A police in one Small city in Alabama Detached illegal alien beings trade a large amount of cocaine after an officer stopped their car for a small violation.
Calera Police Chief David Hyche said that a patrol officer stopped a vehicle last week that traveled through the city because he had no tag. During the stop, Hyche said “likely cause for a search was clear”, which ultimately led to the discovery of 46 pounds of cocaine.
He said that the monetary value of the medicines will be determined after research into domestic safety has been done to investigate what has been taken.
The driver and the passenger, both men who come from Colombia and In the US illegal, were arrested and accused of cocaine on the market. Hyche said that one of the men in Atlanta is being sought for drug trafficking and not appearing.
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A police officer in Calera, Alabama, discovered 46 pounds of cocaine after performing a traffic stop for a small violation last week. (Calera Police Department)
“We initially did not know where these two came from, what they had in their car or their immigration status,” said Hyche. “The choices that these two men made led to this result.”
Hyche also said that the department works with federal agencies that pursue charges against men due to drugs and immigration violations.
The police believe that the men from California traveled to Miami and took an unusual route to prevent it typically Areas with drug ban.
“If they chose I-65 to prevent areas with heavy drug ban, they did not succeed,” said Hyche.

Calera police chief David Hyche believes that the two men traveled from California to Miami and took a strange route to prevent ‘drug ban areas’. (Raymond Boyd/Getty images)
Although the traffic has not become popular for small violations in recent years, Hyche argued for them, describing cases in which small traffic violations led to the saving of two children in danger.
“Many departments in the US have stopped stopping for small traffic violations. I have repeatedly pronounced these and other cases in which leaders of law enforcement apologize for maintaining the law or changing policy to sill critics,” Hyche said. “We do not make laws at law enforcement, we don’t maintain them.”
Said the police chief too criminal activity is encouraged by ‘weak and passive law enforcement’.
Hyche also compared the presence of today’s drugs with when he started his law enforcement career decades ago, stating that drugs such as cocaine and heroin are now cheap and easy to find because they pour over the border.

Calera Police Chief David Hyche said that drugs such as cocaine and heroin are cheap and are easily accessible because of the cartels they constantly bring across the border. (Istock)
“If we arrange the boundaries, the drugs would be expensive,” said Hyche. “The solution must be at the border. It can’t be here.”
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Shelby County District Attorney Matt Casey thanked the police for their great work that protects our community “and said that the two men are being saved on a bond of $ 10 million.
The police chief said he believes that this bust is the greatest in the history of Shelby County.