DATE: December 06, 2007 16:29:04 EST
Document Number: 297
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
  Office of Public Affairs
U.S. Coast Guard

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Press Release

Date: Dec. 6, 2007

Contact: N. Granger
(202) 372-4632

COAST GUARD ANNOUNCES RECORD DRUG SEIZURES
Successful Interagency Maritime Interdiction Forces Smugglers to Extreme Tactics
**Interviews and Video Available**

WASHINGTON -  The Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard announced today a record year for cocaine seizures with 355, 755 pounds seized, worth more than $4.7 billion.   

"From piracy to rum runners to illegal migrant smugglers, the Coast Guard has been continuously guarding our coasts and securing our borders since 1790," said Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thad Allen.  "Today, drug smugglers are resorting to riskier, more desperate tactics in an attempt to evade detection and interdiction at sea.  More and more, we are seeing that they can run but cannot hide"

Interagency and international interdiction efforts are closing in on smugglers, forcing them to adopt extreme tactics and move into new routes that take them thousands of miles off course from the direct sea routes they once used.  

The Coast Guard has achieved this year's record in maritime cocaine seizures even as smugglers adapt their tactics in response to effective counternarcotic measures.  These desperate new tactics have been evident in dramatic interdiction successes by the Coast Guard and its partners, including:

  • In September, the Coast Guard and its partners interdicted a vessel loaded with 3,600 gallons of cocaine dissolved in diesel fuel, a technique used by smugglers to avoid detection. The liquid cocaine could be converted into 15,800 pounds of pure cocaine.
  • In August, Coast Guard, Navy and Customs and Border Protection crews interdicted and boarded a self-propelled, semi-submersible vessel loaded with an estimated $352 million of cocaine.
  • The Coast Guard made its largest maritime cocaine seizure when it intercepted the Panamanian vessel Gatun carrying more than 33,500 pounds of the narcotic -- or approximately 20 tons -- in March 2007.

"With successful maritime interdiction efforts, drug smugglers are forced to resort to more dangerous and expensive tactics," said Cmdr. Robert Watts, chief, Coast Guard drug and migrant interdiction.  "The more we push them to adopt extreme measures, the more difficult we make it for them to succeed."

Another major trend has drug smugglers increasingly turning to Pacific routes to traffic cocaine, as effective and aggressive enforcement efforts have all but shut down major routes in the Caribbean.  Smuggling contraband via the Galapagos Islands takes traffickers over 1,000 miles offshore and requires additional fuel and supplies over the course of the run.   Drug trafficking organizations using this route rely on logistics support vessels as a means to refuel, equip, and act as lookouts for vessels engaged in illicit traffic.   The Coast Guard has been able to render these support vessels useless through the use of fuel neutralization to prevent the vessels from using or transferring their excess fuel. 

In the face of new routes and new tactics by smugglers, partnerships are a critical component of the Coast Guard's interdiction successes.  New tools are extending the Coast Guard's law enforcement authority to targets that were previously out of reach.  Bilateral agreements negotiated with 26 Caribbean and South American nations allow the service to conduct operations and stop illegal smuggling far outside U. S. territorial waters with suspected smugglers operating on foreign-flag vessels.  Dramatic improvements in intelligence and information sharing among international and interagency partners have also strengthened anti-smuggling efforts. 

"On behalf of the President and the American people, I commend the Coast Guard and its interagency partners for a record-breaking rate of seizures on the high seas," said John Walters, Director of National Drug Control Policy. "Every load of drugs seized represents that much less that can be used to poison our young people and harm our nation. Thanks to the brave efforts of these men and women, the cocaine market in the United States has been significantly disrupted and lives are being saved as a result." 

While the Coast Guard is the nation's leading maritime law enforcement agency, drug interdiction is an interagency effort.  Through federal partnerships the Coast Guard is able to make significant gains in keeping illegal drugs out of our country and the profits out of the drug dealers' hands.

Please click to view the Top Ten Drug Bust videos.

Please click to view Maritime Law Enforcement History. 

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The U.S. Coast Guard is a military, maritime, multi-mission service within the
Department of Homeland Security dedicated to protecting the safety and security of America.

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