Austin Flier Nabbed At Miami Airport With 75 Pounds Of Pot

Airport officers say a 23-year-old man from Austin never made it onto his overseas flight after they uncovered roughly 75 pounds of marijuana tucked into his checked luggage at Miami International Airport on Saturday. The bags, authorities say, held dozens of vacuum-sealed bundles that tested positive for marijuana and weighed about 34.01 kilograms. A judge later set bond at $20,000 and ordered the defendant to wear a GPS monitor if he posts bond.

How officials say it happened

According to investigators, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers were conducting routine outbound inspections at MIA when they flagged two checked bags linked to the traveler. Inside, officers reported finding 65 vacuum-sealed packages filled with a green, leafy substance that tested positive for marijuana, with a total listed weight of 34.01 kilograms, or about 74.98 pounds.

The arrest report identifies the suspect as Harrison O’Neill Tiernan, 23, of Austin. Officials say he was taken into custody at the airport before he could board a flight to London, then booked into jail on a cannabis trafficking charge, according to NBC6 South Florida.

Part of a recent run of outbound seizures

Authorities say this latest arrest is just one in a string of large outbound drug seizures at MIA this winter. A press release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office states that CBP officers seized more than 76 kilograms of hashish during outbound inspections at the airport in February, a case that led to federal indictments.

There have also been prior cases in which suitcases headed across the Atlantic did not just contain clothes. In one earlier incident, suitcases bound for London reportedly tested positive for dozens of pounds of marijuana, as detailed in suitcases bound for London. That report notes that outbound screenings and K-9 alerts have factored into several recent arrests.

Charges and what they carry

Tiernan was charged with cannabis trafficking and brought before a judge, who set bond at $20,000 and ordered GPS monitoring if he is released, according to NBC6 South Florida…

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