SPAIN’S war on Class-A drug smuggling has taken a high-tech leap.
Traffickers, never short of cunning, have embraced drones, narco-submarines, and hidden tunnels, pushing law enforcement to the limits of innovation in their fight to keep narcotics off the streets.
This includes a sophisticated drone network recently dismantled in Algeciras, with custom-made UAVs ferrying up to 10 kilograms of hashish at a time from Morocco.
These weren’t your average hobby drones: built in Ukraine with a 50-kilometre range, they slipped silently across borders until police swooped in and seized the operation, arresting 10 suspects. But the sky is just one part of the puzzle.
Narcodrone was built in the Ukraine
Down at busy Valencia port, police have intercepted staggering shipments of cocaine this year concealed in the most industrial of disguises.
This includes 334 kilograms hidden inside industrial equipment on container ships, and a 304-kilo stash lurking inside a shipment of pineapples from Panama.
Clearly, traffickers know that fruit and freight are as much a delivery route as any yacht hull or suitcase.
Speaking of stealth, narco-submarines have resurfaced as a particularly slippery menace.
Authorities intercepted a semi-submersible vessel carrying a whopping 6.6 tonnes of cocaine in the Atlantic en route to Spain, last month.
These underwater ghost ships evade radar, surfacing as shadows in the waves and reminding law enforcement that the drug trade’s ingenuity knows no bounds.
On the personal smuggling front, a man was caught with cocaine cleverly hidden beneath a wig on a flight from Colombia to Amsterdam.
Nearly 20 tiny capsules of the white powder concealed within synthetic hair proved that when it comes to smuggling, traffickers will exploit every possible hiding place.
Even the borders themselves can no longer be trusted. In the Spanish enclave of Ceuta, a secret tunnel was unearthed, stretching 50 metres underground from a warehouse in Spain straight into Morocco.
This subterranean passage exemplifies the shadowy lengths drug rings will go to avoid detection.
To counter these evolving threats, Spanish police and customs have stepped up with a combination of cutting-edge technology and tactical innovation.
High-resolution drones and radar systems now patrol the coastline, scanning for unauthorised drone flights and unusual maritime activity.
At ports, sophisticated X-ray scanners and AI-driven cargo inspections help identify anomalies in freight shipments, while sniffer dogs trained to detect narcotics continue to play an indispensable role.
On land and air, joint task forces composed of Guardia Civil, National Police, and customs officials coordinate real-time intelligence sharing while rapid response units are sent out to intercept smugglers before their cargo gets landed.
Specially trained K9 units are deployed not only at airports but also at less obvious checkpoints, including highways and warehouses.
Additionally, Spanish authorities collaborate closely with their counterparts in Morocco and other EU countries, exchanging intelligence and conducting joint operations to dismantle trafficking networks at their roots.
Public awareness campaigns and community reporting hotlines also bolster the frontline, encouraging citizens to report suspicious activities.
In this relentless game of cat and mouse, Spanish authorities have had to evolve rapidly. International cooperation, advanced technology, and dogged determination have become the backbone of their strategy to shut down increasingly brazen and inventive smuggling operations.
The stakes remain high, but the message is clear: no matter how ingenious the methods, Spain’s fight against Class A drugs is far from over – and the hunters aren’t backing down.
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THE Olive Press can reveal more details of the guns and other items found in the recent searches for missing Madeleine McCann in Portugal.
The two weapons found at a derelict property where prime suspect Christian Brueckner, 38, was known to have stayed in 2007, are still being analysed.
Although a series of bone fragments and animal bones were sent to Germany for scientists to test, the guns inexplicably stayed in Portugal.
It comes after the head of the country’s PJ force, Luis Neves said the searches had ‘not been in vain’.
He has not elaborated further. But while one of the weapons was described by Portuguese police sources as a 50-year-old ‘rusting relic’ so far they have been tight-lipped about the other.
This gun is a 6.35 calibre pistol and, while not in good working order, is considerably newer.
Search for cistern where gun was found.
An Olive Press source in Lisbon revealed it had been found in the ruin, where Brueckner allegedly camped beside his VW Westfalia van, buried under ‘stones and dirt’.
The source added it could definitely ‘still be linked’ to the disappearance of toddler Maddie, 3, in May 2007.
It could also be linked to other crimes on the Algarve, including further missing children, where Brueckner may have been involved.
“The guns were found in different places and were immediately seized by the PJ,” revealed the source. “They wanted to keep everything under their control.”
One of them was ‘in a well covered with muddy water and garbage, the other in a ruin under stones and dirt.’
The Olive Press can reveal that this 6.35 calibre gun was a similar size weapon to one Brueckner sometimes carried when living on the Algarve in 2007.
Former friends and acquaintances of the German sex offender told The Olive Press he had the gun when he lived in the inland village of Foral, 45 minutes from Praia da Luz, for much of 2007.
Search fingerprints found at bottom of cistern where gun was found.
His former landlady told The Olive Press he had been ‘carrying the gun’ when he was recruited to track down a teenage girl – a German orphan – who had run away from the home of his then girlfriend.
“He came and went and was a really scary guy,” Lia Silva told the Olive Press. “People were scared of him in the village.
“Some people said they saw him carrying a gun which was obviously really terrifying.”
She continued that the paedophile had been ‘given the job’ of locating the young girl who had vanished and he brought her back from a rural property where she was staying with three Russians.
Shockingly, as The Olive Press reported, the 16-year-old was later discovered to be pregnant.
According to an official missing person’s report filed with police in nearby Messines, she had come back ‘voluntarily’ and didn’t wish to make any further complaint.
The report, seen by this paper, however was filed alongside her then guardian, Christian Brueckner’s girlfriend, with whom he was known to be involved in various crimes.
The German woman, born in the same month as Brueckner, claimed to be a ‘child psychologist’ and ran a rehabilitation programme for troubled teenagers.
She fled the home, Villa Bianca, in Foral, leaving thousands in unpaid rent, claimed the landlady Silva, as well as traces of drugs and syringes.
She has been grilled at least four times by German police over her involvement with Brueckner at the time.
On the night Maddie went missing she told the Mail on Sunday Brueckner had parked his van outside her house, telling her he had inexplicably been on a long journey back from Tomar, in the north of Portugal.
She added he had got up and left early in the morning.
Police launched the recent three-day search, earlier this month, in a distinct area around 2 kilometres from a farmhouse outside Praia da Luz, where Brueckner lived for a decade.
Led by the German BKA, who have been investigating Brueckner since 2018, they centred their search around 21 plots with various ruined properties on them.
Their search was halted before the end of the third day.
Brueckner, who has many convictions for sex crimes and child abuse, is known to have been in Praia da Luz on the night Maddie went missing.
His mobile phone connected to the village’s mobile phone tower just two hours before Maddie was snatched from her bed at the Ocean Club, where her family were on holiday.
Brueckner was a prolific burglar who regularly stole from apartments in the complex.
He has allegedly confessed at least twice to friends that he knew what happened to Maddie and may have been involved in the abduction.
He was absolved of five further sex crimes on the Algarve, three rapes and two child abuse offences, during a trial last year. The verdict is being appealed.
If unsuccessful he could be let out of prison in September this year.
A Change.org petition has been launched to keep him inside.
TINY turtles smuggled in from China have been found inside a container by the Guardia Civil at a checkpoint in Gandia(Valencia).
20 black-bellied leaf turtles were hidden among stuffed toys and socks, with some of them having died from stress, improper handling, and the sheer length of the journey.
The surviving turtles were taken to the Terra Natura park in Benidorm which has extensive experience in looking after exotic animals.
READ MORE:
RESCUED TURTLES
Terra Natura staff immediately went into overdrive to provide critical care and rehydration for the turtles which in adulthood reach just 15 centimetres in length.
They found some of them suffering injuries during transportation as well as catching certain parasites.
Regular tests are being carried on them to identify what they may have contracted and how to deal with it.
Each of the turtles have been microchipped and remain closely monitored under isolation.
Another concern is food as it is an omnivorous species with a very specialised diet in its natural habitat.
COLOURFUL NEW HOME
Terra Natura Benidorm’s herpetologist, David Marti, said: “ We are working against the clock to identify acceptable foods in captivity that guarantee their survival and avoid starvation”.
He added that it was a particularly ‘worrying’ case of illegal wildlife trafficking which poses ‘problems for the conservation of already vulnerable species’.
A 53-year-old Spaniard is being investigated by the Guardia Civil for wildlife trafficking.
Click here to read more Benidorm News from The Olive Press.