Federal agents find $12 million worth of cocaine inside shrimp at Red Hook Terminal
A drug-sniffing dog noticed something fishy about the shipping container full of shrimp.
Federal agents have discovered a new delicacy from Guyana — shrimp coketail.
A drug-sniffing dog noticed something fishy about a shipping container that arrived at the Red Hook Terminal from Guyana last week and hunted down 268 kilos of cocaine stuffed inside frozen shrimp, according to a complaint unsealed Wednesday in Brooklyn Federal Court.
The whale of a catch has an estimated street value of more than $12 million.
The agents secretly removed the coke-filled crustaceans and tailed the container after it cleared customs on June 15, according to U.S. Homeland Security special agent Ryan Varrone.
The container was delivered to an unidentified warehouse in Brooklyn on Monday where agents spotted Heeralall Sukdeo “together with others … organizing and supervising the unloading” of the shipment, the complaint states.
Sukdeo, 59, the owner of Sukdeo Sons Fishing, a shipping company based in Queens, was arrested, but said he was innocent of any wrongdoing. “Sukdeo stated that he was present only in the vicinity of the truck containing the target shipment because he was curious about its contents,” Varrone stated in the complaint.
Federal agents found 268 kilos of cocaine stuffed inside frozen shrimp at the Red Hook Terminal last week.
The shipment had originated in Guyana and was addressed to “Randolph Fraser” which is apparently Sukdeo’s alias, an employee told the feds.
Sukdeo was ordered held without bail.
Defense lawyer Andre Travieso said Sukdeo has never been arrested before.
“I’m pretty confident that when all the facts come out, this was just a huge mistake,” Travieso told the Daily News, insisting that his client did not order the drug-crusted shrimp.