450 Cocaine Bricks Worth 38M Found At Philadelphia Port

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Sniffer dogs uncovered 450 bricks of cocaine in Philadelphia, the city's largest seizure of the drug in more than two decades.
Local, state and federal law enforcement officials said Thursday the cocaine was found inside 13 duffel bags in a shipping container. 
Customs and Border Protection's Area Port Director for Philadelphia Joseph Martella says Tuesday's seizure amounted to more than 1,185 pounds of cocaine worth about $38million.
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A total of 450 bricks of cocaine, weighing 1,185 pounds with a street value of $38 million, was put on display at the U.S.

Customs House
This image provided by U.S.

Customs and Border Protection shows cocaine seized from a shipping container at the Philadelphia seaport
U.S.

customs officials say drug dogs sniffed out Philadelphia's largest seizure of cocaine in more than two decades
Martella says the ship was ported in Guatemala before stopping in the Bahamas and was destined for the Netherlands.
Bricks of the narcotic were stuffed in duffel bags found in a shipping container filled with liquid rubber aboard the MSC Desiree, which was traveling from Colombia to Europe, 
Based on their historical data, and the area where it left from and went through being considered a 'high-risk area,' the container was searched by a K-9 unit on Tuesday and the drugs were found. 
The container was brought to the Port of Philadelphia on North Delaware Avenue.
Multiple agencies, including Philadelphia Police, Pennsylvania State Police, Delaware State Police, Homeland Security, the DEA, the U.S.

Coast Guard and Customs and Border Protection, inspected it around 10.30 am Tuesday.
U.S. Customs & Border Protection Mid-Atlantic Region spokesman Stephen Sapp said following a multi-agency inspection, the alleged contraband was discovered inside a shipping container. 
It is Philadelphia's largest seizure since 1998.
The cocaine confiscation is the largest for the CBP Area Port of Philadelphia since May 1998
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450 bricks of cocaine were found inside 13 duffel bags in the shipping container
Casey Durst, CBP's Director of Field Operations in Baltimore, hailed the team who conducted the apprehension. 
'Taking a half-ton of dangerous drugs out of circulation is a significant success for https://travelmic.hpage.com/top-10-largest-state-in-india-by-area.html this collective team of federal, state and local law enforcement officers who work very hard every day to keep people safe,' Durst said. 
'Customs and Border Protection remains committed to working with our law enforcement partners and to disrupting narcotics smuggling attempts at the Area Port of Philadelphia.'
Federal and local authorities seen here at the Port of Philadelphia inspected the container after noticing the bolts on the door had been tampered with
Multiple law enforcement agencies are seen at the Port of Philadelphia where they seized at least 450 bricks of cocaine  
Federal and local authorities inspected the container after noticing the bolts on the door had been tampered with. 
Last month, customs agents seized 3,200 pounds of cocaine worth $77 million at Port New York/Newark.  
The cocaine haul at the Port of New Jersey and New York was three times larger than the latest Philadelphia seizure and the street value of the cocaine was worth three times more at $77 million.
Customs agents seized the biggest shipment of cocaine recovered at the ports of New York and New Jersey in 25 years.
It's the biggest cocaine seizure at the ports since 1994.

The drugs were hidden behind boxes of dried fruit aboard a cargo ship.
The shipment was intercepted when the vessel stopped over in New York/Newark on its way to Antwerp, Belgium. 
A truck is pictured bringing away 3,200 pounds of cocaine in 60 packages, where it was seized at the Port of Newark