Story highlights

Drugs and a gun also found, documents show

"They're connecting the dots that we don't think connect," suspects' lawyer says

CNN  — 

Authorities found millions of dollars stashed inside buckets hidden in attic walls, along with drugs and a gun, during a search of a home in the Miami area.

Between $10 million and $20 million in cash was found after a search of a business and a home, according to arrest documents from the Miami-Dade Police Department.

Luis Hernandez-Gonzalez, 44, and his sister, Salma Gonzalez, 32, were arrested Wednesday in connection with a drug trafficking case, documents show.

Miami-Dade Police said Luis Hernandez-Gonzalez and his sister, Salma Gonzalez, are under arrest for drug trafficking, possession.

Steroids, gun

A search of the brother’s gardening equipment business Tuesday yielded $180,000 in cash and two types of marijuana labeled “Super Skunk” and “Chernobyl,” police said.

When authorities went to his home in Miami Lakes with a secondary search warrant, they found more money stashed in various locations, along with four types of anabolic steroids and a loaded TEC-9 pistol with an extended magazine, arrest documents said.

Miami-Dade Police say they recovered TEC-9 handgun in drug raid

Hidden room

Authorities said in a hidden room, accessible only through the attic, they found 24 five-gallon buckets with millions of dollars packed in them. They were hidden behind a dry wall.

Hernandez-Gonzalez is facing drug trafficking and money laundering charges. His sister, who was arrested at the business, is facing marijuana possession and trafficking charges.

The arrests are the culmination of an investigation that involved the Drug Enforcement Agency in Tennessee and Florida, according to arrest documents. Investigators say they used confidential sources, and planned drug buys and surveillance to make the arrests.

“There’s a presumption of innocence and at this point, they’re connecting the dots that we don’t think connect,” Frank Gaviria, an attorney for the suspects, told CNN affiliate WSVN.

Miami-Dade Police told the affiliate it’s the largest cash seizure in the department’s history.