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Police dogs sniff out over 6 tons of cocaine hidden in banana shipment headed for Europe

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Cocaine smuggled in rollerblades from South America to Wisconsin


Cocaine smuggled in rollerblades from South America to Wisconsin

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Police dogs in Ecuador helped find more than six tons of cocaine hidden in a banana shipment headed to Germany, officials announced this week, marking yet another major seizure of drugs concealed alongside the tropical fruit.

National police were carrying out a routine inspection of banana export containers at the Deep Water Maritime Port in Posorja when sniffer dogs alerted officers to the presence of narcotics, the prosecutor-general’s office said in a news release Monday. Officials opened the containers and ultimately found 5,630 brick-shaped packages hidden under the fruit, totaling 6.23 tons of cocaine.

The shipment was destined for Germany, officials said, and had a street value of $224 million. Five people were arrested following the discovery, according to the prosecutor-general’s office, which released an image of the drugs alongside gun-toting officers and two police dogs. Some of the bricks of cocaine featured a “911” logo on the front.

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Police dogs in Ecuador helped find more than six tons of cocaine hidden in a banana shipment, officials said.

Ecuador prosecutor-general’s office


One of the people arrested was a representative of the export company responsible for the shipment, who was present at the inspection and gave officials the names of the four other suspects, officials said. Also detained were the managers of the banana plantation where the cocaine is suspected to have been added to the shipment, as well as the driver who took the container to the port.

Ecuador has become a major transit hub for cocaine produced in neighboring Colombia, with criminal gangs using Ecuador’s ports to ship the drug to Europe and the U.S., according to BBC News. Earlier this year, Ecuadorian officers found 22 tons of cocaine buried in a pig farm — the largest stash ever to be seized in the country.

Last year, more than 200 tons of drugs, most of it cocaine, were seized by security forces in Ecuador, the BBC reported. Only the U.S. and Colombia seized more drugs in 2023.

Drugs have been found concealed in banana shipments across the globe, most recently in February when British authorities said they had found more than 12,500 pounds of cocaine hidden in a shipment of the fruit, breaking the record for the biggest single seizure of hard drugs in the country.

Last August, customs agents in the Netherlands seized 17,600 pounds of cocaine found hidden inside crates of bananas in Rotterdam’s port. Three months before that, a police dog found 3 tons of cocaine stashed in a case of bananas in the Italian port of Gioia Tauro.



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A Moment With: Viswa Colluru

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A Moment With: Viswa Colluru – CBS News


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Enveda Biosciences CEO and Founder Viswa Colluru shares his journey to delivering hope through new medicines

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A Moment With: Antonio Berga and Carlos Serrano

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A Moment With: Antonio Berga and Carlos Serrano – CBS News


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Embat, a European fintech founded by former JP Morgan executives, transforms financial operations with a cloud-based treasury management solution, reshaping how CFOs and finance teams drive strategic growth in medium and large organisations

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Yellowstone hiker burned when she falls into scalding water near Old Faithful, park officials say

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9/18: CBS Evening News

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Yellowstone National Park, Wyo. — A New Hampshire woman suffered severe burns on her leg after hiking off-trail in Yellowstone National Park and falling into scalding water in a thermal area near the Old Faithful geyser, park officials said.

The 60-year-old woman from Windsor, New Hampshire, along with her husband and their leashed dog were walking off a designated trail near the Mallard Lake Trailhead on Monday afternoon when she broke through a thin crust over the water and suffered second- and third-degree burns to her lower leg, park officials said. Her husband and the dog weren’t injured.

The woman was flown to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls, Idaho for treatment.

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Old Faithful northbound sign in Yellowstone National Park

National Park Service / Jacob W. Frank


Park visitors are reminded to stay on boardwalks and trails in hydrothermal areas and exercise extreme caution. The ground in those areas is fragile and thin and there’s scalding water just below the surface, park officials said.

Pets are allowed in limited, developed areas of Yellowstone park but are prohibited on boardwalks, hiking trails, in the backcountry and in thermal areas.

The incident is under investigation. The woman’s name wasn’t made public.

This is the first known thermal injury in Yellowstone in 2024, park officials said in a statement. The park had recorded 3.5 million visitors through August this year.

Hot springs have injured and killed more people in Yellowstone National Park than any other natural feature, the National Park Service said. At least 22 people have died from hot spring-related injuries in and around the 3,471-square-mile national park since 1890, park officials have said.



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