The cash was discovered on April 30 after Nitro, a three-year-old chocolate Labrador retriever trained to detect money, firearms and ammunition, alerted officers during an inspection.
The traveler informed the officers that he was carrying $10,000 after they informed him of federal currency reporting regulations. Officers searched the passenger’s carry-on bag and discovered more than $44,000 in various packets. The funds were confiscated. Before releasing the individual, the officers gave him back $240.
Travelers are allowed to carry any amount of money, but they are required to notify the U.S. Treasury of any sums exceeding $10,000, according to CBP.
“This traveler concealed currency in multiple locations for the purpose of evading federal currency reporting laws, but no amount of concealment can hide bulk currency from Customs and Border Protection officers and especially from CBP canine Nitro,” said Acting Area Port Director Elliott Ortiz, CBP’s Area Port of Philadelphia.
Every day on the country’s borders, CBP officers and agents confiscated approximately $180,000 in illicit or unreported currency in 2025.
Following President Donald Trump’s strong immigration enforcement, U.S. Customs and Border Protection has become notably more stringent at borders. Due to their violations of federal policy and border regulations, numerous foreign visitors have been refused entrance into the United States.
Even Canadians who used to find cross-border travel easy have encountered challenges, and some have even been refused entry into the United States of America.
ENigeria Newspaper recalls that cases particularly peculiar to Canadians. One of those is that how 15 CBP inspectors unintentionally encircled a Canadian traveler’s car at the Ambassador Bridge at the Windsor-Detroit border crossing in November due to a name confusion. Another Canadian had a similar situation in April when, despite having impeccable records, his car was surrounded by six CBP inspectors after he misrepresented how frequently he traveled to the United States.












