Police smashed a major drug ring after finding pills worth millions hidden inside cow manure. Officers grabbed six suspects during raids across two Malaysian towns last Friday. The gang had been selling dangerous drugs to kids and teens for more than two years. Detectives spent a whole year tracking the criminals before making their move.
The first arrest happened when cops stopped a car on a rural road. They found drugs inside the vehicle and searched the driver's house nearby. Behind his home sat a cattle shed with six cows where officers discovered 20 kilograms of pills buried under animal waste. The sneaky criminals thought nobody would look there for their stash.
Drug squad officers arrested five more people during follow-up raids around the area. One suspect was the wife of the first man they caught with drugs in his car. Police believe the gang made huge profits from selling pills to school students across three different states. The criminals washed their dirty money through fake businesses like restaurants and beauty salons.
Officers seized luxury cars, expensive jewelry, and designer handbags worth over one million dollars. The drug haul could have supplied nearly 180,000 people with illegal pills. Police charged all six suspects under tough drug laws that carry severe penalties. The gang used their farm as a storage center before shipping drugs to customers in major cities.
The first arrest happened when cops stopped a car on a rural road. They found drugs inside the vehicle and searched the driver's house nearby. Behind his home sat a cattle shed with six cows where officers discovered 20 kilograms of pills buried under animal waste. The sneaky criminals thought nobody would look there for their stash.
Drug squad officers arrested five more people during follow-up raids around the area. One suspect was the wife of the first man they caught with drugs in his car. Police believe the gang made huge profits from selling pills to school students across three different states. The criminals washed their dirty money through fake businesses like restaurants and beauty salons.
Officers seized luxury cars, expensive jewelry, and designer handbags worth over one million dollars. The drug haul could have supplied nearly 180,000 people with illegal pills. Police charged all six suspects under tough drug laws that carry severe penalties. The gang used their farm as a storage center before shipping drugs to customers in major cities.