Albuquerque Journal

One dead, dozens of migrants detained

Group swam around barrier

- BY PAULINA VILLEGAS

A woman died, and 36 people were detained after they tried to swim around a metal border fence that stretches into the Pacific Ocean and separates Mexico and the United States, authoritie­s said Saturday.

The woman was part of a group of about 70 migrants attempting to enter the United States late Friday night by swimming from Tijuana, Mexico, around the border barrier and into San Diego, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said in a statement.

The steel fence, topped in some places by concertina wire, plunges about 300 feet into the ocean and is heavily monitored, making it one of the most difficult places for people to cross along the 1,900-mile border dividing the two nations.

Border Patrol agents have reported a recent increase in the number of migrants trying to reach California’s coast, often aboard overcrowde­d, small fishing boats known as pangas led by migrant smugglers, which has prompted CBP to expand patrolling operations across 114 coastal border miles.

The rise in the number of migrants taking to the sea, prompted by a mix of factors including financial devastatio­n caused by the pandemic across the hemisphere, highlights the greater dangers they are willing to face to reach the United States.

U.S. authoritie­s acknowledg­ed the phenomenon in August, when CBP reported record levels of maritime smuggling events in California’s Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties, resulting in the detention of 90 undocument­ed migrants.

“Smuggling along the California coastline is inherently dangerous and criminal organizati­ons are not concerned with public safety,” officials noted in a news release. “They see migrants and narcotics as simply cargo.”

Border Patrol agents responded to reports of a group attempting to reach the San Diego beach about 11:30 p.m. Friday. When they reached the area, they found an unresponsi­ve woman.

They tried to resuscitat­e her while requesting more assistance from San Diego Fire-Rescue Department firefighte­rs and lifeguards. The woman was declared dead at about 12:30 a.m., authoritie­s said.

Border Patrol, the U.S. Coast Guard, and authoritie­s from state and local agencies continued to search the area and took into custody 36 Mexican citizens — 25 men and 11 women — who had swam around the border barrier.

The Coast Guard, which dispatched two cutters and a search helicopter, rescued 13 of those migrants.

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