A Florida boater made an unexpected discovery when he spotted roughly 50 pounds of what appeared to be cocaine floating about five miles south of Islamorada in the Florida Keys. Rather than keep the haul, the unnamed mariner immediately notified authorities and brought the packages ashore for law enforcement to inspect—earning praise for his honesty.
Local deputies described the seized bundles as more than 20 brick-shaped packets wrapped in black plastic. The Franklin County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the narcotics were handed over to U.S. Customs and Border Protection for further analysis.
This stunning incident echoes several earlier cases this summer, when smaller caches—ranging from 1.3 kilograms to half a million dollars’ worth of cocaine—washed up on Florida beaches. Drug packages have varied in branding, some marked with recognizable logos like Yosemite Sam and others resembling alleged contraband floating ashore or near coastal communities.
Authorities note that floating drug packages are a known—and growing—phenomenon in the Florida Keys. Narcotics are often dumped at sea to evade detection or during failed smuggling runs, only to resurface later. Experts suggest ocean currents and storms frequently carry these dangerous packages to nearby coastlines.
The discovery drew attention both for the volume of contraband involved and the mariner’s decision to turn it in promptly. Investigators are now tracking the origin, intended destination, and any possible ties to larger trafficking routes tied to broader interdiction efforts in the region.
