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A giant marijuana bundle came flying over the U.S.-Mexico border

This giant bundle of marijuana was launched over the US-Mexico border Wednesday. US Customs and Border Protection / HO

PHOENIX – Border Patrol agents in southern Arizona have seized a nearly 100-pound (45-kilogram) bundle of marijuana after spotting it flying over the border fence.

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Surveillance video on Wednesday captured the large package launching through the air over the fence from Mexico to the U.S. Agents on the ground found a large, plastic-wrapped bundle worth about $48,000.

Spokeswoman Stephanie Dixon said drug smugglers are increasingly launching massive bundles of pot over the border fence, posing a danger to nearby residents and businesses because of their weight. She said she knew of one incident in which a bundle went through the roof of a dog house.

Dixon said she didn’t have handy the number of such cases over the last few years.

“Not only is it illegal activity but it’s extremely dangerous to the public,” she said.

It’s unclear what smugglers used to launch this particular package, but in the past they’ve used home-made catapults and air cannons.

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Sending a bundle that heavy over a fence that stands between 18 and 23 feet high (5 1/2 meters to 7 metres) would require a powerful launcher. Dixon said agents can sometimes hear the packages being launched.

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The area where the marijuana landed is near some businesses, but the Border Patrol hasn’t reported any damage from Wednesday’s incident nor have agents made any arrests.

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Dixon said she was unaware of an investigation by Mexican authorities into where the bundle may have come from on the Mexico side.

Last year, Mexican police in Agua Prieta, Mexico, which sits on the border with Douglas, found a stolen van that had been outfitted with a 10-foot (3-meter) air cannon to shoot projectiles into the United States.

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This Tuesday, Sept. 20, 2016, photo, shows the Arizona border with Mexico in Nogales, Ariz. Arizona voters will decided whether to legalize recreational marijuana in November, and law enforcement leaders say legalization will strengthen drug cartels at the border, allowing them to infiltrate the legal pot market and driving them to sell more hard drugs. Advocates of legalization say it will undercut the cartels by eliminating a key segment of their business. (AP Photo/Astrid Galvan)

Images provided by Mexican authorities showed the black van with hole cut in its roof and a cannon in the back that could fire projectiles. Authorities also said they found an air compressor apparently used to launch packages.

The Border Patrol has said in the past that the most common form of throwing bundles over the border fence involves softball-sized marijuana packages that sometimes land in residential backyards. Smugglers pay people on the U.S. to retrieve the packages, which are then sent to routes around the country.

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High-pressure air cannons can launch much heavier packages. Smugglers have also used trebuchets, a catapult-type launch that can be made out of wood.

Despite smugglers’ creative methods to cross drugs into the U.S., marijuana seizures have dropped significantly in the Southwest over the last several years.

Agents seized 2.5 million pounds (1.1 million kilograms) at the Southwest border in 2011. By last year, that number had dropped to 1.3 million pounds (590,000 kilograms).

The Tucson Sector, which covers most of Arizona, also saw a steep drop in pot seizures, from 1 million pounds (454,000 kilograms) in 2011 to 728,000 pounds (330,215 kilograms) last year.

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