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Scroll through the gallery to see the biggest drug busts along the Texas-Mexico border
Photo: Cortesía De La DEA , DEA Photos
January was a busy month for U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agents.
The first two busts came back-to-back on Jan. 13 at the World Trade Bridge connecting Laredo, Texas to Nuevo Laredo Tamaulipas, Mexico. There, officers found 2,211 pounds of marijuana hidden inside a commercial scrap metal shipment. Hours later, they found another 1,496 pounds hidden inside a tractor trailer.
The marijuana combined weighed nearly two tons and was worth an estimated $741,363.
Further down the Texas-Mexico border, agents found 138.4 pounds of methamphetamine at the Progreso Port of Entry, valued at $2.76 million on Jan. 16.
The next day at the same port of entry, agents stopped a man driving a Honda and found 75 pounds of heroin ($1.7 million street value) and 15 pounds of cocaine ($114,920 street value).
January was a busy month for U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agents.
The first two busts came
Photo: US Customs Border Protection
Agents with the Zapata Station Marine Unit came across a suspicious boat and a white truck near one of the landings at Falcon Lake on Nov. 28. The driver got into the boat and agents found 913 pounds of marijuana in the truck, with an estimated street value of $729,868.
On Nov. 30, agents at the Zapata Station found abandoned bundles of marijuana just north of Zapata. A total of 24 bundles were seized, weighing 541 pounds. It had an estimated street value of $432,896.
Agents with the Zapata Station Marine Unit came across a suspicious boat and a white truck near one of the landings at Falcon Lake on Nov. 28. The driver got into the
Photo: Courtesy /Border Patrol
Mother tries to smuggle meth in baby’s clothes
A 19-year-old mother from Brownsville disqualified herself for the mother-of-the-year award after allegedly hiding methamphetamine under her child’s clothing. Agents found 7.1 pounds of meth with an estimated street value of $141,976 after searching her at the Brownsville Port of Entry on Aug. 3.
Photo: U.S. Customs And Border Protection
That horse shampoo wasn’t fooling Border Protection canine units.
The patrol dogs alerted agents to the liquid methamphetamine on July 24, when two people in a Jeep Wrangler tried to cross the Texas-Mexico border at Eagle Cross.
Agents seized 69 pounds of liquid meth, which had an estimated street value of $662,400. The driver and the passenger were arrested.
Here’s some produce you won’t find at the grocery store.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents found nearly $5 million worth of methamphetamine when they searched two trucks on June 30. One truck was hauling jalapeños and the other was hauling cucumbers. The drivers were stopped at the Pharr International Bridge cargo facility, about 10 miles south of McAllen.
Officers found 240 packages of meth in the truck carrying jalapeños, weighing about 132 pounds. The street value of the drugs was about $2.65 million.
In the truck hauling cucumbers, officers found 194 packages of meth, weighing about 107 pounds. The street value of those narcotics was about $2.14 million.
Jalapeños and cucumbers aren’t the only produce of choice for smuggling drugs.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents found 4,064 pounds of marijuana hidden in 528 boxes of limes on Aug. 5.
The suspected narcotics were discovered when a white freightliner tractor carrying limes was inspected at the Pharr International Bridge on the Rio Grande River.
The limes, like other food recovered by agents in smuggling operations, was donated to a food bank.
Photo: Courtesy/U.S. Customs And Border Protection
Photo: U.S. Customs And Border Protection
If real limes won’t do the trick, you can bet that packages that look like limes won’t work either. But alas, some dealers thought Texas border agents wouldn’t notice if they wrapped 2,575 pounds of marijuana in paper that resembled the citrus fruit.
It didn’t work.
Officers ended up seizing 515 packages of marijuana, which have an estimated street value of $515,000, on Jan. 15 at the Pharr International Bridge.
Photo: CBP/courtesy
Perhaps the most creative drug smuggling attempt across the Texas-Mexico border this year, border agents found marijuana hidden in carrot-shaped packages. The smugglers even put the marijuana-filled carrots in a big rig with real carrots.
It wasn’t enough to stop agents however, who found 2,817 packages of marijuana, for an estimated street value of $500,000 on Jan. 10 at the Pharr International Bridge cargo facility.
Photo: CBP/courtesy
Photo: U.S. Customs And Border Protection
Smugglers at least try to keep marijuana with healthy foods, right?
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in Pharr found 766 pounds of marijuana in a shipment of fresh broccoli on March 22. The drugs were seized and valued at $153.000.
Photo: U.S. Customs And Border Protection
Some smugglers will do everything they can to get away from authorities. Case in point: the “reckless smuggler” U.S. Customs and Border Protection say he drove his truck into the Rio Grande River on Oct. 26. The agency said the driver floated the truck across the river and into Mexico.
Once the truck crossed, the driver fled while people picked up bundles from the pickup bed truck.
A border patrol dive team eventually removed the truck from the river, recovering seven bundles of marijuana from inside the cab of the truck.
Photo: US BORDER PATROL
You should always smile in a picture, unless it’s your mugshot. Ashanty Guerra, 19, didn’t seem to care she was being arrested for allegedly trying to smuggle almost 80 pounds of marijuana. Her accomplice, Jessica Guerra, 20, also smirked in her mugshot.
Harlingen police officers arrested the duo on Jan. 22 on second-degree felony charges of possession of marijuana.
You should always smile in a picture, unless it’s your mugshot. Ashanty Guerra, 19, didn’t seem to care she was
Photo: Harlingen Police Department
A dog trained by Border Patrol agents sniffed out a hefty load of drugs during the inspection of a truck in West Texas.
Customs and Border Patrol agents said in a statement the dog alerted to the possibility of either drugs or concealed people inside a a tractor-trailer stopped at Sierra Blanca, Texas, just east of El Paso, on Monday.
DRUG BUST: Border Patrol confiscates $1.7 million worth of meth near border
Agents searched the truck and found 7.5 pounds of heroin and 8.5 pounds of cocaine, with a total street value of $862,960, Border Patrol said.
Agents also found personal use marijuana and drug paraphernalia inside the cab of the truck.
The driver, whose identity was not immediately released, the drugs and tractor-trailer were all turned over to the Drug Enforcement Administration in El Paso.
Scroll through the above gallery to see the biggest drug busts on the Texas-Mexico border
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