U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers at the Laredo Port of Entry just stopped a significant shipment of firearms, magazines, and ammunition that was headed into Mexico.
On December 2, CBP officers assigned to the Juarez-Lincoln Bridge selected a 2025 Toyota Tacoma pickup truck and utility trailer for inspection as it prepared to cross into Mexico. What they found hidden inside revealed another chapter in the ongoing fight against weapons smuggling across the Texas border.
What They Found
Concealed within commodities inside the trailer, officers discovered:
- 11 handguns
- 10 magazines
- 1 pistol grip
- 21 rounds of ammunition in varying calibers
All of it was hidden. All of it was headed south. All of it was part of a much larger problem.
How They Caught It
The seizure wasn’t accidental. CBP officers followed protocol:
- Selected the vehicle for inspection during outbound operations
- Referred the vehicle and trailer for a nonintrusive inspection system scan
- Conducted a canine examination
- Performed a physical inspection
That’s when they found the weapons concealed among other cargo.
Laredo Port Director Alberto Flores said: “This significant outbound enforcement action reflects the dedication of our officers to upholding CBP’s border security mission and keeping our border communities safe.”
The Bigger Picture
This seizure is one example of a much larger problem: weapons trafficking to Mexico.
According to a 2023 Government Accounting Office report, Mexico relies heavily on U.S. authorities to disrupt the flow of firearms into the country. Between 2014 and 2018, roughly 70% of firearms seized in Mexico originated in the United States.
That’s a staggering number. Nearly seven out of ten guns recovered by Mexican authorities came from north of the border.
Why This Matters
Weapons flowing into Mexico don’t just disappear. They end up in the hands of:
- Drug trafficking organizations
- Cartels
- Criminals
- Gang members
These weapons are used to:
- Murder civilians
- Intimidate communities
- Conduct cartel wars
- Destabilize Mexican regions
When CBP stops weapons at the border, they’re not just preventing smuggling. They’re potentially preventing violence and death in Mexico and ultimately protecting border communities here in Texas.
It’s Not Just Laredo
This seizure at Laredo is part of a pattern. In October 2025, CBP officers at the Laredo Bridge 2 Port of Entry seized approximately 400 firearms—including rifles—high-capacity magazines, and thousands of rounds of ammunition hidden in fabricated trailer walls.
The sophistication of these smuggling attempts is increasing. Criminals are building fake compartments. They’re concealing weapons in multiple locations. They’re adapting to enforcement.
And CBP is catching them. But the volume suggests that some are getting through.
The Investigation
Homeland Security Investigations special agents have initiated a criminal investigation into this seizure. They’re working to determine:
- Who purchased the firearms?
- Where did they come from?
- Who was supposed to receive them in Mexico?
- Is this part of a larger smuggling network?
These investigations can take months or years. They often lead to larger busts as agents trace purchase records, shipment routes, and connections to organized crime.
What This Means for Border Security
One seizure of 11 guns might not seem like headline news compared to the 400-gun haul from October. But every single one matters. Every magazine matters. Every round matters.
Because these aren’t just numbers. These are weapons that won’t be used to kill someone. These are ammunition rounds that won’t be fired in anger. These are tools of violence that won’t reach cartel hands.
The Reality
Weapons smuggling across the Texas border is a persistent, growing problem. Cartels want these weapons. Mexican criminal organizations need them. And American traffickers are willing to provide them for profit.
CBP is on the front lines. Officers at Laredo, Del Rio, El Paso, and other ports are conducting thousands of inspections. Most find nothing. But the ones that find something—like this cache—can prevent violence and save lives.
The Bottom Line
Eleven handguns were stopped at the Laredo Port of Entry on December 2. They were hidden in a trailer. They were destined for Mexico. They were part of an organized smuggling operation.
Because CBP officers did their job, those weapons will never reach their intended destination. They will never be used to hurt anyone.
That’s what border security looks like. That’s what outbound enforcement means. And that’s why the work at the Texas-Mexico border matters every single day.


