The Sun (San Bernardino)

Big cross-border tunnel is found linking Tijuana, San Diego

- By Elliot Spagat

SAN DIEGO >> U.S. authoritie­s on Monday announced the discovery of a major drug smuggling tunnel on Mexico’s border, running the length of a football field on U.S. soil to a warehouse in an industrial area.

The secret passage from Tijuana to San Diego featured rail and ventilatio­n systems, electricit­y and reinforced walls, authoritie­s said. It was discovered near San Diego’s Otay Mesa border crossing in an area where more than a dozen other sophistica­ted tunnels have been found in the last two decades.

U.S. authoritie­s said it was unknown how long the tunnel had been operating and what amount of drugs, if any, got through undetected. They seized 1,762 pounds of cocaine, 165 pounds of meth and 3.5 pounds of heroin in connection with the investigat­ion.

Six people, ages 31 to 55, were charged with conspiring to distribute cocaine. All are Southern California residents.

The tunnel is in one of the most fortified stretches of the border, illustrati­ng the limitation­s of former President Donald Trump’s border wall. While considered effective against small, crudely built tunnels called “gopher holes,” walls are no match for more sophistica­ted passages that run deeper undergroun­d.

The latest passage, discovered Friday, ran onethird of a mile to Tijuana. It was 4 feet in diameter and about six stories deep.

The type of drugs seized may signal a shift from the multi-ton loads of marijuana that were often found in discoverie­s before California legalized pot for recreation­al use in 2019.

Hard drugs, like heroin, methamphet­amine and fentanyl, are typically smuggled through official border crossings from Mexico because their small size and lack of odor make them difficult to detect. But tunnels give smugglers an advantage of being able to carry huge loads at lightning speed.

The tunnel exited the United States in a nondescrip­t warehouse named “Amistad Park” on a street that is busy with large semitraile­rs during the day but quiet at night. On Monday, armed guards watched over a small shaft with a ladder that descended into the tunnel.

After staking out a home that was recently used to stash drugs, officials began making traffic stops of vehicles that had been there or at a warehouse near the border, turning up boxes full of cocaine, according to a federal criminal complaint filed in San Diego.

They raided the properties — finding no other drugs at the warehouse, but a tunnel opening carved into the cement floor, federal prosecutor­s said.

Authoritie­s have found about 15 sophistica­ted tunnels on California’s border with Mexico since 2006.

Many tunnels, including the one announced Monday, are in San Diego’s Otay Mesa industrial area, where clay-like soil is conducive to digging and warehouses provide cover.

The cross-border passages date back to the early 1990s and have been used primarily to smuggle multi-ton loads of marijuana. The U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion said in 2020 that they are generally found in California and Arizona and associated with Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.

Authoritie­s declined to link the latest tunnel to any specific cartel. They claimed victory despite not knowing how long it had been operating.

“There is no more light at the end of this narcotunne­l,” said Randy Grossman, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of California. “We will take down every subterrane­an smuggling route we find to keep illicit drugs from reaching our streets and destroying our families and communitie­s.”

By federal law, U.S. authoritie­s must fill the U.S. side of tunnels with concrete after they are discovered.

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