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Coast Guard seizes $4.3 million of cocaine from boat off coast of Puerto Rico

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Two men are in the custody of the Drug Enforcement Agency after Coast Guard officials seized nearly 400 pounds of cocaine from a boat in Puerto Rico. 

The crew of a Coast Guard aircraft spotted a suspicious vessel in international waters on Sept. 28. The vessel was steering towards Rincón, a beach town on Puerto Rico’s western coast, the agency said in a news release on Wednesday. The Joseph Tezanos, a 154-foot fast response cutter craft ported in San Juan, Puerto Rico, was diverted to intercept the vessel.

The Joseph Tezanos stopped and searched the vessel, officials said, and Coast Guard crew members found 142 “brick-sized packages of suspected contraband” inside the boat.

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Coast Guard agents found 142 packages of cocaine in a small vessel.

U.S. Coast Guard


Those packages tested positive for cocaine, the Coast Guard said, with an estimated value of $4.3 million.

The two men who were aboard the ship were arrested and transferred to the custody of the DEA. Both men are United States citizens, and face federal charges including possession to with intent to distribute a controlled substance aboard a vessel subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, the Coast Guard said. The charges carry a minimum sentence of 10 years in prison and a maximum sentence of life in prison. 

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A U.S. Coast Guard member and the two men who would later be turned over to DEA custody and charged with possession to with intent to distribute. 

U.S. Coast Guard


“I congratulate the United States Coast Guard personnel for this successful interdiction of an international drug smuggling venture,” said United States Attorney W. Stephen Muldrow in the news release. “We greatly appreciate the U.S. Coast Guard’s unwavering support and dedication to keeping Puerto Rico and our nation safe.”

The seizure was made as part of the Caribbean Corridor Strike Force, which brings together task forces from multiple agencies to stop the flow of illicit substances in the region. The DEA, FBI, Coast Guard, Homeland Security, and ICE are all represented in the task force. 

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U.S. Coast Guard agents remove packages of cocaine from a vessel.

U.S. Coast Guard


It’s one of several large caches of cocaine seized by officials in recent months. Federal officials seized $33 million worth of cocaine left on a beach in Puerto Rico in early September. The 3,600 pounds of drugs were left on a beach on the popular tourist island of Vieques in the pre-dawn hours and the people who smuggled the drugs fled the area, officials said. 

In August, two men from the Dominican Republic were arrested after they were found aboard a boat carrying more than 660 pounds of cocaine near Puerto Rico. In July, federal agents arrested two U.S. citizens and seized $4.6 million worth of cocaine west of the island. 

Puerto Rico is considered a transit point for drugs being smuggled to the U.S. mainland and other countries.



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Doctor admits to role in Matthew Perry’s death, pleads guilty to federal ketamine charge

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A doctor criminally charged in connection with the death of Matthew Perry pleaded guilty Wednesday to a federal charge of conspiracy to distribute ketamine, which carries a maximum possible sentence of 10 years in prison.

Mark Chavez agreed to surrender his medical license after being charged in connection with the actor’s death in August, along with four other defendants including another doctor who federal prosecutors say conspired with him to deal an illegal, unethical and dangerous amount of ketamine to Perry in the last month of his life. 

Chavez previously agreed to plead guilty. On Wednesday, he entered a guilty plea in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles.

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Mark Chavez, a doctor charged in the death of Matthew Perry, walks into U.S. District Court in Los Angeles on Oct. 2, 2024. During the court appearance, he pleaded guilty to a federal ketamine-related charge, admitting to his role in the actor’s death.

KCAL News


The other people charged in Perry’s death include the L.A.-area physician accused of conspiring with Chavez, Salvador Plasencia, Jasveen Sangha — an alleged North Hollywood drug dealer who prosecutors have said is known as the “Ketamine Queen” — Perry’s former live-in assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, and Erik Fleming, a Hawthorne man federal authorities have described as a street dealer who acted as a middleman.

In a plea agreement, Chavez admitted to taking ketamine and other prescription drugs from a ketamine infusion clinic in San Diego where he used to work. He also confessed to falsifying a prescription to provide Perry with the drug; using a patient’s name to have the prescription filled without that person’s consent or knowledge and making false statements to a wholesale ketamine distributer so he could supply more of it to Perry.

Nine days before Perry died, on Oct. 19, 2023, Chavez was interviewed by investigators with the Medical Board of California and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, according to federal prosecutors. When he spoke with them, he concealed the fact that he had distributed ketamine to Plasencia who then allegedly provided the drug to Perry, prosecutors said.

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Mark Chavez, a doctor charged in connection with actor Matthew Perry’s death, walks out of U.S. District Court in Los Angeles on Aug. 30, 2024.

KCAL News


The plea agreement states that Chavez is aware that the federal charge he is agreeing to plead guilty to, conspiracy to distribute ketamine, carries a maximum possible sentence of 10 years imprisonment, 3 years of supervised release and a fine of $500,000 —  or twice the gross gain or gross loss due to offense depending on which is greater — as well as a mandatory assessment of $100.

On Aug. 30, Chavez appeared in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles but did not enter a plea at the time. He had previously agreed to plead guilty to his role in Perry’s death. 

While he avoided questions from reporters as he entered the court in August, his attorney, Matthew Binninger, spoke outside the courthouse afterwards.

“He’s incredibly remorseful for what happened — not just because it happened to Matthew Perry but because it happened to a patient,” Binninger said. “He’s trying to do everything in his power to right the wrong that happened here.”

Just days before Chavez appeared in court, his physician’s license had been suspended and he was not permitted to practice, according to records from the Medical Board of California.



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How Vance, Walz struck a cordial tone and focused on policy

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How Vance, Walz struck a cordial tone and focused on policy – CBS News


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Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Ohio Sen. JD Vance stuck to policy and remained cordial during the vice presidential debate in New York City. Political strategists Joel Payne and Maura Gillespie break down the possible impact of the VP debate for both candidates.

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The Electoral College – explained

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The Electoral College – explained – CBS News


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In the United States, the presidential candidate who gets the most votes isn’t necessarily the candidate who wins. This is the Electoral College — explained.

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