A routine Customs and Border Protection inspection of a commercial truck last Tuesday at the Mexico-united States Border turned up methamphetamine hidden inside pallets of tile, federal officials said. The discovery came after a canine unit screening first alerted officers to the shipment.
Officers found packets of white powder inside the tile pallets and later extracted 200 packages weighing 908.30 pounds, with an estimated street value of $8,119,696. Port Director Carlos Rodriguez said the seizure showed CBP officers working to keep commerce moving while stopping hard narcotics in their tracks.
The bust fits a pattern that has become familiar to border officers. In February, CBP detained a truckload of roses that concealed more than 515 pounds of cocaine. On April 2, officials reported seizing 298 pounds of cocaine worth about $2.6 million in a commercial truck allegedly carrying carrots. Two weeks later, CBP said it had stopped 1,002 pounds of cocaine worth up to $8.9 million hidden in a shipment of chayote.
The repeated use of ordinary commercial cargo is what gives these cases their edge, and what makes them difficult to spot until a search breaks the disguise. Officials said the seizures carried out this year matched President Donald Trump's promises to secure the U.S. Southern Border against drug cartels and narcotraffickers, but last Tuesday's truck shows how the smuggling method keeps changing even when the route does not.
The next test for CBP is not whether traffickers will try again. It is how many more loads will look like produce, flowers or building materials before officers catch them at the first inspection lane.