Pubdate: Sun, 09 Dec 2012
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2012 The New York Times Company
Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/help/lettertoeditor.html
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Ian Lovett

LAND ROUTES BLOCKED, SMUGGLING RISES SHARPLY ON CALIFORNIA COAST

LOS ANGELES - The small, open-hull fishing boats head north from Baja 
Mexico, traveling at night, their navigation lights off. It is an old 
smuggling route, popular with tequila runners during Prohibition in 
the 1920s and then little used for nearly a century. Enlarge This Image

But as a result of a security crackdown along the border with Mexico, 
the waters off Southern California have again been teeming with 
smugglers in the last few years, as drug cartels seek new avenues to 
move illicit cargo into the United States.

Last week the resurgence claimed its first American life when 
smugglers rammed a small Coast Guard vessel with their 30-foot 
fishing boat, killing a Guard member who was thrown overboard.

"There's been an uptick in smuggling at sea because we have been 
successful in making it difficult for smuggling organizations at the 
land border," said Claude Arnold, the special agent in charge for 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Los Angeles. "They're trying 
everything they can to get their products into the country."

Episodes involving smugglers off the California coast have increased 
fourfold since 2008, with more than 200 smuggling vessels spotted by 
American law enforcement agencies during the last fiscal year. 
Marijuana seizures from maritime smugglers, meanwhile, were up 
fourfold from just one year earlier. And some smugglers are also 
carrying human cargo, circumventing the security along the land 
border for those with the means to pay for it.

Federal officials said there was no way to know precisely how many 
smugglers had successfully reached California's shores, but they 
believe that "a larger share" of smugglers make it through. And the 
flow of drugs and people into the country from the sea has clearly 
undercut some of the progress the authorities have made in blocking 
off overland supply routes.

In just a few years, officials said, drug and human trafficking off 
the coast here has grown into an elaborate, highly lucrative and 
increasingly dangerous operation, as smugglers venture farther out to 
sea and farther north along the coast in search of safe places to 
deliver their cargo undetected.

Coast Guard officials said the death of Chief Petty Officer Terrell 
Horne, 34, was the first time a Coast Guard member had been killed by 
smugglers since prohibition. But as rare as it was, the deadly 
encounter early last Sunday near an island off Santa Barbara also 
demonstrated some of the bold tactics smugglers are using here, 
putting law enforcement at ever greater risk.

"As the ships are going further offshore and further north, we are 
dealing with larger boats and more horsepower," said Rear Adm. Karl 
L. Schultz, the Coast Guard commander in the region. "It does 
increase the challenge and the inherent danger out there to our folks 
on the water."

When the surge in maritime smuggling began here around 2009, Admiral 
Schultz said, smugglers mostly used small boats with single engines 
that delivered their payloads to sites in San Diego County, rarely 
traveling more than 50 miles north of the Mexican border.

As the government devoted more resources to curbing smuggling, 
however, the Sinaloa drug cartel, which officials say controls 
smuggling corridors on both land and sea, has adapted.

Coast Guard surveillance aircraft have detected smuggling vessels up 
to 100 miles offshore, Admiral Schultz said, and in the last two 
years, smugglers have been arrested along remote stretches of beach 
on California's Central Coast, more than 300 miles north of the border.

To make these longer journeys, smugglers have moved from cheap 
20-foot fishing vessels to boats that are often twice that size and 
sometimes equipped with multiple engines.

Other ships, like the one that rammed Chief Horne's boat, act as 
refueling vessels. The authorities in San Diego said last year that 
they had found a boat equipped with a GPS device, which led them to a 
cache of fuel drums tied to buoys 50 miles offshore.

This year, a 45-foot boat washed up near Santa Barbara, 100 miles up 
the coast from here. Sheriff Bill Brown of Santa Barbara County said 
it had four engines and could outrun all the boats in his 
department's fleet. He estimated that the boat cost at least $100,000 
and could have carried 10 tons of narcotics.

"They ended up just abandoning it," he said. "It shows the amount of 
money they are making bringing drugs up here."

One shipment of marijuana that Sheriff Brown's department intercepted 
on a state beach several months ago had an estimated street value of 
$4.2 million.

It is not only moving large shipments of drugs that is lucrative for 
the cartels, however. People trying to enter the country will pay up 
to $10,000 for passage on smuggling boats, a much steeper price than 
they pay to be brought across on land, said Mr. Arnold, the ICE official.

As the cat-and-mouse game between law enforcement and smugglers moves 
farther out to sea, however, it also becomes more dangerous - not 
only for the Coast Guard but also for the smugglers' human cargo.

At least six people are known to have died aboard smuggling vessels 
since 2008, according to United States Customs and Border Protection, 
all in episodes close to shore. Many more may have died out at sea if 
open-hulled smuggling boats, often packed with more than a dozen 
people, capsized or sank.

So many smuggling vessels have landed on the shores of Santa Barbara 
County that Sheriff Brown appealed for federal help this year. And 
federal authorities have begun to devote more resources toward 
combating maritime smuggling, not only in San Diego and Los Angeles, 
but farther up the coast.

Helicopters and planes watch from the air - it was a Coast Guard 
aircraft that spotted the smugglers before the deadly encounter last 
Sunday - while ships pursue smugglers farther and farther offshore. 
And the authorities have convened a series of task forces, bringing 
together local, state and federal agencies to fight maritime smuggling here.

"We have directed a lot of resources towards this because we 
recognize it as a huge potential security vulnerability," Mr. Arnold 
said. "Who's to say they wouldn't be willing to smuggle a terrorist 
into the county?"

Still, law enforcement agencies in California said they needed more resources.

David Myers, a commander with the San Diego County Sheriff's 
Department, said financing from a federal grant that had helped his 
department apprehend maritime smugglers had been cut every year since 
2009. And those shrinking finances must be shared with more and more counties.

"The ocean is wide open, but the key is they have to land somewhere," 
Commander Myers said. "It would be easy for us to deny them a place 
to land if we were ever able to apply the same resources to the coast 
as we have along the land."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom