Lodi News-Sentinel

Maritime smuggling is not new, but attempts have surged

- Alex Riggins and Tammy Murga SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE

SAN DIEGO — Just after midnight one Friday in late October 2021, the captain of a fishing boat sailing nearly 100 miles off the San Diego coastline spotted a faint light in the distance. In what a Coast Guard pilot later described as a miracle, the captain had spotted the occupants of a disabled, overloaded fishing boat signaling for help.

The 25 migrants on board had been stranded at sea for three days in a boat meant to hold just a few people. All things considered, they were lucky — they had survived.

As maritime smuggling attempts along Southern California’s coastline have surged in recent years, so too have mishaps and deaths. Authoritie­s and experts say a number of forces have influenced both the rise in such incidents and the attention they have received.

Saturday night offered the latest and most lethal example of the dangers of such crossings, when at least eight people died after two suspected smuggling vessels capsized near Black’s Beach.

“This all points to how dangerous border crossings have become, especially maritime crossings,” said Pedro Rios, a human rights advocate and the director of the American Friends Service Committee’s U.S. Mexico/Border Program.

The 911 caller who alerted authoritie­s to the incident said there were somewhere between 16 and 23 people on board the two vessels. Authoritie­s didn’t find any survivors, though it was not yet clear Sunday if there were additional victims, or if the survivors fled before emergency crews arrived on the beach.

Either way, officials called it one of the deadliest — if not the deadliest — maritime incidents in San Diego history, and said it highlighte­d the dangers of such border-crossing attempts.

“Every time they get into a panga to come northbound, their lives are at risk,” Capt. James Spitler, commander of the Coast Guard’s San Diego sector, told reporters Sunday morning of the message officials hope to send to those considerin­g such crossings. He said at least 23 people have died since 2017 in maritime crossings, but added that “the real number of deaths in the California coastal region is unknown. Often these boats are overloaded (and) the maintenanc­e is poor.”

At least three migrants died last year off the San Diego County coast. A man and woman drowned in November when their panga overturned off Imperial Beach, and a man died and three others were injured in April when their panga overturned near Ocean Beach.

In 2021, at least four people died, all in the month of May. Early in the month a boat carrying at least 32 migrants crashed and broke up on a Point Loma reef. Three people died and the others suffered injuries. Later that month, one person died and at least eight others were hospitaliz­ed when a panga capsized off La Jolla.

A year prior, at least four people died in ocean crossing attempts. Two died in February when their vessel overturned off the coast of Imperial Beach, and two others died in August off Ocean Beach.

Federal authoritie­s have rescued, or intercepte­d and detained, hundreds of others during that span.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE ?? One person died and 10 others were rescued from a smuggling boat that eventually capsized off the San Diego coast at La Jolla in May 2021.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE One person died and 10 others were rescued from a smuggling boat that eventually capsized off the San Diego coast at La Jolla in May 2021.

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