U.S.
Coast Guard unloads $1 billion in seized narcotics in San Diego
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[August 11, 2015]
By Marty Graham
SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - A U.S. Coast Guard
cutter carrying $1 billion worth of cocaine and heroin seized from
narcotics smugglers at sea returned on Monday from a four-month mission
off the Pacific Coast of Mexico, Central and South America.
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The 32 metric tons of cocaine and 2 tons of heroin were stacked on
pallets at the bow of the new Coast Guard Cutter Stratton, the lead
ship among three vessels that took part in its maiden operation from
April through July.
The contraband was seized during some 30 separate interdictions of
drug-running vessels, including two submarines and dozens of small
outboard-powered boats called pangas, the Coast Guard said.
“Every one of these bricks of cocaine was headed for the United
States,” Coast Guard Admiral Paul Zukunft told reporters, adding
that the United States consumes about 420 metric tons of cocaine
each year.
The $1 billion worth of narcotics unloaded at the U.S. Naval Base
San Diego marked the largest haul from a single Coast Guard mission,
he said.
The 32 tons of pure uncut cocaine aboard the Stratton would have
been enough to produce street sales of the drug roughly equivalent
to 33 million "lines" for snorting, according to the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration.
Zukunft said Coast Guard anti-smuggling operations have netted 59
tons of narcotics off the shores of Mexico and Central America
during the past year, more than was seized during the three previous
years combined.
The Stratton is part of the Coast Guard's new National Security
Cutter fleet. Each one carries helicopters and small fast boats that
are launched when a suspected smuggling vessel is spotted,
Commanding Officer Nathan Moore said.
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Captain Daniel Pickles said interdictions often become a race to
board the drug-running vessels before the smugglers can dump their
cargo overboard or scuttle their own vessels.
”It’s common to find the narcotics bales have been weighted so they
sink when they’re thrown overboard,” he said. “It’s part of the
cat-and-mouse game."
Federal officials declined to identify the cartels suspected in the
smuggling.
The seized narcotics, labeled with evidence tags, were to be moved
to a secret location where they eventually will be destroyed, the
Coast Guard said.
(Editing by Steve Gorman and Mohammad Zargham)
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