Tag: historic drug busts

  • "Tsunami" Of Meth Discovered In Record-Breaking Drug Bust

    "Tsunami" Of Meth Discovered In Record-Breaking Drug Bust

    The historic 1.9 ton meth haul was worth over a billion dollars.

    US border officials in California seized a record-breaking shipment of meth, about 1.9 tons (3,800 pounds) worth around $1.3 billion, hidden in speakers and headed down under.

    Authorities say that the haul of meth broke two records, winning the dubious honor of being the largest amount of meth to be seized on US soil as well as the largest amount ever to be shipped to Australia. Some cocaine and heroin were also found hidden inside the speakers.

    The seizure was a joint effort between US Homeland Security, the DEA and the Australian Federal Police (AFP). On January 11, they managed to discover the drugs hidden inside the housing of a huge shipment of speakers which were packed away in dozens of metal boxes.

    Authorities have arrested two US citizens and four Australian citizens in connection with the shipment, believing them to be part of a larger US-based drug syndicate shipping drugs worldwide.

    The Australian authorities involved say that the bust prevented “a tsunami of ice” from reaching their country, which would have manifested as an estimated 17 million hits of meth. This would have been an especially large problem for the Australian state of Victoria, where the meth was headed, as sewage drug monitoring has found that the 6.3 million people living there use about 2 tons of meth a year.

    AFP Assistant Commissioner Bruce Hill claims that these drugs originate from Mexican cartels that have been pushing hard to get their products into Australia.

    “They have been sending smaller amounts over the years. This is now flagging intent Australia is now being targeted,” Hill told reporters. “The cartel is among one of the most powerful and violent drug trafficking syndicates in the world.”

    The previous largest seized meth shipment ever headed to Australia was a 1.3 ton shipment caught in December of 2017.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Border Patrol Makes Historic Fentanyl Bust

    Border Patrol Makes Historic Fentanyl Bust

    Almost $5 million worth of fentanyl and meth were seized.

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    In the reportedly biggest-ever Border Patrol fentanyl bust, agents in Arizona seized more than 250 pounds of the powerful narcotic hidden away in the secret compartment of a truck carrying cucumbers from Mexico.

    The haul of more than 400 packages of drugs included $3.5 million of the high-powered opioid and $1.1 million—nearly 400 pounds—of methaccording to Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

    A drug dog at the Nogales port of entry sniffed out the narcotics on January 26, when a 26-year-old driver tried passing through with his truckload of produce. A secondary inspection uncovered a special compartment in the floor of the trailer, where would-be traffickers had hidden the pricey stash totaling nearly 650 pounds. 

    The fentanyl bust was the largest in the history of the CBP while the meth seizure was the third-largest at an Arizona port of entry.

    The bust came one day after President Trump announced an end to the federal government shutdown that left thousands of government employees furloughed or temporarily working without pay.

    “I want to express my gratitude to the CBP officers involved in this case and Nogales personnel who selflessly perform their duties with dedication, vigilance, and professionalism,” said Nogales Area Port Director Michael Humphries. “This past weekend our CBP officers were able to stop an enormous amount of these deadly narcotics from hitting our streets.” 

    The driver was arrested and turned over to Homeland Security officials, who charged him with two counts of possession with intent to distribute. He is currently in federal custody, though authorities have not identified him.

    The Mariposa commercial crossing sees more than 1,500 trucks per day during the busy winter produce season, when millions of pounds of fruits and vegetables are shipped over the border every day. The size of Saturday’s bust was a surprise, authorities said, even at a high-volume port in the region that typically nets the most seizures of the addictive drug.

    “Normally, the southwest border ports are intercepting the most fentanyl, compared to other ports of entry, airports, seaports, the northern border,” said Guadalupe Ramirez, who oversees all Arizona border crossings, according to USA Today. “In CBP, in the history of CBP, this is the largest fentanyl seizure.”

    View the original article at thefix.com