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  4. Baltimore CBP Leads Multi-Agency K9 Examination of Seaport Vessels and Containers

Baltimore CBP Leads Multi-Agency K9 Examination of Seaport Vessels and Containers

Release Date
Fri, 09/20/2019

BALTIMORE – U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) led a multi-agency canine examination of ships and shipping containers at the Port of Baltimore Wednesday.

CBP led a multi-agency examination of three ships and more than 80 shipping containers and trucks at the Port of Baltimore September 18, 2019.
The CBP-led multi-agency team
inspected more than 80 containers and
trucks at the Port of Baltimore.

Dubbed Operation Port Days, the operation was billed as an opportunity to expose more local police narcotics detector dogs to the complexities of shipboard and shipping container examinations while searching for narcotics and other illicit contraband. Hotel-height container ships, pose unique challenges to canine examinations with tight spaces between container stacks and the myriad of ladders between decks.

Several canine alerts resulted in intrusive and non-intrusive examinations, though the team found no illicit contraband. By operation’s end, the multi-agency team inspected three ships and more than 80 trucks and shipping containers at both the seaport’s entry and departure gates.

The canine teams represented Kent, Caroline and Dorchester County Sheriff’s Offices and the Federalsburg and Easton Police Departments along the Eastern Shore.

The world is seeing a trend in larger merchant ships, and in particular ships carrying more than 10,000 containers. Transnational criminal organizations are taking advantage of that trend to transport huge loads of concealed cocaine and other dangers drugs across the globe as evidenced by the many recent significant narcotics seizures in the United States and Europe.

“Customs and Border Protection knows that our local law enforcement partners’ canine capabilities can serve as an invaluable force multiplier to quickly and efficiently inspect the larger container ships arriving from high-risk ports in narcotics source nations,” said Casey Durst, CBP’s Director of Field Operations in Baltimore. “CBP and all of our law enforcement partners remain collectively committed to intercepting dangerous drug loads before it can harm our communities.”

The examination exposed local police K9 teams to the complexities of shipboard inspections.
The examination exposed local
police K9 units to the complexities
of shipboard inspections.

In June, CBP officers in Philadelphia led a multi-agency team of narcotics detector dogs from local and state law enforcement agencies aboard the MSC Gayane, a massive container ship longer than three football fields and capable of stacking 10,000 shipping containers. That inspection discovered a CBP record of nearly 20 tons of cocaine.

In addition to local law enforcement canine teams, CBP used non-intrusive inspection and radiation detecting technology. The U.S. Coast Guard contributed to the operation.

One of CBP’s primary missions is to facilitate international trade to the from the United States. It is a key element of CBP’s national security and consumer safety priorities.

On a typical day in 2018, CBP officers seized 4,657 pounds of narcotics at and between our 328 international ports of entry. Learn more about what CBP did during "A Typical Day" in 2018.

CBP's border security mission is led at ports of entry by CBP officers from the Office of Field Operations.  Please visit CBP Ports of Entry to learn more about how CBP’s Office of Field Operations secures our nation’s borders.

Learn more about CBP at CBP.gov.

Last Modified: Feb 03, 2021