Nova Scotia

Border services agency seizes more than 1,500 kilograms of cocaine in Halifax

Canada’s border service agency said it has made a massive seizure of cocaine that was coming through the port of Halifax.

CBSA says shipment originated in California and was destined for Europe

A stack of yellow and black cubes wrapped in plastic are shown.
The Canada Border Services Agency says it seized more than 1,500 kilograms of cocaine from a container at the Port of Halifax on March 6. (Canada Border Services Agency)

The Canada Border Services Agency says its officers recently seized 1.5 tonnes of a substance that initial tests indicate to be cocaine.

RCMP Supt. Jason Popik said in an interview Tuesday the large shipment is almost certainly pure cocaine, but final tests completed by the federal police are underway to confirm the initial sampling by border agents.

The border agency says in a release the operation began on March 4 when U.S. Homeland Security flagged the possibility of contraband inside a marine shipping container originating in California and destined for Europe.

Two days later, the shipping container was examined at the Port of Halifax, leading to the seizure of 1,556 kilograms of the substance believed to be cocaine.

Popik says the drugs weren't destined for Halifax but rather were on their way to Europe on a ship that was loaded in Los Angeles and travelled through the Panama Canal.

He says the drugs were packaged in kilogram blocks and disguised as a shipment of recycled plastic.