COLUMBUS, N.M. (AP) — A Mexican woman tried to smuggle liquid methamphetamine into the U.S. by hiding it inside Native American-style dreamcatchers when she crossed the border into New Mexico over the weekend, according to federal officials.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials said the woman was detained in Columbus, New Mexico when she crossed from Puerto Palomas, Mexico, and a drug-sniffing dog alerted customs officers.
Officers found six dreamcatchers in the woman’s car with rings made of rubber tubing filled with a liquid that tested positive for methamphetamine, the officials said.
Dreamcatchers, hoops of willow and feathers typically made by American Indians in the Great Plains, are intended to protect sleepers from bad dreams.
The woman, from Nuevo Casas Grandes in Mexico’s Chihuahua state, was handed over to Department of Homeland Security agents. Her name was not released.
Officials said she was traveling with her eight-year-old and one-year-old daughters. The children were handed over by agents to a relative of the woman.
Robert Reza, director of the Columbus Port of Entry, said smugglers frequently conceal drugs in soft drink cans, framed artwork and other seemingly innocent items
- Posted December 23, 2016
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Officials: Native dreamcatchers used in meth smuggling bid
headlines Macomb
- Toasting three decades of success
- Local businesses receive $10,000 in grants courtesy of 2025 Shop Local Macomb campaign
- Conspiracy to commit first degree murder charge added to Dawn Huffman
- Scam alerts focus of Holiday Consumer Protection Campaign
- Nessel secures court victory for wind energy permitting
headlines National
- The business of successfully running an in-house department
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Justice Gorsuch writes children’s book about ‘Heroes of 1776’
- Companies use ‘deceitful tactics’ to market harmful ultra-processed products with ‘addictive nature,’ city’s suit alleges
- Lawyer accused of trying to poison her husband
- ‘Lawyers Gone Wild’? Filmmaker criticizes bar as he seeks ethics probe of serial killer’s daughter for alleged lie




