Pine Valley, Calif. — Over the weekend, U.S. Border Patrol agents arrested a 42-year-old man for attempting to smuggle more than 10.5 pounds of crystal methamphetamine through a checkpoint inspection on Interstate 8 near Pine Valley.
On  Saturday at 1 a.m., agents encountered the man, a U.S. citizen and  resident of Los Angeles, as he arrived to the checkpoint driving a Ford  Mustang. During the inspection, agents became suspicious of the man’s  nervous actions, prompting them to direct the vehicle to a secondary  inspection. 
A Border Patrol K-9 team  conducted a cursory inspection of the vehicle, resulting in a positive  alert to the rear of the vehicle. Agents physically searched the trunk  of the vehicle and discovered grocery bags containing several cans of  vegetables. An inspection of the cans revealed anomalies in five of  them, which led agents to open those cans and discover bottles  containing crystal methamphetamine sealed inside.  
The suspected smuggler and the methamphetamine, which had a  total weight of 10.67 pounds, and an estimated street value of $192,060,  were turned over to the Drug Enforcement Administration.
Last month, Border Patrol agents at the San  Clemente checkpoint thwarted a marijuana smuggling attempt in which  sealed vegetable cans were also used. 
Through  coordinated enforcement operations, the U.S. Border Patrol maintains a  strong defense-in-depth enforcement posture along major routes of egress  from the border to our nation’s interior.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is the unified border  agency within the Department of Homeland Security charged with the  management, control and protection of our nation's borders at and  between the official ports of entry.  CBP is charged with keeping  terrorists and terrorist weapons out of the country while enforcing  hundreds of U.S. laws.
 

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