FBI & ICE Raid Los Angeles — 3.9 Ton Meth Pipeline CRUSHED + 69 Arrests in 1-Minute Breakdown.lh

Well, tonight we’re getting our first look at new video from a massive weekend raid near San Pedro and Bass.
An investigation continues in Brentwood after FBI agents raided a home.
Following the shooting last night involving the ICE agent, the Hawthorne neighborhood was filled with people, you saw some of that, opposing ICE.
4:17 a.m.
downtown Los Angeles.
The air is thick with coastal fog rolling in off the Pacific and the streets are dead silent except for the hum of distant freeway traffic.
But beneath that silence, over 200 federal agents are moving into position.
FBI, ICE, DEA, SWAT teams in full tactical gear.
Blackhawk helicopters circling overhead with thermal imaging locked on six target locations spread across the city.
This isn’t a single raid.
It’s a synchronized strike designed to collapse an entire operation in under 90 seconds.

The targets, a luxury import warehouse in Vernon, a trucking dispatch center in Commerce, three residential stash houses in East LA, and a private logistics office near the Port of Long Beach.
At exactly 4:19 a.m., breaching charges blow the reinforced steel doors off their hinges.
Flashbangs detonate like lightning inside darkened rooms.
Agents in black body armor pour through the smoke, weapons raised, voices shouting federal commands that echo off concrete walls.
Inside the Vernon warehouse, they find 28 industrial pallets, stacked floor to ceiling with shrink wrapped packages labeled as organic avocado pulp and ceramic tile adhesive.
But when agents slice open the first pallet, white crystalline powder spills onto the floor like broken glass.
Methamphetamine, pure industrial-grade, packaged for cross-country distribution.
In the Commerce Trucking Center, suspects are scrambling, trying to delete hard drives and stuff duffel bags full of cash into ventilation shafts.
They don’t make it 10 ft.
ICE agents tackle them to the ground, zip tie their wrists, and drag them into the flood lights outside.
By 4:47 a.m., agents have seized 2.
1 tons of methamphetamine, $940,000 in cash, 17 handguns, four assault rifles, and six encrypted laptops still warm from use.
But it’s what they find in the back office of the Long Beach logistics firm that changes everything.

A locked server room, climate controlled, biometric access only.
And inside, a digital nerve center running 24/7, controlling shipment schedules, port entry codes, and delivery routes across 11 western states.
This wasn’t a drug operation.
It was a supply chain empire.
6:30 a.m.
FBI Cyber Forensics Division, Federal Building, Los Angeles.
Analysts are cracking open those encrypted laptops, and within minutes, the first file opens.
It’s a master logistics diagram.
Code name Operation Iron Vein.
The screen lights up with a spiderweb of routes, shell companies, dummy corporations, and offshore accounts stretching from Guadalajara to Vancouver.
At the center of it all is one name, Raphael Navaro.
Known in cartel communications as El Architectto, the architect.
And the more they dig, the clearer it becomes.
Navaro wasn’t just a trafficker.
He was a systems designer.

He had built a hidden infrastructure that piggybacked on legitimate commerce using real shipping companies, real trucking contractors, and real warehouse facilities to move methamphetamine in volumes that federal agents didn’t think were physically possible without detection.
The network included 12 front companies, fake green logistics firms, sham agricultural exporters, ghost freight brokerages.
Every single one was designed to look clean on paper with business licenses, tax filings, employee rosters, and corporate addresses that checked out when inspected.
But underneath, every truck route, every warehouse bay, every shipping manifest had been engineered to move narcotics.
Investigators trace the money.
It flows through layered offshore accounts in Panama, the Cayman Islands, and Cyprus.
Transfers disguised as consulting fees, equipment leases, and software licensing agreements.
The funds cycle back into California through real estate purchases, car dealerships, and investment portfolios held by silent partners who had no idea their names were being used.
And then comes the most chilling discovery.
Navaro had digital access to port scheduling systems, not hacked, authorized.
Through a network of compromised logistics coordinators and bribed port security supervisors, he could see exactly when inspections were scheduled, which container lines were flagged for review, and which routes were considered low priority by customs enforcement.
He wasn’t smuggling around the system.
He had rewritten the system to let him through.
One analyst leans back in her chair and says it out loud.
This isn’t trafficking.
This is infrastructure treason.
7:40 a.m.
Joint Federal Command Center, downtown Los Angeles.
A massive digital map covers the wall, and it’s pulsing with over 50 red markers spread across Los Angeles County, Orange County, Riverside, and San Bernardino.
Each marker represents a location tied to Navaro’s network, stash houses, distribution hubs, cartel safe houses, corrupt logistics nodes, and money laundering fronts.
The operation commander steps forward and gives the order.
Deploy all units.
We’re taking down the entire network.
Today, over 1,000 federal agents mobilize across Southern California.
FBI tactical teams, ICE enforcement divisions, DEA strike units, SWAT teams backed by armored vehicles and air support.
Blackhawk helicopters sweep low over the San Gabriel Valley.
Unmarked convoys roll through the Inland Empire warehouse corridor.
This is the largest coordinated drug enforcement operation in California history.
And it’s happening all at once.
In Fontana, agents breach a massive industrial warehouse disguised as a furniture storage facility.
Inside, they find 1.
8 tons of methamphetamine stored in false bottom shipping crates labeled as office chairs and dining tables.
In Santa Ana, a luxury home in a gated community is raided at dawn.
The owner, a man in his 50s wearing silk pajamas, is arrested on his own driveway while trying to flee in a Bentley.
Agents find encrypted phones, ledgers, and $300,000 hidden inside a false wall behind his home theater.
In Riverside, a convoy of semi-trucks is stopped on Interstate 10 by ICE agents using mobile X-ray scanners.
Two of the trucks are carrying legitimate cargo.
The third is loaded with methamphetamine hidden inside welded steel compartments beneath the trailer floor.
The driver is pulled from the cab at gunpoint.
In Long Beach, federal agents storm a private shipping office near the port.
Inside, they arrest four logistics coordinators who had been altering manifests and routing high-risisk containers through expedited customs lanes.
Their computers contain schedules for over 200 shipments flagged for cartel use.
By 2 p.m., the numbers are staggering.
69 arrests, 3.9 tons of methamphetamine seized, $2.
7 million in cash recovered, 14 vehicles confiscated, 42 locations raided, and over 600 encrypted devices collected for forensic analysis.
The underworld didn’t just take a hit.
It was dismantled in a single day.
But the raids are only the beginning.
When federal investigators start analyzing the seized servers, phones, and financial records, they uncover something far more disturbing.
Navaro’s network had infiltrated local law enforcement and government logistics agencies, not at the street level, at the coordination level.
Internal emails revealed that cartel operatives had bribed three mid-level logistics supervisors at the Port of Long Beach, two senior dispatchers at private freight companies, and one assistant transportation planner inside a county logistics office.
These individuals weren’t moving drugs themselves.
They were providing access, schedules, routes, advance warnings.
One email chain shows a port supervisor receiving $15,000 per month to flag certain shipping containers for expedited processing and reduced inspection.
Another shows a freight dispatcher coordinating truck routes to avoid way stations during specific time windows.
And a county planner was paid to ensure that certain warehouse districts were classified as low priority enforcement zones during budget reviews.
This wasn’t just corruption.
It was operational collusion.
The system wasn’t broken.
It was being quietly rewritten.
And for every honest agent doing their job, there was someone else making sure the cartels stayed one step ahead.
Federal prosecutors begin building cases not just against the traffickers, but against the officials who enabled them.
Four arrests are made inside logistics agencies.
Badge suspensions.
Internal investigations launched.
And the message is clear.
If you sold access, you will be held accountable.
One federal agent, a 15-year veteran of ICE, stands in front of a seized warehouse and says it quietly.
We weren’t just fighting a cartel.
We were fighting our own infrastructure.
Zoom out.
Los Angeles isn’t the end point.
It’s the distribution heart.
Investigators trace Navaro’s routes across the western United States.