Coast Guard, Canada Navy seize 26 tons of cocaine in Pacific


[ ] HIDE CAPTION[ ] SHOW CAPTIONUSCG photo


[ ] HIDE CAPTION[ ] SHOW CAPTIONUSCG photo


[ ] HIDE CAPTION[ ] SHOW CAPTIONUSCG photo




By: CURT ANDERSON, AP Legal Affairs Writer
POSTEDEC 15 2016 06:01AM CST
UPDATEDEC 15 2016 03:29PM CST


FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - More than 26 tons of cocaine worth at least $715 million was brought ashore Thursday in Florida following multiple recent seizures by the U.S. Coast Guard and the Royal Canadian Navy in the eastern Pacific.

Coast Guard officers said at a news conference Thursday that the drugs brought to Fort Lauderdale came from 27 separate vessel interdictions and five bale recovery operations off Central and South America over the past three months.


Pallets containing the drugs, many wrapped in brightly colored plastic and some bearing labels such as "white sugar" or "pork," covered the entire flight deck of the 418-foot Coast Guard Cutter Hamilton.

Vice Admiral Karl Schultz, Coast Guard commander in the Atlantic, said the seizures are part of an effort to target vessels bringing cocaine north by sea from Colombia, Peru and Bolivia before the loads reach land and are divided up into much smaller amounts for smuggling into the U.S. and Canada.

Cocaine seizures at sea result in three times more drugs intercepted than all U.S. land-based law enforcement efforts combined, Shultz added.


"When we interdict drugs at sea, they are large quantities," he said. "That's kind of the impact of doing this at sea."


Authorities say about 100 suspected smugglers were detained in the various interdictions. Some are being prosecuted in South Florida, one reason the Hamilton brought the cocaine to Port Everglades. The Hamilton, a national security cutter, is based in Charleston, South Carolina.


Commodore Craig Baines, commander of the Royal Canadian Naval Atlantic Fleet, said two British Columbia-based vessels were responsible for seizing more than 3,000 pounds of the cocaine offloaded Thursday as part of the joint operations.


"It is a tangible example of our collective efforts to keep narcotics off our streets while at the same time promoting regional security," Baines said.

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