customs Act for the 74 bags in her system and the Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Control Act for the entire load of 87 bags. Regarding the former act, she denied the allegations. 'There's no doubt that I smuggled cocaine, but it wasn't for profit,' she said. According to police, 46 of the 87 bags were found in her stomach. Another 28 bags later passed through her stomach and were collected after officials waited for them to be naturally excreted. The thirteen bags found between her legs had somehow passed out of her body before arrival at the airport, officials said. According to Osaka Customs, this is the fifth case since last December in which someone has been arrested for attempting to smuggle cocaine from Brazil inside their system. Customs officials are continuing the investigation, believing that an international smuggling organization is behind the case.

Japanese police find 74 packets of cocaine inside foreign traveler complaining of stomach pains
Japanese police find 74 packets of cocaine inside foreign traveler complaining of stomach pains

SoraNews24

time06-06-2025

  • SoraNews24

Japanese police find 74 packets of cocaine inside foreign traveler complaining of stomach pains

Yeah, that'll cause digestive and legal problems for you. Usually if you hear about someone stuffing a sock down the front of their pants, it's a guy wanting his package to be perceived as more prodigious than it really is. In April, though, customs officials at Osaka's Kansai International Airport learned that a woman who was trying to enter Japan had crammed a sock into the crotch of her clothing. Apparently the bulge wasn't immediately visually apparent, but an officer noticed that the traveler, a 35-year-old Brazilian woman named Jessica Ramos de Souza, looked unusually tense while she was going through the standard customs process. She was then flagged for a more comprehensive examination of her luggage and person, which turned up 13 packets of cocaine, including a number that Souza had hidden inside the sock that she'd hidden inside her pants. At some point in the examination, Souza began to complain of stomach pains, so she was taken to a hospital for a medical examination, and X-rays quickly determined the source of her discomfort: 74 more packets of cocaine, in condom-like encasings, which she'd swallowed, presumably in hopes of sticking to a timetable in which she would have passed through customs and been out of the airport quickly enough to get to a secluded space and expel the packets from her body before the discomfort became unbearable. In total, Souza had 675.5 grams of cocaine on/in her when she entered Japan. Souza has been placed under arrest on charges of violating Japan's narcotics control act. She has admitted to smuggling the cocaine, but says that she had no intention of selling it, a claim which may or may not hold up as the authorities continue to investigate the original source of the drugs and potential accomplices. It's probably a pretty safe assumption that SoraNews24 readers and international drug mules are two demographics with minimal overlap, but all the same, this is a good spot to remind everyone that Japan's criminal justice system does not fool around when it comes to drugs, and Souza's arrest not becoming public knowledge until more than a month after the incident means that anyone caught smuggling is likely to be sitting in lockup for a very long time even if they somehow manage to avoid going to trial. Source: Asahi ABC News via Yahoo! Japan News, NHK News Web Top image: Pakutaso ● Want to hear about SoraNews24's latest articles as soon as they're published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

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