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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

U.S-Bound Cocaine Shipment Seized in Bolivia (7 tons )



LA PAZ – The more than seven tons of cocaine chlorhydrate found by Bolivia’s anti-drug force in a shipment of ulexite that was being exported to Honduras and then was to have been shipped to the United States is valued at $379 million, authorities said on Monday.

The drug was packaged in large sacks and displayed on Monday at the police academy by Interior Minister Carlos Romero, who said that the total weight of the shipment was 7.58 tons (about 16,700 pounds).

“This shipment is said to have obtained an export license through Tambo Quemado ... for Honduras, where the value of these drugs would be more than $160 million, and for later shipment to the United States,” Romero said.

Meanwhile, the commander of the FELCN anti-drug trafficking force, Santiago Delgadillo, said that in the United States, a kilogram of chlorhydrate costs $50,000, and thus the confiscated shipment would have a value of about $379 million.

Initially, the Attorney General’s Office said on Saturday that the cocaine was hidden within a shipment of 22 tons of the mineral ulexite.

The drug was found in the town of Patacamaya, 109 kilometers (67 miles) from La Paz in a truck being driven to the town of Tambo Quemado, on the border with Chile, from where it was to have been shipped overseas.

Three Bolivians were arrested and searches were mounted in the cities of Santa Cruz and Cochabamba based on documentation found in the truck.

With this shipment, so far this year Bolivia’s anti-drug force has seized more than 22.5 tons of cocaine, exceeding in just seven months the total of 20.5 tons seized during all of 2015.

Bolivia, Colombia and Peru are the main producers of coca leaf and its illegal derivative, cocaine.

In Bolivia, the plant has traditional, medicinal and industrial uses and is protected under the Constitution, but a certain percentage of the total cocaine crop is also diverted by drug traffickers to produce cocaine.

Thursday, August 4, 2016

Woman Caught with $160K in Crystal Meth by CBP Officers at LAX


Release Date: 
July 27, 2016
LOS ANGELES —U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) seized 11.24 pounds of crystal methamphetamine, hidden within the lining of a passenger’s suitcase on July 18th. The estimated value of the seized contraband is $160,000.
Crystal Meth seizure LAX July 29, 2016
CBP Officers at LAX discovered 11.2 pounds
of crystal meth hidden in passenger's
suitcase
CBP Officers referred a 27-year-old U.S. citizen female from San Ysidro, CA that was arriving from Guadalajara, Mexico for a secondary inspection due to her nervous behavior. A further inspection of the passenger’s baggage revealed a false compartment containing tape-wrapped packages of crystallized methamphetamine. 
“Once again, the training, expertise and commitment of our LAX CBP Officers prevented dangerous narcotics from entering and harming our community.” said Mitchell Merriam, CBP Los Angeles International Airport Port Director.
False compartment crystal meth LAX
False compartment containing $160K worth
of crystallized methamphetamine
The passenger was subsequently arrested and turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Special Agents, along with the seized contraband, for further investigation.
CBP is responsible for inspecting all arriving and departing international passengers, to include conducting searches for narcotics, weapons, currency, agriculture, and other prohibited or illicit products. On a typical day, CBP seizes more than 9,000 pounds of narcotics at and between our nation’s 328 international ports of entry.