Skip to main content

Racing decoy

Eagle-eyed Spanish police have foiled a clever attempt to smuggle drugs into the country, using a decoy support vehicle for a major race event. The criminals tried to use the Dakar Rally held earlier this year as a front for their drug smuggling activities in an attempt with a plotline worthy of a Hollywood gangster movie.
February 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Eagle-eyed Spanish police have foiled a clever attempt to smuggle drugs into the country, using a decoy support vehicle for a major race event. The criminals tried to use the Dakar Rally held earlier this year as a front for their drug smuggling activities in an attempt with a plotline worthy of a Hollywood gangster movie. A truck was disguised by the enterprising smugglers to resemble a race support vehicle for the race, which was held in South America instead of Africa this year. The truck was emblazoned with logos for the event's sponsors and for the Dakar Rally itself, as well as having a graphic of a racing car on its rear doors. The smugglers then transported the truck from the Spanish port of Bilbao to Argentina for the event. Close to Argentina's capital Buenos Aires the truck was loaded with the drugs using a number of secret storage areas within the vehicle. With the drugs aboard the truck then shadowed the race for two weeks before being shipped back to Bilbao. However police were waiting and the truck and its contents were seized. Inside the truck police discovered over 800kg of cocaine as well as 1,500 ecstasy tablets, 4.5kg of hashish and two firearms, all of which was hidden behind the various panels in secret lockers. Seven people were also arrested. The smugglers had prepared documentation for the vehicle and provided its crew with official uniforms, however the event organisers said that the truck was never part of the official race and never came to the meeting points along the route. The vehicle's graphics were also incorrect, making it easier to identify as a 'Trojan horse'.

Related Content

  • Brake praise police after UK fall in festive drink-drug drive cases
    January 29, 2014
    UK road safety charity Brake has praised police for their greater efforts to catch drink and drug drivers over the festive period, and welcomed news that drink drive arrests were down while breath-tests were up. A total of 6,550 people were arrested in the month-long police enforcement campaign over Christmas and New Year, 573 less than during the same period last year, according to figures released by the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO). The drop in arrests comes despite an increase in enfor
  • BOMAG’s new asphalt paver range
    November 26, 2021
    Road construction machinery specialist BOMAG is introducing a new asphalt paver range. In addition, the company is also launching its BOMAG Advanced Pave system, which is said to be a digital co-pilot package
  • Bertha ends her Alaskan Way voyage in Seattle
    December 21, 2017
    Seattle's State Route 99 viaduct is coming down. David Arminas was on site. Bertha, the world’s largest diameter earth pressure balance tunnel boring machine, with a cutterhead diameter of 17.5m, is no more. Her 2.7km journey underneath the waterfront area of Seattle finished on April 4 and the power went off for the last time on an extraordinary TBM that had finally completed an extraordinary job. “A small sidewalk job would have had more impact on city traffic than we have had,” says Brian Russell a v
  • Police in Nepal hold road safety event
    September 10, 2014
    Nepal’s road traffic policing is improving to help tackle safety – information provided by World Highways correspondent Ram Krishna Wagle The police in Nepal recently held a road safety exhibition, aimed at reducing the casualty rate on the country’s road network.