The Mexican Navy gave reporters a firsthand look on Tuesday at what they described as one of the largest methamphetamine labs ever found in the country, with enough ephedrine to produce more than 40 tonnes of the drug.
The smell of chemical solvents was overwhelming at the remote mountaintop site in the northern state of Sinaloa, where Navy personnel on patrol last week stumbled across an enormous holding tank they initially thought might be used to water a marijuana plantation.
Instead, the tank fed water to a pair of enormous sheds where sailors found 49,640 liters of ephedrine, a chemical used to make methamphetamine. That is enough to produce 40.2 tonnes of the drug, or about 309 million individual doses.
The members of the Navy patrol found drums, barrels and other chemicals used in the process at the site, located on a dirt road kilometers away from the nearest town.
“This is one of the heaviest blows to the drug traffickers in this administration ... as far as synthetic drugs are concerned,” said Vice Admiral Jorge Humberto Maldonado, who estimated that the precursors were enough to produce methamphetamine worth US$1.4 billion in street value.
That would make it larger than the May seizure of more than 8 tonnes of finished methamphetamine at a clandestine drug lab in the western state of Michoacan.
In 2006, Mexican officials seized more than 19 tonnes of a similar precursor chemical, pseudoephedrine acetate, at a Pacific coast port. Mexico subsequently banned almost all legal uses of pseudoephedrine, but traffickers have apparently found other illegal routes to get the material. On Tuesday, Guatemalan authorities confiscated nearly 10 million pseudoephedrine pills worth US$33 million, the country’s biggest seizure of the substance.
The Navy was carried out the Thursday bust in Mexico’s so-called Golden Triangle, where traffickers long have operated. But was no immediate indication which drug cartel ran the facility.
The Navy also reported on Tuesday that it had detected a shipment of cocaine hidden inside the carcasses of frozen sharks aboard a freight ship at the Gulf coast port of Progreso. The Navy did not provide an immediate estimate of the amount of cocaine found, but said it had been detected in an X-ray inspection of the shipment.
Also on Tuesday, police found the bodies of seven young men who were beaten or shot to death in the state of Durango in northern Mexico.
At least three of the bodies had bullet wounds. The others appear to have been beaten to death.
Investigations into the case are continuing, but the style of the killings suggested the involvement of drug gangs.
An employee of the state prosecutor’s office, who was not authorized to be quoted by name, said the bodies were found on a street in the city of Gomez Palacio.
And in the western state of Michoacan, three suspected kidnappers were killed in a shootout with local police in the city of Uruapan.
State prosecutors said the shootout occurred on Tuesday after police got a report of kidnappers fleeing in a truck and attempted to stop them.
More than 10,800 people have been killed by drug violence since Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched a nationwide crackdown on organized crime in late 2006.
A string of rape and assault allegations against the son of Norway’s future queen have plunged the royal family into its “biggest scandal” ever, wrapping up an annus horribilis for the monarchy. The legal troubles surrounding Marius Borg Hoiby, the 27-year-old son born of a relationship before Norwegian Crown Princess Mette-Marit’s marriage to Norwegian Crown Prince Haakon, have dominated the Scandinavian country’s headlines since August. The tall strapping blond with a “bad boy” look — often photographed in tuxedos, slicked back hair, earrings and tattoos — was arrested in Oslo on Aug. 4 suspected of assaulting his girlfriend the previous night. A photograph
The US deployed a reconnaissance aircraft while Japan and the Philippines sent navy ships in a joint patrol in the disputed South China Sea yesterday, two days after the allied forces condemned actions by China Coast Guard vessels against Philippine patrol ships. The US Indo-Pacific Command said the joint patrol was conducted in the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone by allies and partners to “uphold the right to freedom of navigation and overflight “ and “other lawful uses of the sea and international airspace.” Those phrases are used by the US, Japan and the Philippines to oppose China’s increasingly aggressive actions in the
‘GOOD POLITICS’: He is a ‘pragmatic radical’ and has moderated his rhetoric since the height of his radicalism in 2014, a lecturer in contemporary Islam said Abu Mohammed al-Jolani is the leader of the Islamist alliance that spearheaded an offensive that rebels say brought down Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and ended five decades of Baath Party rule in Syria. Al-Jolani heads Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which is rooted in Syria’s branch of al-Qaeda. He is a former extremist who adopted a more moderate posture in order to achieve his goals. Yesterday, as the rebels entered Damascus, he ordered all military forces in the capital not to approach public institutions. Last week, he said the objective of his offensive, which saw city after city fall from government control, was to
IVY LEAGUE GRADUATE: Suspect Luigi Nicholas Mangione, whose grandfather was a self-made real-estate developer and philanthropist, had a life of privilege The man charged with murder in the killing of the CEO of UnitedHealthcare made it clear he was not going to make things easy on authorities, shouting unintelligibly and writhing in the grip of sheriff’s deputies as he was led into court and then objecting to being brought to New York to face trial. The displays of resistance on Tuesday were not expected to significantly delay legal proceedings for Luigi Nicholas Mangione, who was charged in last week’s Manhattan killing of Brian Thompson, the leader of the US’ largest medical insurance company. Little new information has come out about motivation,