Los Angeles Times

The squeeze: Drug tunnels tighten

A surge in U. S. discoverie­s has cartels turning to smaller, less sophistica­ted passages.

- TATIANA SANCHEZ tatiana.sanchez@sduniontri­bune.com Sanchez writes for the San Diego- Union Tribune.

The illegal border tunnels are changing. They are significan­tly smaller and don’t boast the technologi­cal advances that officials saw just a few years ago.

William Sherman, special agent in charge for the U. S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion in San Diego, said the drug cartels have moved toward tunnels that require a smaller investment because of the high risk of being discovered.

“It saves them money. ... In at least the previous six tunnels, we’ve hit those before they got any narcotics through. So it was a tremendous amount of money and resources that they wasted when we took those off,” Sherman said. “I think ( they’re thinking) ‘ Hey, they’re finding these pretty quick, we maybe shouldn’t put as much money into them, even if it takes us more time to get the loads through.’ ”

David Shaw, special agent in charge for U. S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t’s Homeland Security Investigat­ions, said the cartels’ primary goal is simply to get their product to the United States as quickly as possible.

“It’s all about the investment,” he said. “So less investment, they get more bang for their buck.”

Also notable in the recent discoverie­s is the emergence of drug organizati­ons besides the dominant Sinaloa Cartel, among them the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generación.

Agents with Homeland Security Investigat­ions, in partnershi­p with the DEA and U. S. Customs and Bor- der Protection’s Border Patrol and Air and Marine Operations, formed the San Diego Tunnel Task Force in 2003.

They credit their success in recent years to more effective collaborat­ion among agencies. If Border Patrol agents see something suspicious while out on the field, for example, they often alert the task force, which launches an investigat­ion. They are in communicat­ion daily.

“The partnershi­p is really how we do it,” Shaw said. “We have all the different expertise, the different abilities, the different capabiliti­es. I think when we bring that together, that’s really our best fighting.”

Before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, agencies tasked with going after drug tunnels worked under separate department­s. Customs ( now known as Homeland Security Investigat­ions) worked under the Depart- ment of Treasury, while the Border Patrol and DEA worked under the Department of Justice.

Jurisdicti­ons weren’t clear and informatio­n wasn’t shared quickly, said Lauren Mack, a spokeswoma­n for U. S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

After Sept, 11, Border Patrol and HSI were moved under the newly created Department of Homeland Security. At the same time, heightened security at ports of entry pushed more drug smuggling undergroun­d.

Today, law enforcemen­t agents talk to business owners and community members along the border about what to do if they witness suspicious activity. Old- fashioned detective work has also bolstered the effectiven­ess of the task force. But as their approach becomes more effective, drug smugglers are changing their techniques.

Evolving tunnels

Among the tunnels uncovered in recent weeks was an extremely narrow, zigzagging pathway in Otay Mesa, described as one of the longest ever found along the California- Mexico border.

It was about a half mile long — or about nine football fields — but only 3 feet in diameter, which likely kept its costs down. Officials said it was small enough that the smugglers had difficulty maneuverin­g.

But unlike many of the other recently discovered tunnels, the Otay Pallet tunnel included railing and ventilatio­n systems, lighting and a large elevator, U. S. Atty. Laura Duffey said.

As part of the discovery, officials seized more than 14,000 pounds of marijuana and more than 2,000 pounds of cocaine, one of the largest seizures of cocaine on the California- Mexico land border.

It was among more than 75 cross- border tunnels that have been found in the last five years, mostly in California and Arizona, according to the U. S. attorney’s office. Though the cost to build and operate the tunnels varies, authoritie­s estimate most cost more than $ 1 million.

The cost of remediatio­n — rendering the tunnels unusable, often by filling them with concrete — has cost Customs and Border Protection an estimated $ 8.7 million since fiscal 2007, according to a 2015 report by the Department of Homeland Security.

In many ways, tunnels have been woven into the fabric of the war on drugs. The world’s most powerful drug kingpin, Joaquín Guzmán Loera of the Sinaloa Cartel, nicknamed “El Chapo,” famously escaped prison cells in Mexico twice through intricatel­y built tunnels, most recently in 2015

Authoritie­s believe the Sinaloa Cartel, regarded as the largest drug importer into the U. S., operates most of the tunnels, often hiring engineers to design them. They declined to name the organizati­ons connected to specific tunnels they’ve uncovered. In some instances, organizati­ons that aren’t linked to particular cartels have built a tunnel and then rented or sold it, making it difficult for officials to determine which cartel is involved.

Ev Meade, director of the Trans- Border Institute at the University of San Diego, said the region is a hot spot for drug smuggling.

“San Diego and parts of Arizona have seen this proliferat­ion of tunnels. That’s not true in other parts of the border. Some of it is geography, but it’s also the nature of the business. According to the DEA and most authoritie­s, we’re still in the general territory of the Sinaloa Cartel,” he said.

At the same time, Meade said larger cartels are breaking up into smaller and often more dangerous factions.

Perhaps a more alarming developmen­t from the dismantlin­g of the Otay Pallet tunnel on April 16 was the discovery that the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generación — known to authoritie­s as CJNG — is possibly active in the tunneling industry.

“We’re certainly seeing a shift in Tijuana. CJNG is getting a lot of momentum down there,” said Sherman of the DEA. “As far as tunnels go, this is the first time we have any indication that anybody other than Sinaloa was putting product through the tunnels.”

The cartel, led by Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera Cervantes, has made a quick ascent into Mexico’s narco- traffickin­g network, rivaling the power of Sinaloa.

Cervantes, a native of Michoacán and a Sinaloa alum, is believed to have been involved in drug traffickin­g activities since the 1990s, according to the U. S. Treasury Department.

The group rose to power about 2009 with the decline of the Valencia- Milenio cartel. Its growing presence in Tijuana has been quick — and bloody. Drug- related killings accounted for more than 80 percent of Tijuana’s 670 homicides in 2015, the highest number in five years, according to the Baja California Attorney General’s Office.

Edgardo Buscaglia, a senior research scholar in law and economics at Columbia Law School, said a diverse organized crime network in Mexico has resulted in a large variety of tunnels, each reflective of its own organizati­on.

“In that regard you will see many types of tunnels, some very sophistica­ted tunnels and others very basic,” he said. “The sophistica­tion of the tunnels ref lects the sophistica­tion of the organized crime network that traffics all their stuff up north.”

More tunnels

The Galvez tunnel, a now- defunct passageway between the U. S. and Mexico in Otay Mesa, was built to transport marijuana into a warehouse about 760 feet north of the border. But the tunnel was never used.

Authoritie­s discovered the passageway in 2009 as part of an investigat­ion in what they call “outreach,” or collaborat­ion with community members in the surroundin­g area who reported suspicious activity.

A series of four narrow ladders leads to a steep 85- foot decline, where the air is thick. The tunnel had a phone and railroad system, electrical wiring and ventilatio­n. About 6 feet high and 4 feet wide, it’s considered a more developed tunnel, about twice the height of those recently discovered.

It originated about 60 feet south of the border in a warehouse on Galvez Street, where it was covered by a restroom f loor controlled by a hydraulic lift.

Now, the Galvez tunnel is a training site for Border Patrol agents.

 ?? Peggy Peattie San Diego Union- Tribune ?? LANCE LENOIR of the Border Patrol’s Tunnel Rat team walks in the Galvez tunnel, a path between the U. S. and Mexico in Otay Mesa. It was built to transport marijuana into a warehouse but was never used.
Peggy Peattie San Diego Union- Tribune LANCE LENOIR of the Border Patrol’s Tunnel Rat team walks in the Galvez tunnel, a path between the U. S. and Mexico in Otay Mesa. It was built to transport marijuana into a warehouse but was never used.

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