$19M worth of cocaine found inside pineapple shipment at Georgia port

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SAVANNAH, Ga. — Authorities said a shipment of fresh pineapples to Savannah, Georgia, contained more than a ton of cocaine.

According to a Friday news release from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, over $19 million worth of cocaine was found inside 450 packages hidden among the fruit at the Savannah seaport last November. The packages were shipped from Cartagena, Colombia.

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"This was an outstanding interception of narcotics by our CBP officers," Savannah CBP Area Port Director Lisa Beth Brown said in a statement. "This seizure is a positive enforcement action against drug smuggling organizations and highlights the important work our officers do each day to stop illegal activity at our borders and ports of entry."

A field test confirmed the packages, which weighed over 1,150 pounds, contained cocaine, the release said.

In 2016, more than $6 million worth of cocaine was seized at the same port inside a container of frozen pineapples, AJC.com previously reported. The shipment, which was from Costa Rica, included nearly 350 pounds of cocaine.

On Tuesday, the CBP found about $40,000 worth of cocaine inside Honduran decorative figures at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.

The agency said it seizes more than 5,000 pounds of drugs on a typical day from ports of entry throughout the U.S.

Both the Colombian and Honduran incidents remain under investigation.