The sea returned what the drug trafficker hid
The Security Cabinet reported a discovery that seems straight out of an action movie: 13 brick-type packages and a bundle with cocaine were recovered floating in the ocean, 248 nautical miles southwest of Huatulco, Oaxaca. Yes, you read that right: the drug was literally drifting, waiting to be picked up.
The operation was a team effort between the Semar, the SSPC and the FGR. It was no coincidence: the authorities had been combing the area for days, following the route that the cartels use to move their merchandise from South America to the Mexican and Central American coasts.
“As a result of naval surveillance work, 13 brick-type packages and a package containing a substance with characteristics similar to cocaine were detected and recovered,” the official statement detailed.
What’s next?
Everything insured was transferred to the port of Huatulco and placed at the disposal of the Public Ministry. Now it’s time to investigate who the shipment belonged to and if this is just the tip of the iceberg.
This blow is not isolated. The administration of Claudia Sheinbaum now adds 65.5 tons of illicit cargo insured at sea. Numbers that sound good, but that also show the magnitude of the problem: drug trafficking continues to use the ocean as its favorite highway.




