FILE PHOTO ILUSTRATION - U.S. Coast Guards display part of the 1280 kg (2822 pounds) of cocaine, worth an estimated $37 million, seized in a routine patrol during a media presentation in San Juan, May 6, 2014. Reuters
FILE PHOTO ILUSTRATION – U.S. Coast Guards display part of the 1280 kg (2822 pounds) of cocaine, worth an estimated $37 million, seized in a routine patrol during a media presentation in San Juan, May 6, 2014. Reuters

 

San Juan –  Authorities have made the largest maritime seizure of cocaine in the Atlantic region since 1999 from a boat off South America’s northeastern coast, the U.S. Coast Guard said Monday.

About 4.2 tons of cocaine, with an estimated street value of $125 million, was confiscated from a fishing boat in international waters off Suriname, said Ricardo Castrodad, a spokesman for the U.S. Coast Guard in San Juan.

The vessel was stopped and searched by authorities Feb. 16 during a joint patrol by the crews of the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Joseph Napier and the coast guard of Trinidad and Tobago, Castrodad said.

The crew of the Napier, which is based in Port Canaveral, Florida, towed the 70-foot (21-meter) fishing vessel, the Lady Michelle, to St. Vincent and four men on board from Guyana were taken to the U.S. Virgin Islands to face possible criminal charges. The Coast Guard took the cocaine to Puerto Rico and turned it over to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

As reported by Vos Iz Neias