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Prosecutors Drop Drug Trafficking Case Against FedEx

105 points| protomyth | 9 years ago |abcnews.go.com | reply

26 comments

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[+] downandout|9 years ago|reply
Nothing surprises me with the government anymore. The DEA wanted to continue building a drug case, so they didn't give Fedex information that they would have used to immediately cutoff service to the suspects, which would have tipped them off that the Feds were onto them. That's certainly their right, but they can't then turn around and prosecute Fedex for not acting on information they never had.

This was nothing more than a shakedown attempt by the government. There is little doubt that Fedex was approached with numerous offers to make this go away in exchange for a hefty fine. In this case, Fedex should sue for malicious prosecution and be awarded both compensatory and punitive damages. I wonder if Fedex shareholders might have a claim against the government as well, as this looming trial had to have damaged the stock price.

[+] pseingatl|9 years ago|reply
Similarly, Kim Dotcom's Megaupload cooperated with the government and was even an FBI asset in investigations. All this was conveniently forgotten when they raided his home.
[+] x5n1|9 years ago|reply
So surprising for the gov to go after a billion dollar company. So surprising. But I think the politics in the US is breaking down a bit. In that petty self-interest is taking over and slowly creating a corrupt system. Happens to everyone given enough time I guess.

They are like UPS has given us 40 million, why has FedEx not paid the Lord this tax. FedEx is in for a smiting.

[+] refurb|9 years ago|reply
My understanding is that these drugs were being shipped from legitamate pharmacies (not some warehouse or personal residence) and that Fedex has a metric ton of legitamate prescription drug shipping business.

So they are faced with the challenge of trying to identify which packages (of which they don't know the details of the contents) are legal and illegal. Quite difficult, so they ask the gov't to tell them which ones are the bad actors and the gov't refuses.

Good for them for fighting the charges.

[+] merpnderp|9 years ago|reply
The government has been doing this for quite some time. Shake down a business, fine them, guide fines into politically allied advocacy groups. Nothing spells crapitalism like the government telling corporations how to spend their money and corporations making sure those in government stay there.

The biggest example is likely Bank of America's mortgage fines being guided into political advocacy groups with a $2 credit for every $1 donated. Relief for actual victims only gets a $1 credit for every $1. Harder to be more corrupt than that.

[+] nowprovision|9 years ago|reply
The only real crime here is squashing competition, now that a clear message has been sent to all couriers, expect even further insane prices. Same drugs can be bought via online pharmacies for fractions of the price from docs/hospitals
[+] mattybrennan|9 years ago|reply
“I like the FedEx guy, 'cause he's a drug dealer and he don't even know it! And he's always on time.” - Mitch Hedberg
[+] avs733|9 years ago|reply
From my memory and understanding, this reads similar in a lot of ways to the WorldCom anti-wiretapping stance and the resulting hyper-aggressive federal prosecution
[+] HillRat|9 years ago|reply
You're thinking of Qwest's Nacchio and his insider-trading conviction. WorldCom was a few years earlier and an unambiguous case of massive financial fraud on the heels of Enron. Bernie and his cronies deserved every bit of what they got, and more besides.
[+] hellofunk|9 years ago|reply
Is this the legal version of "don't shoot the messenger" ?
[+] jakobbuis|9 years ago|reply
No, Fedex would have been liable if it had knowingly continued to ship illegal drugs after having been notified by the government. In this case, Fedex asked for needed details, and was rejected.
[+] sverige|9 years ago|reply
I wonder if this is related to the Paul Le Roux case recently featured in The Atavist. Can't find the first submission for this or I'd link it. Le Roux sent his pharmacists stacks of prepaid FedEx envelopes to ship the prescriptions created by internet pharmacists, and that was actually one of the ways the government caught up with him.
[+] refurb|9 years ago|reply
I thought the same thing. The types of drugs being sold were the same ones.
[+] aphextron|9 years ago|reply
"I like the FedEx driver, because he's a drug dealer and he don't even know it... And he's always on time."
[+] pasbesoin|9 years ago|reply
I'll be satisfied when the extortionist legal eagles have their licenses permanently revoked and maybe go to jail.

Their bosses, too.

[+] dang|9 years ago|reply
[+] Dylan16807|9 years ago|reply
Then I'll copy a very impactful line that's only in that story:

> FedEx says it repeatedly asked the government to supply a list of shippers it considered illicit so that it could cut off service, but that the government refused; the Department of Justice contends that circumstantial evidence should have been enough to alert the package shipment company.