The operation, on paper, appeared to be a typical government crackdown on drug traffickers.
In late 2024, more than two dozen masked officers descended on an alleged narcotics lab on the outskirts of San Pedro Sula, Honduras, where they found materials for processing cocaine and automatic weapons.
There was only one problem: The evidence, including the firearms and cocaine, seems to have disappeared from the public record.
That is according to a Honduran prosecutor specialising in cases of state corruption who spoke to Al Jazeera on condition of anonymity, for fear of professional reprisal.
The prosecutor believes there is a strong possibility the police may have kept the weapons and drugs to resell them on the black market.
Experts say questions of corruption and abuse have come to t