Cocaine Keeps Washing Up On Florida Beaches
Drugs washing up on Florida beaches has been happening for the last 50 years of so, but the frequency of cocaine bricks hitting our shoreline seems to have gone from occasional – to a normal occurrence. Most recently, a package containing 16 bricks of suspected cocaine was found on the beach by guests of the Islands of Islamorada Resort at approximately 11 a.m. Sunday. As is the norm, the package was turned over to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
This was back on August 5th, Hurricane Debby washed all these bricks ashore in the Florida Keys.
Back in late July, a Florida lobster diver looking for lobster approximately one mile offshore of Tavernier on the oceanside, found this package of suspected cocaine. The bunny logo is kinda cute.
The Cocaine Is Even Washing Up In Southwest Florida
This was 2 weeks ago, and not in the Florida Keys – but Everglades City, Florida. For those of you who don’t know the history of Everglades City, by all means – check it out. having bundles of drugs wash ashore was reminiscent of the “square grouper” marijuana smuggling days in Collier County during the 1970s and 1980s but uncommon for today. I’m very curious as to what the logo was on the cocaine as they don’t normally blur them out.
But Why So Much?
These are just three examples of some of the recent finds. The Collier County Sheriff’s Office speculates that “the cocaine most likely washed in with the tides from the east coast due to recent storms. Large packages of drugs ranging from marijuana to hashish to cocaine have been discovered floating in the waters off Miami and the Florida Keys.”
So it appears that there’s a tremendous amount of drugs in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean, and storms will bring them ashore. And we’ve got plenty of hurricane season to go, which means we can expect more. So when your kids run out on the beach to collect seashells after a passing storm, don’t be too surprised what else you may find.