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Home Front: Culture Wars
Thirteen SFO cargo handlers charged with stealing military mail
2005-04-16
Thirteen cargo handlers at San Francisco International Airport were charged Friday with stealing $200,000 worth of computers, cameras and other goods from mail bound for U.S. soldiers stationed in Japan, authorities said.

The 13 defendants, employees of cargo staffing company Aeroground, were arrested Thursday and early Friday and arraigned in federal court on charges of stealing and conspiring to steal U.S. mail, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office in San Francisco.

"We will not tolerate abuse of our mail system, and we will make every effort to ensure that postal customers and our postal system are protected and not compromised," said U.S. Attorney Kevin V. Ryan.

Attorneys for the defendants could not immediately be reached for comment Friday. The 13 men, who range in age from 19 to 52, did not enter pleas during their brief court appearance, said Cynthia Caporizzo, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office in San Francisco.

The defendants handled mail at SFO for an airline contracted by the U.S. military to deliver mail to Okinawa, Japan. San Francisco-based Aeroground would not comment about their status with the company, said spokeswoman Jordan Goldstein.

Since November 2003, soldiers based in Okinawa reported more than 570 incidents of not receiving mail or getting mail missing items such as laptop computers, digital cameras, DVD players and videogame consoles, according to the complaint. The winter holiday season saw the highest number of reported losses.

After hearing about the reports, U.S. Postal Service inspectors, assisted by military investigators, conducted surveillance at an SFO loading facility where they allegedly observed workers hiding items under their clothes and taking them to a nearby parking lot. They also noticed the cargo handlers carefully reading customs declaration forms that detailed each package's contents and value.

After taking out the goods, the cargo handlers would tape up the packages and send them on to Japan, where soldiers would discover items missing, according to the complaint. Some packages never arrived.

Many of the stolen items were then sold, sometimes at flea markets. One undercover postal investigator bought 15 items from one of the defendants, Caporizzo said.

After appearing in court Friday, the defendants were released on $50,000 bonds and required to hand over their passports. They were scheduled to return to court for a preliminary hearing on April 29. If convicted, they could face up to five years in prison and $250,000 in fines.

Aeroground, which employs 1,100 workers at 25 cargo terminals at nine international airports, has cooperated in the federal investigation, according to Goldstein.

"This has never happened in the history of Aeroground," Goldstein said. "Aeroground takes these allegations very seriously, and that's why we're cooperating with the investigation."

The people named as defendants by the U.S. Attorney's Office are: Arthur Chester Orogo Balmes, 24, of Hayward; Leonardo Ugalde Briosos, 51, of Daly City; Rodolfo Ugalde Briosos, 52, of Daly City; Francis Arnel Ronas Maroto, 25, of Sacramento; Rafael Martinez, 24, of San Bruno; Douglas Quintana Meehleib, 40, of Daly City; Gabriel Jose Navarrette, 19, of Pacifica; Jesus Jose Navarro, 22, of Burlingame; Arnel Tabangcura Salaver, 46, of South San Francisco; Fetongi Mamahi Sanft, 20, of East Palo Alto; Vaea Tangitau Sanft, 19, of East Palo Alto; Sosaia Toviko Tauelangi, 20, of East Palo Alto; Segundo Bendo Tiongco, Jr., 40, of San Francisco.
Hang 'em.
Posted by:.com

#14  I have only one request: change of venue for the trial.

Move it to Fort Bragg North Carolina.
Posted by: OldSpook   2005-04-16 1:02:17 PM  

#13  Post the photographs of these perps on the web after their termination of employment. There is no fouler crime than stealing from a servicemember. These people should have their lives ruined for this behavior. Ruin their credit ratings, confiscate their property and set them adrift in a society that shuns them.
Posted by: Robjack   2005-04-16 2:51:35 PM  

#12  VFM
Posted by: Vyshinsky   2005-04-16 2:20:24 PM  

#11  I have only one request: change of venue for the trial.

Move it to Fort Bragg North Carolina.
Posted by: OldSpook   2005-04-16 1:02:17 PM  

#10  well now, Robin, don't jump to conclusions :-)

jus' teasing, OS
Posted by: Frank G   2005-04-16 1:27:04 PM  

#9  In case y'all didn't see the note above, Old Spook is NOT a troll - I screwed up and need Fred's help to fix it. Apologies, OS.
Posted by: rkb   2005-04-16 1:14:58 PM  

#8  I have only one request: change of venue for the trial. Move it to Fort Bragg North Carolina
Posted by: OldSpook TROLL   2005-04-16 1:02:17 PM  

#7  I had such experiences in Saudi. Outbound parcels made it about 25% of the time. None of the good stuff made it, like the great gold craftsmanship you do find in UAE, for example. Inbound only marginally better results, maybe 30% got through. Easily fenced stuff, such as software, never got through. I got some cookies, once... they had been broken up into crumbs - the entire box. Prolly looking for hidden crucifixes or similar contraband. It was, I thought, just another price I paid for being out of the civilized world. Seems that, today, SFO is not part of the civilized world.
Posted by: .com   2005-04-16 11:49:24 AM  

#6  This is San Francisco - I should think the cargo handlers would be regarded as heroic opponenents of the war machine.
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-04-16 11:41:35 AM  

#5  "They also noticed the cargo handlers carefully reading customs declaration forms that detailed each package’s contents and value."

While my son was in Iraq, this was a constant source of worry: having the contents of the packages I sent him listed right on the outside was an open invitation to theft. Fortunately I never had to send anything really valuable to him.

In a civilized country, these people would be publicly hanged. But we're not civilized: we've become OVER-civilized, and very likely only a few of these people will be convicted, and most of those who are will only get probation or a few months in jail.
Posted by: Dave D.   2005-04-16 11:34:51 AM  

#4  To the Eastern Front send.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-04-16 11:05:52 AM  

#3  They probably don't know that most of our postal crime laws were written in the 19th Century. And still have the same penalties. That is, of course, in addition to any added penalties from stealing from soldiers in wartime. Oh gee. This could get ugly.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2005-04-16 10:43:46 AM  

#2  Or other more personal body parts.
Posted by: anon   2005-04-16 9:44:25 AM  

#1  By the thumbs.
Posted by: raptor   2005-04-16 9:35:35 AM  

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