• The Shot You’ll Never Forget Giveaway - Enter To Win A Barrel From Rifle Barrel Blanks!

    Tell us about the best or most memorable shot you’ve ever taken. Contest ends June 13th and remember: subscribe for a better chance of winning!

    Join contest Subscribe

$10,000,000in cocaine and a revoked licsense

Maggot

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood"
Supporter
Full Member
Minuteman
Supporter
  • Jul 27, 2007
    26,794
    31,882
    Virginia
    sleep.gif


    DENVER (Reuters) - A routine Colorado traffic stop led to the discovery of 220 pounds of cocaine with a street value of $10 million in the rental car of a California couple, police said on Monday.

    Mark Bailey and Lisa Calderon, both of Sylmar, California, were arrested on Sunday in the southern Colorado city of Pueblo on suspicion of cocaine possession, Pueblo Deputy Police Chief Andrew McLachlan said.

    "This is definitely the largest cocaine seizure in our department's history," McLachlan told Reuters.

    McLachlan said a patrol officer was tipped off by an off-duty detective to a car making an illegal lane change on Interstate 25, about 115 miles south of Denver.

    The north-south highway has long been a drug-smuggling corridor, he said. When the officer pulled over the rented Chevrolet Malibu, he discovered that Bailey's California driver's license had been revoked.

    Bailey, 37, told the officer he owned an auto body shop in California, and was en route to Iowa to look at a 1955 Chevy, police said.

    The officer became suspicious because when Calderon, 35, was questioned she appeared nervous. She said the pair were going to visit her brother in Iowa but couldn't say where, police said.

    When the officer noticed that the back of the car appeared to be weighed down, he summoned a drug-sniffing dog and its handler to the scene. The dog, name Raleigh, "alerted on the rear of the Chevy," McLachlan said.

    A search of the trunk uncovered four black duffel bags stuffed with bricks of cocaine, and the pair was arrested, he said.

    Bailey was also cited for driving with a suspended license, and no proof of insurance.
     
    Re: $10,000,000in cocaine and a revoked licsense

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Sled Dog</div><div class="ubbcode-body">220lbs of coke, I bet Raleigh the drug dog was doing backflips. </div></div>

    No kidding! I bet all his barking in the car was him giving directions to the coke from 20 miles away.
    smile.gif
     
    Re: $10,000,000in cocaine and a revoked licsense

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: benchmstr</div><div class="ubbcode-body">i wonder how much that coke was really worth? we as LEO have no clue on the price of this stuff....220lbs is a lot though </div></div>

    Its a lil less than $1,500,000 at $15K per kilo...

    Even at the highest of $60/gram... its still only around $5,988,000

    It'd have to be stepped on a whole lot to be worth $10 million in the real world
     
    Re: $10,000,000in cocaine and a revoked licsense

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: slowkota</div><div class="ubbcode-body">\

    Its a lil less than $1,500,000 at $15K per kilo...

    Even at the highest of $60/gram... its still only around $5,988,000

    It'd have to be stepped on a whole lot to be worth $10 million in the real world </div></div>

    [intervention]Slowkota, we need to talk. Your family and friends have all came here today because we're worried about you....[/intervention]
     
    Re: $10,000,000in cocaine and a revoked licsense

    Read this earlier today. Thought it was rather amusing that the cops bothered to cite the guy for his suspended license and no insurance after he gets busted for trucking around 200 pounds of cocaine.
     
    Re: $10,000,000in cocaine and a revoked licsense

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Boondocker</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Read this earlier today. Thought it was rather amusing that the cops bothered to cite the guy for his suspended license and no insurance after he gets busted for trucking around 200 pounds of cocaine. </div></div>

    It is common practice to cite for the probable cause for the stop, regardless of the end result.