
2026. 6. 19. · 12:23
42 kg of Ketamine, Two Strangers, One Airport
Two unrelated 50-year-old men — one Japanese arriving from Amsterdam, one British arriving from London — were caught at Hong Kong International Airport on back-to-back days carrying a combined 42 kilograms of ketamine worth HK$16 million; Hong Kong Customs says they never met. Also: CBP's Laredo Field Office pulled nearly $984K in cocaine from two separate vehicles on consecutive days at two different Texas border crossings, a Taiwanese traveler was caught smuggling 304 live animals through the cross-strait "Small Three Links" route, and Irish Revenue seized 30.7 kg of cannabis at Dublin Airport.
On June 17, a 50-year-old Japanese man flew into Hong Kong from Amsterdam. His checked bag contained 16 kilograms of ketamine packed into large white plastic bags, with 137 untaxed cigarettes stashed in his carry-on as a side note. 1
The next day, June 18, a 50-year-old British man flew into Hong Kong from London. His two checked bags contained 26 kilograms of ketamine, also packed in sealed white plastic bags. 1
Two men. Both 50. Different nationalities, different departure cities, different flights, different days. According to Hong Kong Customs, they are entirely unconnected — not co-conspirators, not part of the same operation, apparently not even aware of each other. Together, they walked through Hong Kong International Airport on back-to-back days carrying a combined 42 kilograms of ketamine valued at approximately HK$16 million (~US$2 million). 1 Both appear at West Kowloon Magistrates' Courts on June 20.
The probability math on this coincidence is left as an exercise for the reader.
42 kg of ketamine in two independent suitcases — Hong Kong Airport, June 17–18
Hong Kong is a significant transit and destination market for ketamine. Unlike in most Western jurisdictions where MDMA or cocaine dominate club drug markets, ketamine has historically been the recreational dissociative of choice across much of East and Southeast Asia — demand is sustained, the supply chain runs through multiple European source countries, and airport couriers are a standard delivery method.
What made this week unusual isn't that two people tried to bring ketamine through HKIA. It's that they did it independently on consecutive days, with nearly identical profiles, and customs caught both of them.

The first man was arrested June 17 on three charges: drug trafficking, possession of dutiable goods, and failure to declare to customs. The 16 kg of ketamine filled a single suitcase — in the official photo, large white bags crowd the entire bag. The 137 cigarettes in his carry-on seem almost comedically incidental by comparison, worth noting on a charge sheet but dwarfed by HK$9.2 million in alleged narcotics sitting next to the overhead bin. 1
The second man, arriving from London the following day, carried 26 kg across two bags. The official photo for his case shows 17 sealed plastic packages arranged in a grid on a green floor — four large flat bricks at the bottom, two rows of smaller rectangular packs above, all sealed white. The total estimated street value for his load alone: HK$6.8 million. He faces a single trafficking charge. 1
Drug trafficking of a dangerous drug under Hong Kong's Dangerous Drugs Ordinance (Cap. 134) carries a maximum of life imprisonment and a HK$5 million fine. The two men will be in the same courthouse on the same morning, June 20 — presumably still strangers.
$984K in cocaine on back-to-back days — Laredo, Texas, June 12–13
If consecutive coincidences at border crossings are a theme this week, the Laredo Field Office of US Customs and Border Protection had a version of its own.
On June 12, a 56-year-old Mexican man drove a 2020 Nissan Frontier pickup truck across the Colombia-Solidarity Bridge, one of four land ports managed by the CBP Laredo Field Office. Officers ran non-intrusive imaging and had a canine unit work the vehicle. The scan and the dog agreed. A secondary inspection turned up 20 packages containing 50.75 pounds of cocaine — street value estimated at $677,617. 2

The next day, June 13, a 53-year-old Mexican man drove a 2015 Toyota Camry across the Camino Real Bridge at Eagle Pass — a different port, roughly 150 miles northwest of Laredo, but still within the Laredo Field Office's area of responsibility. Same technology, same result: non-intrusive imaging identified an anomaly, inspection found 13 packages of cocaine, this time 22.97 pounds valued at $306,723. 2

Both drivers were handed to Homeland Security Investigations agents. The federal charges hadn't been disclosed by the time CBP published its press release on June 18. 2 Donald R. Kusser, the Laredo Field Office Director, said the two seizures "underscore not only the reality of the drug threat we face daily, but our officers' keen ability to apply inspection experience and technology to take down these drug loads." 3
Combined: 73.72 pounds of cocaine, $984,340. The color difference in the packaging — black bricks with orange tape at Laredo, neon-green bricks at Eagle Pass — suggests two separate supply chains operating through the same corridor on consecutive days, without knowledge of each other.
304 live animals in one traveler's bags — Taiwan's "Small Three Links," June 18
A Taiwanese traveler was accused of smuggling 304 live animals — including geckos — through the "Small Three Links," the informal mini cross-strait route connecting Kinmen island to China's Fujian coast, arriving in Kaohsiung. Taiwan's Kaohsiung Customs announced the case on June 18; Taipei Times reported it the following day. 4
The full animal list, exact concealment method, and whether any species are CITES-protected haven't been confirmed — the complete Taipei Times report is behind a paywall. What's confirmed: 304 live animals, carried by one person, moving through a route better known for lighter cross-strait foot traffic than bulk wildlife. All animals are subject to confiscation. 4
The Small Three Links (小三通) were opened in 2001 as a limited civilian channel between Kinmen and Xiamen — they carry far less customs scrutiny than direct Taiwan-mainland routes through major airports. That differential is, evidently, not lost on wildlife traffickers.
30.7 kg of cannabis — Dublin Airport, June 17
Irish Revenue officers seized approximately 30.7 kilograms of herbal cannabis at Dublin Airport on June 17, announced the following day. Estimated value: over €615,000. 5 The Revenue Commissioners described it as a routine operation. Concealment method, route, and whether any arrests were made weren't publicly disclosed — the official announcement provides only the weight and value, and no Irish media followup had appeared by June 19.
At 30.7 kg, it's a meaningful airport cannabis seizure by any European benchmark, but without the how or the who, it sits as a number without a story.
Cover image: The 26 kg ketamine seizure from the June 18 HKIA case — HKSAR Crown Copyright
참고 출처
- 1Hong Kong Customs — two drug trafficking cases at HKIA, June 19
- 2CBP — Officers seize over $984K in cocaine at Laredo Field Office
- 3FOX 7 Austin — CBP Officers Seize $984K in Cocaine at Texas Border
- 4Taipei Times / Facebook — Traveler attempts to smuggle over 300 live animals
- 5Irish Revenue Commissioners — Revenue seize herbal cannabis worth over €615,000 at Dublin Airport




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