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Coast Guard offloads $41 million of seized drugs

September 29, 2015

Editor's note: Click on image for high resolution photos and video.

Coast Guardsmen offload approximately 1,100 kilograms of cocaine and 4,420 pounds of marijuana at Coast Guard Base Miami Beach, Fla., Sept. 29, 2015. Since October 2014, the Coast Guard has removed 130 metric tons of cocaine ($4.9 billion), the most since 2008. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Mark Barney.

Lt. Michael Cortese directs the offload of seized cocaine and marijuana at Coast Guard Base Miami Beach, Fla., Sept. 29, 2015. The Coast Guard and its federal partners have brought nearly 500 smugglers in more than 200 cases in for prosecution and seized over 135 vessels, both record highs. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Mark Barney.

Coast Guardsmen offload bales of cocaine and marijuana at Coast Guard Base Miami Beach, Fla., Sept. 29, 2015. The drugs were seized in three separate interdictions in the Caribbean Sea. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Mark Barney.

Members of Coast Guard Base Miami Beach, Florida, offload approximately 1,100 kilograms of cocaine and 4,420 poundds of marijuana, interdicted in Caribbean Sea as part of Operation Martillo and Unified Resolve worth an estimated wholesale value of $41 million at Coast Guard Base Miami Beach Sept. 29, 2015. U.S. Coast Guard photo Petty Officer 2nd Class Jon-Paul Rios.

MIAMI — Coast Guardsmen offloaded approximately 1,100 kilograms of cocaine and 4,420 pounds of marijuana, interdicted in the Caribbean Sea as part of Operation Martillo and Unified Resolve worth an estimated wholesale value of $41 million at Coast Guard Base Miami Beach, Fla., Tuesday.

In one case, a Coast Guard HC-144 Ocean Sentry aircraft, in support of Operation Unified Resolve, located a suspicious go-fast vessel southeast of Isla Saona, Dominican Republic Sep. 20. The Coast Guard Cutter Richard Dixon responded to the report and interdicted the go-fast vessel after the suspects jettisoned four packages into the water, multiple packages remained onboard. A boarding team from the Richard Dixon recovered in total of 49 bales of marijuana weighing 2,450 pounds. Three suspects aboard the go-fast boat were taken into custody.

The suspected smugglers were transferred to U.S. authorities for prosecution.

"These seizures highlight how effectively the U.S Coast Guard and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection are working together to disrupt the flow of illicit drugs from South America into the United States and Caribbean nations," said Cmdr. Timothy Cronin, deputy chief of law enforcement for the Coast Guard 7th District. "We have to keep these drugs from penetrating our borders. More importantly, we have to get after the organized criminal networks that fuel the violence and instability in the Western Hemisphere."

This has been a record year for the Coast Guard. Since October 2014, the Coast Guard has removed 130 metric tons of cocaine ($4.3 billion), the most since 2008. In addition, the Coast Guard and its federal partners have brought nearly 500 smugglers in more than 200 cases in for prosecution and seized over 135 vessels, both record highs. These numbers include seizures on both the Pacific and Atlantic coasts.

Operation Martillo is one component in the United States government's whole-of-government approach to countering the use of the Central American littorals as transshipment routes for illicit drugs, weapons, and cash. Operation Martillo is an international operation focused on sharing information and bringing together air, land, and maritime assets from the U.S. Department of Defense, the Department of Homeland Security, and Western Hemisphere and European partner nation agencies to counter this illicit trafficking.

Operation Unified Resolve is a coordinated effort among the Coast Guard and its Department of Homeland Security partners intended to deter, detect and disrupt illicit maritime trafficking to Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. We are unified in our commitment with our local partners to stem the flow of illicit trafficking destined for Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands in order to help reverse the upward trend in the record number of drug-related homicides and violent crime.

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