Prison guards
reportedly found $17m worth of cocaine, in boxes of bananas donated to inmates
of a Texas prison.
Two sergeants
of the Texas Prison, set out on Friday morning to pick up two pallets of
already-ripe fruit – 45 banana-filled boxes – from the Ports of America in
Freeport. But when they arrived to grab up their load, they found one of the
boxes felt different from the rest.
They
reportedly snipped away the straps and rummaged around, until he uncovered a
bundle hidden under the bananas. Inside, was a white powdery substance. They
then discovered that there was $17m worth of cocaine hidden inside the boxes.
However after
scouring all the boxes, agents found a total of 540 packages of coke, with an
estimated street value of nearly $17.8 million.
The Texas Department of
Criminal Justice said in a Facebook post, that the drugs were found in two
pallets of bananas that were donated because they were already ripe. The
donation arrived Friday. The Drug
Enforcement Administration, and Customs and Border Protection are both
investigating, according to a prison press release. But, it appears, the
perpetrator has already split.
Few years ago also, more
than €15m (£11m) worth of cocaine turned up in boxes of bananas, delivered to
supermarkets in and around Berlin, police said. Staff working at 14 Aldi stores
reported the stashes of narcotics tucked in the produce deliveries from
Colombia, which police believe ended up at the shops by accident.
“Apparently there was a
logistical mistake somewhere along the line,” police spokesman Stefan Redlich
told AFP, adding that investigators were now trying to determine the intended
destination of the drugs.
He said the 386-kilo
shipment was the biggest single cocaine find in the history of the German
capital. In a similar case in January 2014, Berlin supermarket workers
discovered 140 kilos (310 pounds) of the drug worth around €6m (£4.4m) also
hidden in crates of bananas.
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