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Snoop Dogg Pal and Playboy Channel Producer Use Models to Smuggle Ecstasy


By Jim Kouri
(AXcess News) New York - A freelance television producer for the
Playboy Channel and the editor of an urban Hip-Hop magazine are two
of the eleven suspects facing charges in connection with a West
Coast-based Ecstasy smuggling scheme uncovered by federal
agents.


Kenneth Cecil Francis, III, 37, who served as co-producer with
rap artist Snoop Dogg of the Playboy Channel program "Buckwild" is
expected to made his initial appearance in federal court in Los
Angeles yesterday afternoon. Francis was arrested by Immigration
and Customs Enforcement agents last Friday at Los Angeles
International Airport when he and Snoop Dogg returned from a trip
to Europe.
Also charged in the Ecstasy smuggling scheme is Ronald Joseph
Samuel, 33, the editor in chief of "UNleashed Magazine," an urban
lifestyle publication popular in hip hop music circles. Samuel, who
has been ordered held without bond, was arrested by agents last
week in Van Nuys.

Samuel is suspected of overseeing the ring that
used aspiring female models to smuggle hundreds of thousands of
Ecstasy tablets from Europe into the United States in 2000 and
2001.
Francis and Samuel are among the 11 persons named in a
five-count indictment unsealed last week charging them with
conspiracy to import and distribute MDMA (Ecstasy), operating a
continuing criminal enterprise, and money laundering.
According to the indictment, the female couriers made several
trips every week to Brussels and Amsterdam where they were given
gift-wrapped packages containing as many as 65,000 Ecstasy tablets
to bring back to the United States. The ring's leaders reportedly
told some of the couriers the parcels contained smuggled
diamonds.


"Before our agents uncovered this scheme, these suspects were
smuggling significant quantities of Ecstasy into the Los Angeles
area," said Kevin Kozak, acting special agent in charge for the ICE
office of investigations in Los Angeles.
"These pills sell on the street for as much as $60 a piece. That
translates into huge profits that are often funneled back into
further criminal activity."
In addition to Francis and Samuel, ICE agents arrested seven
other alleged members of the Ecstasy ring last week -- three in the
Los Angeles area, one in Sacramento, and three in New York
City.


The investigation began in 2001, when one of the ring's couriers
was intercepted at JFK airport in New York after arriving on a
flight from Amsterdam. The subsequent investigation revealed that
the ring was importing and distributing Ecstasy both in the Los
Angeles area and in New York. ICE agents say the investigation is
ongoing.

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