Hurricane Dorian washes up bricks of cocaine on Florida beaches

As Hurricane Dorian churns off the coast of Florida, hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of cocaine have washed up on Florida’s shoreline.

More than a dozen bricks have been found so far, with the first brick discovered Tuesday by a passerby at Paradise Beach Park in Melbourne, according to NBC News. The beach-goer alerted a police officer on foot patrol that a suspicious package had washed ashore, and when the officer examined it, he found the bundle “wrapped in a way that was consistent with narcotics.”

The contents of the package, bundled in black and wrapped tightly with tape, was tested and determined to be a kilo of coke. A spokeswoman for the Melbourne Police Department said it would be destroyed.

A package of cocaine washed up on a Florida beach as Hurricane Dorian approaches. (Melbourne Police Department)
A package of cocaine washed up on a Florida beach as Hurricane Dorian approaches.

There appeared to be part of a word on the brick, with only the letters “DIAMANT-” exposed in a photo released by the Melbourne Police Department.

About 20 miles north, police in Cocoa Beach were alerted to a duffel bag containing 15 bricks of cocaine that had washed ashore. In Orlando, a kilo of cocaine is worth between $20,000 to $30,000. The bag has reportedly been turned over to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Dorian, now a Category 2 storm, is moving closer to the coast of the Carolinas after stalling out and pummeling the Bahamas.

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