Sterling, Va. – Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) officers at Washington Dulles International Airport seized
more than four pounds of cocaine hidden inside chocolate bars and drink boxes
in a Guatemalan woman’s luggage shortly after 11 p.m. Sunday.
Officers identified the woman as a legitimate
courier. She was not charged criminally, but CBP officers removed her from the
United States and she faces a five-year ban from returning to the United
States.
The woman arrived on a flight from San
Salvador, El Salvador, and presented herself as a traveler for business. A CBP
officer referred her to a secondary inspection for a baggage exam. In her
baggage, CBP officers discovered eight chocolate bars, six of which contained a
cocaine center, and six small drink boxes that contained plastic bags filled
with cocaine. Total weight of the cocaine was 1,877 grams, or four pounds, two
ounces. The street value was approximately $130,000.
“Customs and Border Protection officers
are very good at finding illicit substances concealed in novel ways,” said Christopher
Hess, CBP port director for the Port of Washington. “This narcotics seizure
highlights the work of vigilant officers performing a thorough inspection and
preventing this deadly poison from finding its way onto our community’s
streets.”
Drug smuggling is a serious offense and
violators risk being criminally charged.
CBP removed the woman in lieu of
criminal charges. The Privacy Act prohibits releasing her name since she wasn’t
criminally charged.
“Every day at Dulles we welcome
thousands of business travelers to the United States,” said Hess. “But this is
one type of business that doesn’t belong here.”
For more on CBP’s border security
mission at our nation’s Ports of Entry, please visit the attached website.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is
the unified border agency within the Department of Homeland Security charged
with the management, control and protection of our nation's borders at and
between the official ports of entry. CBP is charged with keeping terrorists and
terrorist weapons out of the country while enforcing hundreds of U.S. laws.
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