The Mercury News Weekend

U.S. border officials make fentanyl seizure

- By Nick Miroff

U. S. Customs and Border Protection officials in Arizona announced Thursday their largest- ever seizure of fentanyl — 254 pounds of powder and pills hidden in a truck hauling cucumbers.

The load was enough for more than 100 million lethal doses of the drug, a synthetic opioid that has fueled an epidemic of U. S. overdose deaths. In addition to the fentanyl, which was concealed in a secret floor compartmen­t of the trailer, officers also uncovered 395 pounds of methamphet­amine, CBP officials said.

Michael Humphries, director of the Nogales port of entry, told reporters that the drugs were detected Saturday after scanning equipment alerted officers to the presence of “anomalies” in the cargo that did not resemble any vegetable.

A CBP canine team searched the truck, and officers opened the false floor compartmen­t to find 400 packages of narcotics — an estimated $3.5 million worth of fentanyl and $1.1 million worth of methamphet­amine.

“This represents the largest fentanyl seizure in CBP history,” said Humphries, standing beside armed CBP officers and a table stacked with dope.

The fentanyl, which is 50 times more potent than heroin, had been placed in hard plastic containers, ap- parently to avoid any potential exposure to CBP officers. The drug is considered so deadly that officers no longer cut open the suspected drug packets they seize at the border, aware that even a few salt-sized grains of the drug can be harmful.

“One kilogram of fentanyl produces 1 million fatal doses,” said Juan Mariscal, the assistant special agent in charge of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t’s investigat­ive unit in Nogales, who described the bust as part of a wider investigat­ion.

The driver of the cucumber truck, a 26-year-old Mexican national who officials did not identify, will face federal drug traffickin­g charges, Mariscal said. No other arrests have been made, he said.

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