'Something positive': Passaic gets funds to create fourth splash park

About 1.6 tons of cocaine seized at Port Newark, largest drug bust in 25 years

More than 1½ tons of cocaine was seized in Newark, in the largest cocaine bust at Port Newark in 25 years, authorities said.

On Feb. 28, about 1.6 tons of cocaine, with an estimated street value of $77 million, was seized at Port Newark, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced in a statement. The seizure was the result of a joint raid by CBP,  the U.S. Coast Guard, Homeland Security Investigations, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the New York Police Department and the New York State Police.

Truck full of cocaine seized at Port Newark

“This is a significant seizure, in fact it is the largest cocaine seizure at the Port of New York/Newark since May 1994,” Troy Miller, director of CBP's New York Field Operations, said in the statement. “This interception prevents a massive quantity of drugs from getting to the streets and in the hands of our children.”

HEROIN HIGHWAY:On Route 23, a growing suburban demand for drugs meets urban supply

COCAINE:Paterson men face drug charges after DEA seizes 20 bricks of cocaine

MIKE KELLY:After 2 heroin overdose deaths, a mother aches to move forward

CBP turned over the mass shipment of cocaine to Homeland Security Investigations, which will continue to investigate. 

The multi-agency effort to seize drugs at ports of entry is meant to intercept them before they're disseminated throughout the country, preventing the drugs from ever reaching the streets. Cocaine, much like heroin, is often cut with fentanyl, a powerful opioid that is up to 100 times stronger than morphine and often causes fatal overdoses.

“Cocaine, New York’s nemesis of the '90’s, is back — indicating traffickers' push to build an emerging customer base of users mixing cocaine with fentanyl,” said Ray Donovan, DEA special agent in charge.

The drug bust is the largest at Port Newark this century. In May 1994, more than 3 tons of cocaine was discovered in cargo at the port, The New York Times reported. CBP agents staked out those drugs, waiting for the shipment to be broken down and distributed. Three men were arrested in July that year.

Email: torrejon@northjersey.com