
Cocaine in a stone figurine
On June 5, a 23-year-old woman flew São Paulo→Istanbul→Hong Kong with two decorative stone statues packed with 3.4 kg of suspected cocaine — the same press release also announced 16 kg of cannabis buds from a separate Bangkok arrival. Follow-up: the Bulgarian gold-in-mattress driver from Issue 17 has been formally charged and released on €2,000 bail. A US–Canada joint press conference flagged a counterfeit goods surge ahead of the FIFA World Cup opening June 11.

A pale jade-colored figurine, roughly the size of a fist, sat in a checked suitcase next to what presumably passed as souvenirs. At Hong Kong International Airport on June 5, customs officers looked closer and found the statue had been hollowed out and packed with white powder.
Cocaine inside stone statues, HKIA — June 5, 2026
A 23-year-old woman had flown in from São Paulo, Brazil, via Istanbul, Turkey. Hong Kong Customs officers, during a routine baggage inspection, found two decorative statues in her checked suitcase. Both had been modified to conceal drugs inside. Total extracted: 3.4 kg of suspected cocaine, with a street market value contributing to a combined HK$5.6 million (roughly US$720,000) haul across two cases announced together. 1
The concealment logic is straightforward on paper: stone or resin figurines are dense, visually unremarkable among tourist goods, and don't compress or crinkle on an X-ray the way clothing does. Hollowing the interior and packing it with powder before resealing takes the item out of the "soft goods" detection category entirely. Officers examining checked baggage generally look for density inconsistencies — which is presumably how this one got flagged.

The woman was also found carrying 34 duty-unpaid cigarettes and one alternative smoking product in her carry-on — either an oversight or an indication that her primary concern was the statues, not the cigarettes.
The same press release, issued at 22:15 HKT on June 6, covered a separate arrest: a 22-year-old woman arriving from Bangkok, Thailand, was found with 16 kg of suspected cannabis buds packed across her checked baggage — 24 vacuum-sealed bricks spread across the suitcase floor. 1 No statues involved; straight volume.

Both women were arrested. Under Hong Kong's Dangerous Drugs Ordinance, drug trafficking carries a maximum fine of HK$5 million and life imprisonment.
Follow-up: Bulgarian gold driver formally charged
Three days after the Kapitan Andreevo mattress-gold case appeared in Issue 17, the Bulgarian National Customs Agency confirmed on June 5 that criminal charges have been filed against the driver, identified as G.K., a 50-year-old Turkish national. 2

The charge is Article 242(1)(d) of the Bulgarian Penal Code — gold smuggling. A court set bail at €2,000 and imposed a travel ban. The seized gold: 538 g of 14–22 karat jewelry, value €74,106, hidden in the truck cab's mattress. A separate 319.9 g haul (€34,990) from a different vehicle at the same checkpoint in late May was reported alongside the announcement. 2
On the same day, U.S. and Canadian border officials held a joint press conference in Ottawa warning that the FIFA World Cup — opening June 11 in the United States — is expected to drive a significant surge in counterfeit goods seizures in both countries. 4 No specific new seizures were announced; the alert is forward-looking. Given that Issues 14 and 16 both logged World Cup jersey hauls in Toronto and France respectively, the five days before the June 11 kickoff are when border agencies tend to make announcements — expect the Monday and Tuesday issues to be heavier on counterfeit goods.
Cover image: Hong Kong Customs and Excise Department official photo, via Hong Kong SAR Government Press Releases
References
- 1Hong Kong Customs detects two drug trafficking cases involving passengers at airport
- 2National Customs Agency (Bulgaria) — Over 100,000 euros worth of smuggled gold items seized at Kapitan Andreevo BCP
- 3Fakti.bg — Customs officers seized smuggled gold items worth over 100,000 euros
- 4CKPG Today / Canadian Press — World Cup driving spike in counterfeit goods, Canadian, U.S. border officials say
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