K-9 Officer Beny alerted officers to the odor of narcotics on the vehicle’s exterior during a traffic stop.
The following written content by Stephen Sorace
A police K-9 in California sniffed out an estimated $300,000 in suspected drug money during a traffic stop, authorities said Monday.
Beny, a K-9 officer with the California Highway Patrol (CHP), was called on to sniff a Chevy Tahoe on Dec. 21 in Merced, the department said in a statement. A CHP officer had pulled over the vehicle for tailgating and noticed several things that led to suspicions of criminal activity.
Beny sniffed the vehicle’s exterior and gave a positive alert to the odor of narcotics, the CHP said.
Officers then searched the vehicle and found a suitcase and backpack filled with a large amount of cash, the statement said. Investigators believe the money came from the sale of drugs.
While an official count is pending, officers estimated the cash amounted to around $300,000.
Officers seized the money and the driver was arrested. A charge of possessing over $100,000 of money related to drug sales was pending, the department said.
The incident was one of several high-profile busts Beny and the CHP made this month.
On Dec. 11, Beny busted a driver who was found with two suitcases and a black briefcase filled with $1,017,750 in cash, the department said. Investigators believed the money also came from drug sales. Read more from Fox News.
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