Germany: 'Massive' cocaine bust uncovered in sugar shipment
Drug traffickers attempted to smuggle hundreds of kilograms
of cocaine in a sugar shipment, authorities in the eastern German state of
Saxony announced on Tuesday.
A drug bust of that size is expected to have a
"significant impact on the entire narcotics market," said Sonya
Penzel, the head of Saxony's state criminal police office.
What did police say?
Authorities recovered 700 kilograms (1,540 pounds) of
cocaine in total, describing the bust as "massive."
The cocaine has an estimated street value of over €150
million ($170 million).
"This is the largest cocaine seizure in the state of
Saxony to date," police said in a statement.
The drugs were uncovered by an unusual source — workers at a
food production company located in a rural area between the cities of Dresden
and Chemnitz.
The workers were unpacking a recent shipment of sugar when
they came across the suspiciously wrapped cocaine bricks.
They then quickly alerted the police, who were then joined
by customs officers in Dresden.
Police are now working to uncover who was behind the
shipment — and where it was headed.
It is unclear whether the cocaine was intended to be
distributed in the state of Saxony, or whether it was a stopover.
Authorities made clear, however, that the company that made
the initial discovery is not considered a suspect.
Drug busts are more common in Germany's port cities, where
container shipments first land. In Hamburg, authorities uncovered 16 tons of
cocaine alone the month of February last year.
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