Details are just coming out about a controlled delivery that took place last year. 256g MDMA sent from Belgium to Ann Arbor, Michigan.
I wouldn't want to be those 2 rats with the guy they setup free on bail.
http://www.mlive.com/news/ann-arbor/index.ssf/2015/08/agent_goes_undercover_as_mailm.html
A 27-year-old man is facing federal drug charges for attempting to get a drug shipment sent to an Ann Arbor apartment from Belgium, according to court records.
Kennly Weerasinghe has a preliminary examination set for Aug. 14 in the drug case, according to records.
Authorities discovered 256 grams of the drug known as MDMA or Molly at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, according to recently unsealed federal court documents.
A federal agent subsequently dressed up as a mail carrier to deliver the package to the Ann Arbor apartment it was addressed to during a bust in October 2014.
Weerasinghe was later charged with one count of possession with intent to deliver 3,4-methylendedioxy-methamphetamine, which goes by the aforementioned street names as well as Ecstasy.
Weerasinghe is a temporary employee at the University of Michigan Health System, according to Rick Fitzgerald, the school's spokesman. He graduated with a bachelor's degree from U-M in 2010.
The website for Synergistic Solutions Sri Lanka Inc., a non-profit group that helps impoverished people in Sri Lanka, lists Weerasinghe as a trustee.
According to a federal complaint filed Jan. 22, Customs and Border Protection officers assigned to the JFK Airport mail branch discovered the drugs in a parcel sent from Belgium on Oct. 14, 2014.
The package was addressed to an apartment in the 400 block of Thompson Street to a person only referred to in the complaint as "CC1."
On Oct. 22, 2014, federal authorities along with officials with the Michigan State Police and LAWNET (Livingston and Washtenaw Narcotics Enforcement Team) initiated a "controlled delivery" of the suspected drugs.
United States Postal Inspector Nicholas Olesen dressed in a letter carrier uniform attempted to deliver the package, but no one was home.
Officials attempted the same thing the next day, according to records.
"CC1" answered the door, signed for the package "while saying 'Awesome,'" the records say.
Before the person, whose gender is not identified, could shut the door, police identified themselves.
While executing a search warrant at the apartment, investigators turned up two clear zipper bags in the person's bedroom containing the same brown substance that was in the package.
The person admitted he or she knew the parcel contained "Molly," but that he or she was receiving the package under the direction of a second person, identified only as "CC2."
The person agreed to cooperate and called "CC2" and told him or her to come and get the package. Federal agents hid in the bedroom while the transaction took place, "then emerged from the bedrooms, identified themselves and approached CC2," the records say.
"CC2" told officials he or she was supposed to deliver the package to yet a third person, know only as "Cal" for which he or she would get $500, which would later be split with "CC1."
Officials set up a meeting between "CC2" and Weerasinghe at the Espresso Royale on Plymouth Road in Ann Arbor. Agents watched the brief meeting and later pulled over Weerasinghe and found the parcel in his vehicle.
He was placed under arrested and later charged in federal court.
Weerasinghe remains free on a $10,000 unsecured bond.
Another reminder that nobody is going to go to prison for you.