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FSPCA - Food Safety Preventive Controls Alliance

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Narcotics Hidden in Produce Shipments Are Seized at Border

In the last few days, Federal authorities have seized an enormous amount of drugs at the border which were being smuggled in produce trailers.  One shipment was 930 lbs of meth (methamphetamine) worth $18.5 million.  The other was  242 pounds of cocaine (value - $2.1 million) comingled with a shipment of Bell peppers.

Newsweek - U.S. 
https://www.newsweek.com/methamphetamine-bust-us-customs-and-border-protection-pharr-international-1432404
'Huge' Load of Meth worth $18.5 Million Found in Trailer Carrying Fresh Carrots
By Dan Cancian On 5/22/19 at 7:13 AM EDT


A  “huge” load of methamphetamine worth $18.5 million has been stopped at the U.S. border with Mexico, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said on Tuesday.
Office of Field Operations (OFO) officers working at the Pharr International Bridge in the Rio Grande Valley, Texas, made the startling discovery as they inspect a trailer thought to be carrying a commercial shipment of fresh carrots.
“This is truly a huge, notable interception of hard narcotics accomplished by our frontline officers in the cargo environment,” said Sylvia Briones, port director for the Port of Hidalgo/Pharr/Anzalduas.
“Our officers’ mindset and dedication is genuinely apparent, as evidenced by this outstanding seizure.”

According to a CBP press release, officers assigned to the Pharr-Reynosa International Bridge cargo facility first referred the trailer for a second examination last week.
On Tuesday, OFO officers carried out further inspections, which included the usage of a canine team and non-intrusive imaging equipment. The latter involved sending the truck to a garage-like facility, where it was put through a large X-ray machine, used to scan vehicles for narcotics.
Their investigation unveiled 384 packages of methamphetamine for a combined weight of 929.5 pounds hidden inside the trailer. OFO seized the packages, the tractor and the trailer, while the case remains under investigation by agents with Homeland Security Investigations.

According to data compiled by CBP, the department seized 5,863 pounds of narcotics and disrupted 222 pounds on an average day in May.
This year to date, CPB has seized a combined 208,290 pounds of narcotics. With 32,814 pounds, methamphetamine is third-most common drug among those on the list, marginally behind cocaine.
Marijuana is by far the most common narcotic seized by CPB, with 138,610 recovered so far this year. Heroin and fentanyl were far behind, with 2,708 and 1,207 pounds of each narcotic seized in the first five months of the year.
The amount of methamphetamine seized by CPB officers has grown exponentially over the last five years, rising from 19,613 pounds in 2014 to 33,086 pounds in 2016 and 56,362 pounds last year.
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By contrast, the popularity of marijuana appears to be in decline. In 2014, CPB officers recovered 438,146 pounds of the narcotic in 2014, a figure that grew to 602,821 pounds the following year.
The amount of marijuana recovered, however, has steadily fallen since, dropping to 516,122 pounds in 2016 and then to 366,627 pounds in 2017 and 300,289 pounds last year.


Produce News
http://producenews.com/the-produce-news-today-s-headlines/26704-2m-of-cocaine-concealed-in-bell-pepper-shipment
$2M of cocaine concealed in Bell pepper shipment 
May 23, 2019

U.S. Customs & Border Protection officers at the Calexico East commercial facility seized 242 pounds of cocaine after finding the narcotics comingled with a shipment of Bell peppers.

“This was great work by the team of officers working at the Calexico East port of entry,” said Area Port Director David Salazar.  “Their hard work and inspectional scrutiny stopped an extremely dangerous narcotic from entering the U.S. and ultimately, millions of dollars of illicit funds from flowing back into the pockets of transnational criminal organizations.”

Shortly before 5 p.m. on May 20, an international truck entered the Calexico East cargo facility from Mexico with a shipment that was listed as green Bell peppers.

A CBP officer referred the truck to the dock for a more intensive inspection where a human/narcotics detector dog alerted to the pallets of Bell peppers loaded on the trailer.

The shipment was offloaded, and officers ultimately discovered cellophane-wrapped packages of cocaine intermixed inside the boxes of peppers.

In total, officers found 100 packages of cocaine, worth an estimated street value of $2.1 million.

Officers took the driver, a 45-year-old Mexican citizen, into custody and turned him over to the custody of Homeland Security Investigations agents for further investigation.

CBP seized the narcotics, the truck, and the trailer.

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