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US law enforcement raids the offices of Houston fuel dealer Ikon Midstream

Two U.S. officials and a Mexican official said that U.S. authorities raided Ikon Midstream's offices in Houston, Texas, to investigate fuel smuggling.

Two U.S.-based sources confirmed that the operation?in which law enforcers executed a federal warrant? took place this week at?Ikon Midstream’s Houston headquarters. One source said that the operation targeted documents and computers. The exact reason or materials seized could not be confirmed. The raid was not previously reported.

Joseph Slovacek confirmed to the company that "U.S. Customs and Border Protection executed a search warrant at Ikon. He stated that law enforcement cited previous reports about Ikon as the reason for their search.

Slovacek responded to a Thursday?request for comments by saying that the warrant was entirely a result of your article from October 2025 and your persistence in trying to get Ikon investigated.

He added that "No arrests have been made as Ikon has not committed any wrongdoing."

Rhett Kenagy, Ikon Midstream’s chairman and CEO, was not available for comment.

Requests for comments sent to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and Mexico's Presidency earlier Thursday were not responded to. The FBI declined comment.

Ikon Midstream's operations were described in a 2025 investigation into fuel smuggling into Mexico. The report documented, using tanker tracking data and trade records how a shipment from Ikon Midstream to Mexico in March 2025 aboard a tanker named Torm Agnes. According to three Mexican sources of security and a document from the government on security, the shipment ended up with Intanza - a Mexican firm suspected of being an alias for the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.

Intanza was unable to be contacted for comment. Intanza could not be reached for comment.

According to the U.S. Government, smuggled fuels and stolen crude oils have become Mexico's cartels' second largest source of revenue behind narcotics. The government has increased efforts to crackdown on the illicit trade along with its broader effort to combat drug gangs. In February 2025, the Trump administration designated CJNG a terrorist organization.

Reports from October 22 revealed that Mexican cartels make billions in revenue annually by allegedly smuggling gasoline primarily from the U.S. into Mexico. Some U.S. players were complicit, while others were unaware. Smugglers often falsify or complete import-export documentation for these transactions.

Mexican authorities say that the scheme is a tax avoidance: diesel, gasoline, and naphtha, are declared as lubricants in trade documents to avoid paying high import duties on these imported fuels. According to a calculation, the savings could be as high as half the value of a shipment. In the case the March 2025 Torm Agnes shipment the amount saved would be $7 million.

Torm, the Danish company that manages the vessel, told the media in September 2025 that Ikon Midstream had stopped doing business in April that year, "based on the information that has been revealed."

Mexico's government announced that, following the publication of "story" last year, it had expanded its investigations into suspected fuel-smuggling by unspecified officials and companies, including in three Mexican ports, where Ikon Midstream supplied petroleum products in 2025. This was according to a report published on a Senate's website in February.

Ikon Midstream has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. It filed for defamation in Texas state courts on?November 14, claiming that the news agency had made "categorically false" statements in the article about its business. Ikon Midstream stated in a?statement dated March 27 that it had "conducted business lawfully," and "we never falsified a U.S. or Mexican Customs document."

A spokeswoman for the company said that it stands by its reporting, and denies any attempt to have Ikon investigated by law enforcement.

(source: Reuters)