Coast Guard seizes $33.9 million in cocaine in Easter Sunday bust off Ecuador

 April 10, 2026

The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Escanaba pulled more than 4,510 pounds of cocaine out of the Eastern Pacific Ocean on Easter Sunday, a single-patrol haul the Department of Homeland Security valued at $33.9 million. The seizure, part of the ongoing Operation Pacific Viper, marks another major interdiction in what has become the most aggressive maritime counter-narcotics campaign in recent memory.

DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin framed the bust as a direct extension of President Donald Trump's push to dismantle cartel revenue streams at sea. Documents obtained by the Daily Caller detail how the operation unfolded: a U.S. maritime patrol aircraft spotted a suspected narco-terrorist vessel dumping contraband overboard off the coast of Manta, Ecuador, and alerted the Escanaba.

The cutter scrambled its MH-65 Dolphin helicopter aircrew, which investigated and marked the location of the floating drugs. Then the Escanaba activated its over-the-horizon pursuit boat crew and relaunched the helicopter. The boat crew recovered the cocaine and transported it back to the cutter.

It was a textbook intercept, aircraft eyes in the sky, a helicopter crew closing the gap, and a fast boat pulling the product before the current carried it away. The kind of coordinated, multi-asset operation the Coast Guard has been running with increasing frequency since Pacific Viper launched last August.

Operation Pacific Viper's growing tally

The Escanaba's Easter haul adds to an already staggering total. Mullin stated that Operation Pacific Viper has now seized over 215,000 pounds of cocaine and led to the arrest of more than 160 suspected narco-traffickers since its inception.

Those numbers did not materialize overnight. The Coast Guard launched Pacific Viper in August 2025, surging cutters, aircraft, and specialized tactical teams into the Eastern Pacific to detect, interdict, and disrupt the flow of illicit narcotics headed toward the United States. Within weeks, the operation produced a headline-grabbing result.

That same month, the USCGC Hamilton conducted what DHS called the largest drug offload in Coast Guard history, more than 76,000 pounds of narcotics valued at $473 million. The sheer volume signaled that Pacific Viper was not a press-conference exercise. It was a sustained deployment with real teeth.

By November 2025, the USCGC Stone had set its own record: the largest amount of cocaine seized by a single cutter during a single patrol, offloading more than 49,000 pounds of illicit drugs worth an estimated $362 million. And by February, the broader operation had crossed the 200,000-pound mark. As we previously reported, that six-month pace was without modern precedent.

Mullin ties the bust to Trump's cartel strategy

Secretary Mullin left no ambiguity about whom he credits for the campaign's momentum. In a statement tied to the Escanaba seizure, Mullin said:

"Operation Pacific Viper plays a central part of President Trump's fight against the cartels at sea, cutting off their ability to make money by trafficking their poison into our country."

He continued, praising the personnel carrying out the mission:

"This operation has already seized over 215,000 pounds of cocaine and has arrested over 160 suspected narco-traffickers. The brave men and women of the Coast Guard are saving American lives by keeping these deadly drugs out of our communities and off our streets."

The language, "narco-terrorist vessel," "trafficking their poison", reflects the administration's deliberate framing of cartel activity as a national security threat, not merely a law-enforcement problem. That framing has driven a broader campaign that extends well beyond the Coast Guard. The U.S. military has struck suspected drug boats in regional waters, a sign of how far the operational posture has shifted.

What the numbers mean on the street

Put the seizure figures in plain terms. The 4,510 pounds of cocaine the Escanaba pulled from the water on Easter Sunday would, at wholesale, supply tens of thousands of individual transactions in American cities. At $33.9 million, DHS's valuation reflects bulk pricing; the street value, once cut and distributed, would be multiples higher.

Across the full span of Pacific Viper, the 215,000-plus pounds seized represent a direct hit to cartel cash flow. The Hamilton's $473 million offload and the Stone's $362 million haul alone account for more than $800 million in narcotics that never reached U.S. shores. Each pound pulled from the Pacific is a pound that doesn't kill an American.

The Coast Guard's maritime enforcement work runs parallel to other interdiction efforts along the nation's borders. Separately, the service has also been intercepting smuggling vessels off the Southern California coast, detaining illegal immigrants and disrupting human-trafficking routes.

Questions that remain

DHS and the Coast Guard have not disclosed whether the suspected narco-terrorist vessel spotted dumping contraband was itself boarded, detained, or intercepted. It is unclear how many people were aboard, whether any arrests were made in direct connection with the Escanaba's Easter Sunday seizure, or what happened to the vessel after it jettisoned its cargo.

Those gaps matter. Seizing product is one thing. Capturing the operators and building prosecutable cases against the networks behind them is another. The broader Pacific Viper numbers, 160 suspected traffickers arrested, suggest the operation is doing both. But the specifics of this particular bust remain thin on the human-intelligence side.

The wider cartel fight has also produced dramatic developments on land. Mexico's takedown of kingpin "El Mencho" with U.S. intelligence support showed that the pressure is being applied across multiple fronts, maritime, military, and cooperative, simultaneously.

A Coast Guard earning its keep

For years, critics across the political spectrum questioned whether the Coast Guard had the resources and the mandate to make a real dent in Pacific drug routes. The cartels adapted constantly, faster boats, semi-submersibles, disposable crews willing to dump product and scatter at the first sign of a cutter.

Pacific Viper's answer has been volume and persistence. Surge more assets. Fly more patrols. Put pursuit boats in the water faster than traffickers can dump and run. The Hamilton, the Stone, and now the Escanaba have each delivered results that suggest the strategy is working, not as a one-off bust for the cameras, but as a sustained campaign of attrition against cartel logistics.

The men and women aboard the Escanaba spent their Easter Sunday hauling bales of cocaine out of the ocean so that poison wouldn't reach American communities. That's the kind of work that rarely makes the front page but keeps the country safer every day.

When the government deploys its people with a clear mission and the will to back them up, results follow. The Coast Guard is proving it, 4,510 pounds at a time.

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