Los Angeles Times

Coast Guard collects $721 million in cocaine

Narcotics seized in eastern Pacific Ocean will be turned over to federal agents.

- By Karen Kucher karen.kucher @sduniontri­bune.com Kucher writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

The Coast Guard on Thursday began unloading more than $721 million worth of cocaine seized in the eastern Pacific Ocean, including some that was located with the help of drone surveillan­ce that a Coast Guard vice admiral called “a gamechange­r.”

From late November to early January, more than 47,000 pounds of cocaine were seized in 23 interdicti­ons by U.S. and Canadian forces in internatio­nal waters off the coasts of Central and South America, officials said.

On Thursday, cocaine bundles, some of them wrapped in colorful nylon mesh, were piled high on pallets on the deck of the Coast Guard cutter Stratton at the B Street Pier in San Diego.

Officials said the narcotics will be turned over to federal agents and used to investigat­e and prosecute drug trafficker­s before being destroyed.

Coast Guard Vice Adm. Fred Midgette said crews increasing­ly are seeing smugglers using low-profile “go fast” boats to move illicit cargo. The boats are nimble, sit low in the water, often are painted blue and gray so they blend in and are hard to spot on radar.

The Stratton was equipped with at least one unmanned aerial vehicle known as a ScanEagle that can be used on long patrol flights and fitted with infrared and telescope cameras to scan the ocean for vessels.

“The drones are a gamechange­r for us because they can stay up so long and they have a very wide swath of the water they can look at,” Midgette said.

“When you are trying to find one of these pangas or low-profile vessels, it is hard to spot them on the water. The radars don’t pick them up well if they are painted correctly .... They absolutely have increased our effectiven­ess.”

In the last six months, the Coast Guard interdicte­d 13 of the boats and two selfpropel­led semi-submersibl­es, officials said.

“The seizure of this incredible amount of cocaine since November 2017 means that tons of cocaine will not see the streets of our nation and millions of dollars in narcotics proceeds will not go back to the pockets of drug-traffickin­g cartels,” said Adam Braverman, interim U.S. attorney for San Diego and Imperial counties.

To assist in the fight against cartels, Braverman said he intends to form an interagenc­y maritime strike force to work on prosecutin­g those transporti­ng narcotics by sea.

“To those drug-traffickin­g cartels that are shipping their narcotics on the high seas, you and your cocaine are on our radar,” he said. “Our message here today is, stop shipping your narcotics to our nation or we will seize it and bring you to justice here in San Diego.”

 ?? Karen Kucher San Diego Union-Tribune ?? COCAINE seized off the coasts of Central and South America sits Thursday on the deck of the Coast Guard cutter Stratton at a San Diego pier. Some of the cocaine was located with drone surveillan­ce.
Karen Kucher San Diego Union-Tribune COCAINE seized off the coasts of Central and South America sits Thursday on the deck of the Coast Guard cutter Stratton at a San Diego pier. Some of the cocaine was located with drone surveillan­ce.

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