The small boat had 38 Dominicans and $385,000 in cocaine, the U.S. Coast Guard says

A 30-foot boat crammed with people and cocaine was stopped Thursday on the way to U.S. entry via Puerto Rico, the U.S. Coast Guard said.

Number of people: 38. Amount of coke: 7 kilograms (15.4 pounds).

About 20 miles south of Mona Island, Puerto Rico, the Coast Guard said, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection aircraft spotted the 30-foot boat. By the time the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Winslow Griesser got to the boat, four inches of water sat in the bottom of the boat.

The 35 men and three women all claimed Dominican citizenship. Two of the women were flown to a hospital in Puerto Rico. The rest were handed to the Dominican Republic Navy for repatriation.

The 30-foot boat with 38 Dominican Republic nationals, who the U.S. Coast Guard said were trying to get into Puerto Rico.
The 30-foot boat with 38 Dominican Republic nationals, who the U.S. Coast Guard said were trying to get into Puerto Rico.

The U.S. Coast Guard put the wholesale value of the cocaine at $154,000. Using the Customs and Border Protection San Juan’s usual estimate of $25 per gram, that would be $175,000 on Puerto Rican streets. On Miami streets, using Narcotics News’ $55 per gram minimum, it would be $385,000 of cocaine.

A boat with $825,000 of cocaine got intercepted on the Miami River, Coast Guard says

Inside a refrigerated container entering Puerto Rico: $3.3 million of cocaine, feds say

Does $27 million have a smell? That’s how this agent found it, U.S. Customs says

About $500,000 in smuggled cash found in chair cushion shipped from MIA, feds say