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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Tunnel Across Border No Shock To Drug Agents
Title:US CA: Tunnel Across Border No Shock To Drug Agents
Published On:2002-03-01
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-31 01:36:39
TUNNEL ACROSS BORDER NO SHOCK TO DRUG AGENTS

Border: Discovery Of The Route From Mexico To The U.S. Confirms Long-Held
Suspicions.

SAN DIEGO -- For years, American drug agents heard whispers about the
existence of one or more tunnels for ferrying drugs beneath the U.S.-Mexico
border in the remote, boulder-strewn reaches of eastern San Diego County.

This week, aided by leads from an earlier drug seizure, they found such a
passage: a tunnel the length of four football fields, complete with
electricity, ventilation pipes and rails for hauling carts of contraband
under the border fence in a rural stretch of eastern San Diego County. The
agents also reported finding 500 pounds of marijuana at the mouth of the
tunnel on the U.S. side of the border.

Authorities said Thursday that they think smugglers used the
1,200-foot-long subterranean route for three years or more, shuttling
perhaps tons of marijuana and cocaine to a house on a former pig ranch in
the community of Tierra del Sol, about 55 miles east of downtown San Diego.
Officials said there was no indication it was used to smuggle illegal
immigrants.

The discovery of the 4-by-4-foot tunnel on Wednesday added a strange
chapter to border lore and, officials said, could stand out as a major
law-enforcement coup. Though the passage is not the first to be unearthed
along the U.S.-Mexico border, officials said it was noteworthy for its
sophistication and for how long it had been in use.

"I think it's one of the most significant finds ever on the Southwest
border," said Errol J. Chavez, special agent in charge of the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration's office in San Diego.

Agents displayed aerial photographs of the U.S. property, a shaded
barn-style house where the tunnel ended beneath a lift-up staircase, 1,000
feet north of the border. The photographs also showed a single-story
tile-roofed home in Tecate, Mexico, that held the tunnel's opposite
opening, about 200 feet south of the fence.

The builders took great pains to disguise their project, hiding the U.S.
entrance beneath the false floor of a hidden safe and the Mexican opening
in a fireplace piled with ashes. The tunnel was lined most of the way with
wood paneling and lighted by electricity. Plastic pipe carried fresh air to
the deepest part of the tunnel, 35 feet below the surface.

Smugglers apparently used rail carts to move their cargo and may have done
so recently. Chavez said the 500-pound marijuana stash appeared fresh.

"[The tunnel] was very sophisticated," Chavez said during a news conference
at the DEA office in San Diego. "It was very secure and obviously used for
a long time."

Chavez said that no arrests were made on the U.S. side, but that some could
come soon. He said agents, who continued to search the property, were
seeking to determine the identity of a man who leased the house from the
owners, who were believed to be unaware of the smuggling enterprise. Three
people initially detained on the Mexican side were also thought to be
innocent of smuggling.

Chavez said the smugglers probably built the tunnel after a 10-foot border
fence went up in 1995 as part of the U.S. government's border crackdown
known as Operation Gatekeeper. The remote area was long known as a
smuggling haven. Officials suspect that the operators paid a toll to the
Arellano Felix drug cartel, based in Tijuana, for permission to move drugs
through the gang's turf.

The drug organization has been the target of U.S. and Mexican authorities
for years. Ramon Arellano Felix is on the FBI's list of most-wanted
fugitives, and his brother Benjamin also is sought on U.S. charges. U.S.
and Mexican officials are investigating whether Ramon, considered the
gang's top enforcer, was killed in a shootout in Mazatlan last month.

Tunnels have been a staple of border smugglers over the years. A tunnel
estimated to have cost $1 million to build was used to smuggle cocaine from
Agua Prieta, Mexico, to Douglas, Ariz. Discovered in 1990, the tunnel was
elaborately camouflaged on the Mexican side to look like a game room with a
hydraulic lift that hoisted a pool table and concrete slab that concealed
the southern entrance. The electrically lighted tunnel was 273 feet long,
lined in concrete and had sump pumps to prevent flooding.

An unfinished quarter-mile tunnel built by drug kingpin Joaquin "Chapo"
Guzman was discovered near the Otay Mesa port of entry in San Diego in
1993. That tunnel made headlines again in 1998 when Border Patrol officials
suspected it had been reopened to smuggle undocumented immigrants onto U.S.
soil. The mystery of its reopening was never solved conclusively, but the
tunnel was sealed.

Last year, customs agents found a tunnel beneath the border leading to an
unoccupied house in Nogales, Ariz. Tunnels had been discovered there
previously, making use of a system of drainage ditches that crossed the
border there.

Chavez said the discovery of the Tierra del Sol tunnel came during an
unrelated investigation stemming from a big drug seizure in San Diego six
months ago. He said it confirmed persistent reports of tunnels and may hint
at others yet undetected.

"There have been numerous rumors about tunnels throughout Southern
California," Chavez said. "We still hear rumors that there are more tunnels
out there. We make every attempt to locate the tunnels.

"But because of how difficult it is to find tunnels underground, the
technology that is required, the expense to locate them, it has been
extremely difficult."
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