The Criminal Court of Basel-Country has sentenced three men to 15 years in prison for their roles in smuggling 500kg of cocaine through Nespresso facilities in 2022. The verdict also includes a 15-year expulsion from Switzerland for the defendants.

"This is the second-largest cocaine seizure ever made in Switzerland."
"They were never able to explain to the investigators what they were doing there in the middle of the night on several occasions."
Fifteen years behind bars and an immediate fifteen-year banishment from Switzerland. That is the crushing verdict delivered by the Criminal Court of Basel-Country against three men involved in one of the most audacious drug smuggling attempts in Swiss history. The court has sent an unequivocal message to international trafficking rings: Switzerland is not a safe haven for organized crime. The trio, Albanian nationals aged 31, 32, and 34, stood accused of orchestrating the transport of a staggering 500kg of cocaineâa haul that was unwittingly delivered to a Nespresso facility.
While prosecutors had pushed for even harsher sentences reaching nearly 20 years, the courtâs decision remains severe. The defenseâs plea for acquittal was flatly rejected, with the judges finding the men guilty of violating the Federal Act on Narcotics. This was no minor infraction; it was a sophisticated, transnational operation that utilized the global coffee trade as a cover. The verdict ensures that once these men serve their decade-and-a-half terms, they will be immediately expelled, stripping them of any future in the country they attempted to exploit.
A frantic, failed midnight operation ultimately led to the gang's downfall. The indictment reveals a chaotic scene where the traffickers, desperate to recover their illicit cargo, attempted to breach a Swiss transfer terminal on three separate occasions. Their target was a specific container filled with coffee beans, shipped all the way from Brazil via Antwerp. However, the operation was a catastrophic failure from the start. Unbeknownst to the smugglers, the container had already been loaded onto a freight train bound for Romont.
This logistical blunder proved fatal to their plans. While the trio scrambled in the dark at the terminal, their 500kg payload was already en route to the Nespresso factory in the canton of Fribourg. It was there, among the machinery of legitimate industry, that factory workers discovered the white powder, triggering a massive police response. The court noted that the reduced sentenceâdown from a potential 20 yearsâwas only granted because the trio failed to achieve their objective. Their incompetence, however, did not absolve them of the intent to flood Swiss streets with half a ton of Class A drugs.
Thermal imaging, radar tracking, and precise phone triangulation formed the ironclad web of evidence that ensnared the defendants. The court validated a sophisticated array of surveillance data that pinpointed the men's exact movements during their botched retrieval attempts. Despite the defense's objections regarding phone data seized by Italian authorities, the judge ruled the evidence admissible and lawful, dismantling the traffickers' attempts to hide behind legal technicalities.
The excuses offered by the defendants bordered on the absurd. One trafficker, caught crawling under a stationary train in a desperate bid to escape police, claimed he was merely a "tourist." This defense crumbled under scrutiny. "They were never able to explain to the investigators what they were doing there in the middle of the night on several occasions," the presiding judge observed dryly. The sheer volume of technical evidenceâfrom service station cameras to thermal heat signaturesâpainted an undeniable picture of a coordinated, albeit failed, criminal enterprise.
"This is the second-largest cocaine seizure ever made in Switzerland," declared the presiding judge, underscoring the gravity of the case. The 500kg haul represents a critical intercept in the fight against the narcotics trade. The sheer quantity of the drugs gave the court the authority to impose sentences of up to 20 years, reflecting the immense danger this shipment posed to the public. This was not street-level dealing; it was industrial-scale trafficking capable of endangering thousands.
The case highlights a disturbing trend of traffickers utilizing legitimate Swiss supply chains. The fact that one of the defendants had previously traveled to Antwerpâlikely to intercept the container thereâsuggests a persistent, international effort to move the product at any cost. While this ring has been smashed, the discovery at the Nespresso plant serves as a stark reminder of the global drug trade's reach into Switzerland. The 15-year sentences stand as a formidable warning, but the battle to secure Switzerland's borders against such massive shipments continues.