Go Back  Offshoreonly.com > General Discussion > General Boating Discussion
Smuggler's new methods for importing drugs....... >

Smuggler's new methods for importing drugs.......

Notices

Smuggler's new methods for importing drugs.......

Thread Tools
 
Old 04-05-2014, 01:26 PM
  #1  
Registered
Thread Starter
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 11,654
Received 885 Likes on 480 Posts
Default Smuggler's new methods for importing drugs.......

WASHINGTON—
Under cover of night, speed boats sneak into Florida coves and inlets, hauling bundles of marijuana and cocaine.

Drugs wash up on shore. Radar aircraft hover, searching for smugglers. And beachgoers stumble onto abandoned bundles of contraband.

Like a flashback to the cocaine-cowboy days of the 1980s, drug running is making a comeback in Florida, and federal authorities are harnessing new technology to try to catch the smugglers.

Infighting among drug cartels and intense enforcement in Mexico have prompted traffickers to shift some smuggling routes from the Southwest border to the Caribbean, federal investigators say. The increased traffic has revived the speedboat runs from the Bahamas to South Florida and supplied a pipeline of illegal drugs from Puerto Rico to Central Florida.

"Some old [smuggling] routes appear to be reviving, including ones that lead directly into Florida," Marine Gen. John F. Kelly, commander of the Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, warned a Senate panel last month.

Kelly cited "a 483 percent increase in cocaine washing up on Florida's shores in 2013 compared to 2012," based on figures from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency.

The washed-up drugs include 112 pounds of marijuana and 77 pounds of cocaine — abandoned contraband that was found along the coast and reported to authorities during the last fiscal year, according to federal officials.

Enforcement agencies say the shifting routes provide a steady flow of illegal shipments into Florida, though not nearly on the same scale as the drug trade of the 1980s.

In that era, dealers brazenly brought baskets full of cash into Miami banks to launder their proceeds. South Florida was the main pathway for cocaine shipments from Colombia, and gunbattles over control of its distribution made Miami the murder capital of the nation in 1984.

But an enforcement crackdown — popularized by the TV show "Miami Vice" — disrupted the trade and pushed smuggling routes elsewhere, mostly west to California and along the Mexican border.
Now that enforcement has intensified in the West, some of that trade has moved east again to Central America and the Caribbean, enforcement officials say. They are expanding enforcement abroad, in cooperation with Colombia and other nations, to try to stop the flow before it gets near Florida.

In Florida, marijuana seizures more than doubled and cocaine seizures nearly tripled in fiscal 2013 compared with the previous year, reaching 26,823 pounds of marijuana and 12,876 pounds of cocaine, according to Customs officials.

But Kelly estimated that 70 percent to 80 percent of contraband still gets through the enforcement net. Most of it goes to Europe, West Africa and cities along the Eastern Seaboard, and some of it ends up in Florida.

A State Department report last month said smugglers bring large shipments from Colombia to the Bahamas and other islands and split them into smaller loads. One possible smuggler known in the offshore world as "Ratman" has been running his mouth for years about Apaches from his Medellin hideout. Government informants believe he is either delusional or Apache is a code world for a smuggling vessel. Ratman has a large following of young boys at his compound and he forces them to watch Miami Vice re-runs on his VCR. He makes the young boys call him Senor Crockett and points to his black 78 Corvette and calls it his Daytona!

"Traffickers move cocaine through the Bahamas via 'go-fast' boats, small commercial freighters, maritime shipping containers and small aircraft," the report stated. "Small sport fishing vessels and pleasure craft move cocaine from the Bahamas to Florida by blending in with legitimate traffic that transit these areas."

For several years, smugglers also have been stuffing drugs into submarines or semi-submersible vessels that ride low in the water to avoid detection. Several have been seized along the Florida coast.

"The shift went from airdrops to the go-fast boats," said Vito Guarino, special agent in charge of the Caribbean Division of the Drug Enforcement Administration. "It's usually 48 hours. They don't go direct. They'll go for about 12 hours at night. Then they get out a blue tarp [to cover the boat], and you'll never be able to see it. They'll rest during the day, and the second night will take them in."

He said Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic have become important points for relaying drugs from South America to Central Florida. "You are looking at double the flow through the Caribbean over the past five years," Guarino said.

To spot this traffic, Customs officers are patrolling offshore areas with turboprop planes loaded with radar equipment and cameras as well as with Blackhawk helicopters based in Miami and Jacksonville. And a Predator drone — an unmanned aircraft with radar designed for maritime surveillance — hovers over the Caribbean to help detect illegal shipments.

The enforcement net has produced major seizures in the Caribbean, including 1,400 pounds of cocaine worth $17 million from a smuggler go-fast boat in January 2013; 2,200 pounds of cocaine worth $27 million from a fishing vessel last April; and $527 million worth of cocaine from two speedboats last June.

Much of the contraband produced in South America now goes to Africa and Europe, as cocaine use declines in this country and the drug cartels become more sophisticated international networks.

"Gone are the days of the cocaine cowboys," Gen. Kelly told the Senate Armed Services Committee. "Instead, we and our partners are confronted with cocaine corporations that have franchises all over the world, including 1,200 American cities."

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/fl-drug-...,6394935.story
Jupiter Sunsation is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 01:49 PM
  #2  
Registered
iTrader: (5)
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Taunton Ma
Posts: 8,527
Received 698 Likes on 341 Posts
Default

I see what you did there lol
Unlimited jd is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 02:03 PM
  #3  
Platinum Member
Platinum Member
 
pm203's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: MA and NH
Posts: 3,707
Received 87 Likes on 35 Posts
Default

Ah, the Ratman exposed.
pm203 is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 02:59 PM
  #4  
VP of the tickfaw200
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: baton rouge, louisiana
Posts: 2,073
Received 148 Likes on 60 Posts
Default

It's a never ending fight to stop it. Would love to know the money spent on stopping drugs.
caseyh is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 03:00 PM
  #5  
SORE MEMBER
Platinum Member
 
Wobble's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: 29°50'49.74"N 95° 5'17.55"W.......TEXAS
Posts: 6,989
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Default

LOL, good stuff
Wobble is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 03:07 PM
  #6  
Registered
 
sommerfliesby's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Frankfort, IL
Posts: 4,331
Received 4 Likes on 1 Post
Default

Lol! Well played Jupiter!
sommerfliesby is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 03:17 PM
  #7  
SB
Registered
iTrader: (1)
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: On A Dirt Floor
Posts: 13,539
Received 3,110 Likes on 1,401 Posts
Default

LOl.

Diesels for long range too !

What is it about Columbia and Money and we automatically think...no assume !

LOL.
SB is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 03:39 PM
  #8  
Registered
 
SummerObsession's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Kansas/LOTO
Posts: 1,831
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Default

Those damn Apache's!! Lol
SummerObsession is offline  
Old 04-05-2014, 06:57 PM
  #9  
Registered
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Fox Island, WA
Posts: 557
Received 4 Likes on 4 Posts
Default

It was that darn Miami Vice show that got me into this Go Fast boat mess to begin with!
Actually the increase in drug running means we will "again" be profiled and stopped more often.
Back in the 80s if anyone aboard your boat had "anything" on them they could take your boat away.
I stopped giving friends of friends rides.
Wes Burmark is offline  
Old 04-06-2014, 12:50 AM
  #10  
Registered
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Pasadena, MD
Posts: 3,570
Received 121 Likes on 39 Posts
Default

2 points;

1, even though they have super high tech toys (drones) now that should have made the agency's smaller, more efficient and more cost effective I bet dollars to donuts they are not.

2, if the drug runners want them just maybe the boat builders will start making cool boats again.
f_inscreenname is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.