Man allegedly had meth-laced pills on Hawaii flight to Guam

A man arriving in Guam from Hawaii was stopped by Customs and Quarantine officers after pills in his possession tested positive for methamphetamine.
Mark Edwin Cacho Ocampo is charged with importation of a schedule II controlled substance as a first-degree felony, possession of a schedule II controlled substance on board an aircraft arriving in Guam, and possession of a schedule II controlled substance as a third-degree felony.
According to court documents, on April 21, around 5:53 p.m., Ocampo presented his electronic declaration form to officers, indicating he had prescription medication in his luggage.
During a bag inspection, officers discovered a pill packet labeled "Metilfenidato," a name that translates to methylphenidate in multiple languages, a schedule II controlled substance.
Ocampo told officers he had purchased the pills from a pharmacy in Mexico to treat Attention Deficit Disorder, a condition he later admitted he had never been diagnosed with.
The pills were subsequently tested and confirmed to contain methamphetamine.