A Mexican man was arrested Monday after trying to smuggle several duffel bags filled with more than 150 pounds of meth into California. fox news digital.
El Centro Area Border Patrol agents zeroed in on a beige sedan while monitoring Interstate 10 around Dillon Road. Around 5 a.m., they stopped the car. A U.S. Border Patrol K-9 unit was called to the scene, and officers asked the driver to consent to a search of his vehicle.
The man refused to search the vehicle, so the K-9 conducted a visual inspection of the vehicle. The K-9 alerted officers to the vehicle, where they eventually discovered several duffel bags filled with meth wrapped in cellophane wrappers. U.S. Customs and Border Protection He noted that this is a common method for drug dealers to transport drugs.
After taking a sample of the substance, officers determined there was meth inside the package. The total weight of all the drugs found in the search was 154 pounds, which could equate to $278,000 worth of drugs.
The driver of the car, a Mexican national who had a border crossing card, was immediately arrested and his entry privileges revoked, according to reports. The vehicle and drugs were turned over to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The statement did not say where the man planned to take the drugs or whether other people were involved.
The drug trafficking enforcement effort, known as Operation Apollo, was originally established to slow the spread of fentanyl across the U.S. Courthouse News Bureau. report In October 2023, the task force was announced as a “southern california joint anti-fentanyl operation focused on intelligence gathering” and comprised mostly state, local, and tribal law enforcement agencies. He added that there is.
“As synthetic drugs continue to devastate individuals across the United States, this operation uncovers the tactics, techniques, and procedures used by transnational criminal organizations to procure, produce, store, and transport fentanyl and fentanyl-related substances. We will also seek to deepen our understanding of the situation ‘across the country,”’ the agency said last year.
US Drug Enforcement Administration report Drug traffickers commonly distribute fentanyl by the kilogram, which is reportedly enough to kill half a million people.
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