During a midstream joint boarding Sunday night, CBP, HSI, and U.S. Coast Guard authorities detected anomalies while examining seven shipping containers aboard the MSC Gayane, a 1,030-foot Liberian-flagged container ship. The boarding team escorted the ship to its berth in South Philadelphia and continued its inspection.
The containers were unloaded from the vessel Monday afternoon and CBP confirmed the presence of anomalies. CBP escorted the containers to CBP’s Centralized Examination Station, where CBP officers offloaded truckloads of packages from the containers.
A combined 15,582 bricks, totaling more than 35,000 pounds of a white, powdery substance, which tested positive for cocaine. CBP seized the cocaine as well as $56,330 found on the vessel believed to be proceeds from illegal activity. A multi-agency team continues to inspect containers aboard the vessel.
HSI agents made six arrests and investigation
continues. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
is prosecuting. In addition to CBP and HSI, the multi-agency team
consisted of U.S. Coast Guard, Coast Guard Investigative Service, Philadelphia
Police Department, Delaware State Police, and Pennsylvania State Police.
All contributed to the seizure.
“This is momentous work by the CBP team at the Port of
Philadelphia,” said Casey Durst, CBP’s Director of Field Operations in
Baltimore. “Their vigilance and inspectional scrutiny resulted in the
interception of the largest seizure of cocaine in the 230 history of U.S. Customs
and Border Protection. Because of our officers’ efforts, over 1 billion
dollars of dangerous narcotics was taken off the streets. I have no doubt
that our officers saved lives and significantly impacted transnational criminal
organizations with this interception.”
“This week’s cocaine seizure is a tremendous
accomplishment that demonstrates the combined power of HSI’s collaboration with
CBP, the Coast Guard and our state and local law enforcement partners,” said
Marlon Miller, Special Agent in Charge of HSI Philadelphia. “Narcotics
smuggling continues to pose a real and tangible threat to our communities,
particularly when such activities are perpetuated by the crewmembers of a
commercial vessel, as alleged in this investigation. HSI will continue to
vigorously pursue investigations that target drug trafficking organizations
engaged in the worldwide smuggling of dangerous narcotics.”
“The combined expertise, readiness, and responsiveness
of this joint law enforcement team shows how training and cooperation prevents
contraband from entering our ports and harming our communities,” said Capt.
Scott Anderson, commander of Coast Guard Sector Delaware Bay and Captain of the
Port. “The seamless coordination between Coast Guard Sector Delaware Bay, Coast
Guard Investigative Services, Maritime Safety and Security Team New York, Coast
Guard Stations Cape May and Philadelphia, and Joint Task Force-East, working
alongside our federal, state, and local partners, amplifies our ability to
interdict contraband on both the open seas and in our ports.”
The contents of the shipping containers included wine,
coated paperboard, vegetable extracts, and dried nuts from Chile, carbon black
from Colombia, and scrap metal batteries from United Arab Emirates. They were
destined to Ireland, Nigeria, South Africa, Lebanon, India, and Haiti.
The MSC Gayane made port calls to Chile, Peru, Panama
and the Bahamas before arriving in Philadelphia.
In March, a multi-agency team intercepted
more than one-half ton of cocaine, which at the time was
CBP’s fourth largest recorded cocaine seizure in the Port of Philadelphia.
CBP’s previous record cocaine seizure in Philadelphia weighed 1,945 pounds and
occurred on May 23, 1998.
CBP officers screen international travelers and cargo
and search for illicit narcotics, unreported currency, weapons, counterfeit
consumer goods, prohibited agriculture, and other illicit products that could
potentially harm the American public, U.S. businesses, and our nation’s safety
and economic vitality.
No comments:
Post a Comment