A freighter seized off the coast of
Washington state nearly four decades ago in one of the largest marijuana busts
in the region's history was moved to Seattle on Thursday and will eventually be
scrapped, local officials said.
The Helena Star was towed from Tacoma
to Seattle by state agencies and will be inspected and broken down over the
next week, said Bob Redling of Washington's Department of Natural Resources.
The drug smuggling ship made national
headlines when it was seized by the Coast Guard in 1978 with 37 tons of
marijuana on board. At the time, it was the biggest maritime pot bust in West
Coast history.
Helena Star's South American captain
and eight crew members were arrested, and the flagless ship, en route to
Canada, was docked in Seattle.
The vessel eventually made it to
auction and changed hands among private owners several times before being
purchased by a Tacoma man who docked the rusting, ageing structure in the
city's Hylebos Waterway, Redling said.
In 2013, the Helena Star sank, spilling
640 gallons of oil and diesel gasoline into the waterway and taking down
another vessel next to it. The owner of the ship, Stephen Mason, has been
charged with abandoning a vessel and polluting state waterways. He faces up to
a year in jail if convicted.
The ship must dry out and undergo
inspection before it is scrapped, Redling said. The sale of the scrap,
estimated to bring in about $1 million, was unlikely to cover the price tag of
recovery and demolition, he said.
Source:
reuters.
24 July 2014
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/24/us-usa-washington-ship-idUSKBN0FT2Z820140724
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