The Two Largest Drug Busts Of All Time

Law enforcement agents love nothing more than to stack a big pile of drugs onto a table while they hold a congratulatory press conference. You’ve seen it before. The drugs are typically stacked in a neat little pyramid with a bunch of guns and maybe even some confiscated cash sprinkled around like decorations. Sometimes the drug bust is the result of a months-long investigation with undercover officers, wire taps, maybe even an informant on the inside. Other times, the drug bust is the result of pure dumb luck. Maybe cops pullover the right car, or knock down the right door, and boom, jackpot! Maybe they get an anonymous tip.

However they happened, what are the largest drug busts of all time? What was the dollar value of the drugs that were found and what happened to the people who got busted? The answers are pretty insane.

The Hayward California Heroine Bust of 1991

Back in May 1991, U.S. Customs agents began following four suspected members of a heroin smuggling cartel. Seven months earlier, the suspected smugglers rented a warehouse supposedly to import porcelain from China. The warehouse, which was rented under the business name “Join Sun Corp”, was located in the bay area city of Hayward, just a few minutes south of the city (and port) of Oakland.

Agents painstakingly observed every person and a delivery that came and went to that warehouse 24 hours a day for over a month. Finally, on Thursday, June 20, 1991, agents waited for three men to enter the warehouse before making their move, once and for all. Heavily armed cops stormed the warehouse from the front, back and roof, but the three suspects did not put up a fight and were quickly put under arrest.

Customs and DEA agents had long-suspected that this crew was importing China White heroin from Thailand instead of innocent porcelain from China. After Thailand, agents believed that the heroin was sent to Taiwan, then Oakland by barge. At the port of Oakland the drugs were offloaded onto trucks and transferred to Join Sun Corp’s warehouse. Upon searching the warehouse, the agents were not surprised to find quantities of heroin. But no one was prepared for the actual amount of heroin they ended up collecting. When it was all totaled up, Join Sun Corp’s warehouse was storing 59 boxes filled with 1,059 pounds of China White Heroin

FYI, the DEA’s entire budget for 1991 was $875 million. DEA agents would later estimate that this bust amounted to 5% of the world’s annual production of heroin at the time. In the end, four men connected to the ring were tried, convicted and sentenced to federal prison. They each received long enough sentences that they are all still locked up today, 26 years later.

The Sylmar California Cocaine Bust of 1989

Sylmar is a quiet suburban community located in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley. On September 28, 1989, local police received an anonymous tip from a “concerned citizen” about suspicious behavior that was occurring at a nondescript storage facility in the middle of a residential neighborhood. The tipster reported that several very large tractor-trailers had been making frequent deliveries to the storage unit. The tipster described the trucks as being “as big as two school buses”.

Keep in mind that this was at the height of both the American crack epidemic and the Colombian drug cartel empire. As such, DEA agents at the time were on the lookout for exactly this kind suspicious activity. After all, who needs to have frequent “school bus” size deliveries at their storage unit?

After receiving the tip, agents followed a car that left the storage unit the next day. That car drove 30 miles southeast to a city called Baldwin Park at which point the driver noticed the tail and took evasive action. Police eventually pulled the car over and found 20 kilograms of cocaine in the trunk. That was enough probable cause to get a search warrant for the storage unit.

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