Los Angeles Times

Boat abandoned at O.C. beach

Panga-style vessel may have smuggled immigrants; four people found in search

- By Hannah Fry and Sonali Kohli hannah.fry@latimes.com sonali.kohli@latimes.com Fry writes for Times Community News.

The discovery of a pangastyle boat that may have been used to smuggle immigrants onto an Orange County beach triggered the temporary lockdown of an elementary school as authoritie­s searched the area for the vessel’s occupants Tuesday morning.

The boat came ashore on Moro Beach, in Crystal Cove State Park, about 6:25 a.m. with people aboard, said California State Parks spokesman Jorge Moreno.

El Morro Elementary School in Laguna Beach was placed on lockdown for about two hours, starting at 7:30 a.m., as Laguna Beach and Newport Beach police, along with U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents, combed the area around Crystal Cove.

At least four people were found by 7:40 a.m., authoritie­s said.

An Orange County Sheriff’s Department helicopter crew and a Laguna Beach police drone equipped with infrared technology helped with the search.

Where the vessel came from remains unclear.

During the search, Laguna Beach Unified School District officials tweeted that El Morro Elementary “is safe, but currently on lockdown.” The lockdown was lifted by 9:35 a.m.

This is the second time this month that a pangastyle boat was found beached in the Crystal Cove State Park area.

An abandoned boat that may have been used for human smuggling was discovered June 11 on the beach near Reef Point. No one was aboard when authoritie­s arrived. Authoritie­s believed about 12 people entered the country illegally on that boat.

Pangas are fishing boats, often powered by outboard motors, used to smuggle drugs and people into the country, said U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Theron Francisco.

They tend to be about 20 feet long, though the size and the number of people or items the vessel can hold vary, he said.

In the 2017 fiscal year, there were 129 “maritime events” along the California coast, most of which involved boats like these, though people also use jet skis and family boats to blend in more, Francisco said.

From October to May, there were 63 such events, he said.

In fiscal year 2017, U.S. Border Patrol apprehende­d 347 people trying to enter the country along the California coast by water, Francisco said. People apprehende­d may be deported to their country of origin or face additional charges in the U.S., he said. Francisco did not know how many were seeking asylum in the country.

“Most of the people being smuggled through the maritime scene are not the ones claiming asylum or refugee status,” Francisco said.

 ?? Laguna Beach Police Department ?? A DRONE image of a panga-style boat that washed ashore Tuesday at Crystal Cove State Park. A nearby school was placed on lockdown during a hunt for the vessel’s occupants. At least four people were found, authoritie­s say. A similar boat washed ashore...
Laguna Beach Police Department A DRONE image of a panga-style boat that washed ashore Tuesday at Crystal Cove State Park. A nearby school was placed on lockdown during a hunt for the vessel’s occupants. At least four people were found, authoritie­s say. A similar boat washed ashore...

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