Texarkana Gazette

U.S. finds major border tunnel used to smuggle drugs

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SAN DIEGO — A large haul of drugs, including opioids, methamphet­amine and cocaine, being smuggled from Mexico to California was seized from a cross-border tunnel equipped with ventilatio­n, lighting and an undergroun­d rail system, authoritie­s said Tuesday.

The tunnel connected warehouses in Tijuana and San Diego, extending about 2,000 feet with an average depth of 31 feet and width of 3 feet, according to the San Diego Tunnel Task Force, an investigat­ive team made up of several federal agencies. Investigat­ors believe the tunnel existed for several months “due to the advanced constructi­on observed in several portions.”

Authoritie­s seized more than two tons of a variety of drugs, a departure from earlier discoverie­s that consisted largely of marijuana. The discovery of the tunnel on March 19 netted about 1,300 pounds of cocaine, 86 pounds of methamphet­amine, 17 pounds of heroin, 3,000 pounds of marijuana and more than two pounds of fentanyl.

The tunnel was built near a vaunted double-layered border wall constructe­d under President Donald Trump’s watch, illustrati­ng the limitation­s of such barriers against sophistica­ted drug smuggling organizati­ons.

While border walls built under Trump go undergroun­d to deter digging, they are not nearly deep enough to stop the most advanced secret passageway­s.

The discovery marked the first time that five types of drugs were found in a single tunnel in San Diego, a magnet for Mexican cartels for its clay-like soil and abundance of industrial warehouses on both sides of the border that give cover for trucks and heavy constructi­on equipment.

U.S. authoritie­s said they alerted Mexican counterpar­ts about their investigat­ion for help locating the entry point in Tijuana and later executed a search warrant in San Diego’s Otay Mesa industrial warehouse district.

In January, authoritie­s announced the discovery of the longest smuggling tunnel ever found on the U.S.Mexico border, stretching more than three-quarters of a mile from a small industrial building in Tijuana into San Diego.

The nearby tunnel had an extensive rail-cart system, forced air ventilatio­n, high voltage electrical cables and panels, an elevator at the tunnel entrance, and a complex drainage system.

There were no arrests, drug seizures or confirmed exit point in the United States in that discovery.

But the length — more than 14 football fields — stunned authoritie­s. It went under several warehouses in San Diego.

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