Cocaine-laden ghost boat washes up in Marshall Islands

Ship carrying $1 billion of cocaine could have another 30 tons on board

Marshall Islands police have found the Pacific nation's largest-ever haul of cocaine in an abandoned boat that washed up on a remote atoll after drifting on the high seas, potentially for years. Attorney General Richard Hickson said the 18-foot fiberglass vessel was found at Ailuk atoll last week with 1,430 pounds of cocaine hidden in a compartment beneath the deck.

Hickson said the vessel most likely drifted across the Pacific from Central or South America. "It could have been drifting for a year or two," he said.

Police said the drugs, which were in one-kilogram packages, or about 2.2 pounds, marked with the letters "KW," were incinerated on Tuesday, aside from two packs that will be given to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency for analysis.

A photo on December 15, 2020 shows a box filled with one-kilo "bricks" of cocaine after a transfer to a police pickup truck from a patrol vessel that transported the cocaine from a remote outer atoll to Majuro for confiscation and destruction. Photo by Giff JOHNSON / AFP

Debris from the Americas often washes up in the Marshalls after months or years at sea, driven by Pacific Ocean currents.

There have been numerous other stashes of drugs found along the Marshall Islands' shoreline over the past two decades, including another one in Ailuk, but the latest haul was by far the largest.

Law enforcement officials have various theories about the origins of such drugs, including that they were abandoned when smugglers were in danger of being caught, or lost in storms.

A photo on December 15, 2020 shows Marshall Islands police loading a box filled with one-kilo "bricks" of cocaine into a police pickup truck from a patrol vessel that transported the cocaine from a remote outer atoll to Majuro for confiscation and destruction. Photo by Giff JOHNSON / AFP

In January 2014, Salvadoran fisherman Jose Alvarenga washed up in the Marshalls, more than 13 months after he set off from Mexico's west coast with a companion, who died during the voyage.

After his discovery, University of Hawaii researchers conducted 16 computer simulations of drift patterns from the Mexico coast and found nearly all eventually arrived in the Marshall Islands.  

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