Drug tunnels from US to Mexico

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by Bud Head, Mar 2, 2002.

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    Billions in drugs moved via tunnel



    Lucrative drug-smuggling mechanism discovered
    U.S. federal agents show a tunnel discovered leading across the border with Mexico. Not only was it used for smuggling, they say, but may also have been rented out by drug lords. NBC's George Lewis reports.


    By Kevin Sullivan
    THE WASHINGTON POST
    TIERRA DEL SOL, Calif., Feb. 28 — Down the dust-blown driveway, past a chain-link fence and the Keep Out sign, past the beefy Rottweiler and the tire swing, in a closet under the staircase in a little two-story bungalow, Mexico’s most violent drug lords kept a secret at Johnson’s pig farm.



















    ‘It’s one of the most significant finds ever along the southwestern border.’
    — ERROL J. CHAVEZ
    special agent WHEN U.S. DRUG AGENTS busted into the closet on Wednesday, they found a large safe. They opened it and found nothing. Then they spotted the false floor. And when they pried it up, they found the entrance to a 1,200-foot tunnel - complete with electric lights, ventilation ducts and wooden walls - that ended in a fireplace in a house just beyond the metal wall that separates the United States from Mexico.
    Investigators are calling the tunnel in this remote section of rocky border scrubland, 70 miles east of San Diego near a small town called Tecate, one of most lucrative drug-smuggling mechanisms ever discovered along the U.S.-Mexico frontier.
    “It’s one of the most significant finds ever along the southwestern border,” said Errol J. Chavez, special agent in charge of the San Diego office of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. “They used this tunnel to smuggle billions of dollars worth of cocaine, marijuana and other drugs into the United States for several years.”
    Chavez, speaking to reporters in San Diego, said investigators believe the tunnel was built at least two or three years ago by the notorious Tijuana cartel, headed by several brothers in the Arellano Felix family. He said the Arellano Felixes moved tons of drugs in carts that rolled on railroad-style tracks through the tunnel, which is about 20 feet below ground.





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    The drugs were then likely loaded into pickups and other small trucks, which were used to deliver the drugs to Los Angeles and beyond.
    Chavez said investigators have learned that the Arellano Felixes charged other smuggling rings a fee to use the tunnel. He said that the tunnel seems to have been used exclusively for drugs and that there was no evidence that illegal immigrants were also moved through it.
    The tunnel, which is four feet square, offers further evidence of the difficulty of sealing the 2,000-mile border despite efforts to cut off drug smuggling and illegal immigration. Since Sept. 11, border security has been sharply increased and drug seizures are way up. But Vincent E. Bond, a spokesman for the U.S. Customs Service in San Diego, said the tunnel shows that when one route is closed to smugglers, they find a new one.
    The discovery came just days before a visit to Mexico by Tom Ridge, the U.S. director of homeland security, who will discuss border security with top Mexican officials.

    A HISTORY OF TUNNELS
    Tunnels are nothing new along the border. Several have been discovered since 1990. The largest one, found in 1993, stretched about 1,452 feet under the border at Tijuana, Mexico. That tunnel was never used because it was discovered just before it was completed. Chavez said it belonged to drug lord Joaquin Guzman, known as “El Chapo,” who tried to keep the tunnel secret by murdering the workers who dug it.
    The discovery of the tunnel here, which Chavez said would be destroyed, is another in a series of blows for the Arellano Felixes.
    U.S. officials recently froze many of the Felixes’ known assets in the United States and banned U.S. citizens from spending money at hotels, pharmacies and other Mexican businesses controlled by the cartel. Then, earlier this month, Mexican police may have killed Ramon Arellano Felix, the cartel’s most ruthless enforcer and a figure on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted list. U.S. forensic scientists are trying to determine if a man killed Feb. 10 in the Mexican resort city of Mazatlan was him.
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    No arrests have been made on the U.S. side in the tunnel case. Chavez said investigators from the DEA and the U.S. Customs Service, which assisted in Wednesday’s raid, are seeking several suspects, including a man who leased the house and was living there.
    Mexican police said they have detained for questioning two people who were found in the house at the Mexican end of the tunnel during the raid.

    DRUGS IN THE TUNNEL
    Chavez also said that about 550 pounds of freshly packed marijuana was found in the tunnel, suggesting that it had been in use until very recently. Here in Tierra del Sol, DEA officers continued to patrol the pig farm, where two small houses sit amid signs of normal life, including several dogs and picnic tables, an old slide and swing set, and rusting trucks.
    A small caretaker’s house had few furnishings beyond a couple of floral-print couches and a television. Just beyond the other small, barn-style bungalow sat Mexico, behind an eight-foot green metal fence that was erected in 1995 as part of a stepped-up security program known as Operation Gatekeeper.
    In the 1980s, the property was owned by Elbert Lushen Johnson until it was seized by federal authorities because of drug-smuggling activity and sold at auction. Chavez said Johnson is serving time in prison after being convicted of cocaine smuggling in Arkansas in 2000.
    The property’s current owners, Belinda and Raul Alvarado, bought the house in 1995. Chavez said they have been questioned by the DEA. He said authorities do not know the name of the man who leased the house from the Alvarados, who is being sought for questioning. Chavez said officials are unsure whether the Alvarados were aware of illegal activity on their property. They have not been charged with any crime.
    “Everybody around here knows that you don’t go down there, or the old man who lives there will come after you with his shotgun,” said a woman who said she has lived nearby for 10 years.
    She declined to give her name, saying that many of her neighbors were involved in drug smuggling and that her life “wouldn’t be worth a plugged nickel” if her name appeared in a newspaper. She said the man living in the house has been there since last year. She said she stopped in last fall to inquire about renting the property, but the man, a Mexican in his fifties, came out with his shotgun and told her to leave.
    The woman said that this secluded section of the border, about eight miles from the nearest main road, is used by Mexicans sneaking into the United States illegally. She said they sometimes travel in pickups or larger flatbed trucks, which she said she suspects are used mainly for drugs.

    © 2002 The Washington Post Company





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  2. I always thought about digging a tunnel like that, but didnt think it was feasible...guess it is...
     
  3. Remember the Viet Nam war when the North Vietnamese were digging tunnels to avoid the U.S. bombs? Well, the stupid U.S. Government still doesn't understand that they are in another war they have no chance in winning. Too bad these tunnel diggers can't be like the C.I.A. and import any substance they wish into this country with no fear of arrest. The real sad part is the prohibitionists is they continue to wage war on the very people who pay their salaries. What a waste of time and effort. All because a small segment of the population wants to enjoy themselves. I continue to support the Libertarian Party because they stand against prohibition in all forms. Let's go back to the freedoms we once enjoyed before these corrupt liars gained control of our government.
     
  4. I used to study about this, i'm sure theres a fuck load of tunnels that the DEA hasn't found yet too. I bet, if you made a tunnel from Canada to the US nobody would ever think about it to even try to find it. Theres a lot dope in Cananda, i'm digging a tunnel someday :)
     
  5. Did you want some help?
     
  6. I think we need to dig a tunnel for all the anti-marijuanna people with no knowledge of the herb. Then just close both ends when there in the middle.

    The truth is the knowledge that most people miss!
     
  7. I heard about this on the news...reminded me of Traffic.

    While you guys are at it you should dig a hole to China too! I always wondered if people would float in the center of the earth...might be too hot though.

    Also in current events...Kobe Bryant and Reggie Miller got into a fight. Both were suspended and fined.

    NYC just found out that a Russian nuclear bomb was almost stolen by terrorists. It was intended to bomb the city. The U.S. government didn't tell the mayor or governor about this because they get pranks like this all the time now.
     
  8. Yah i just saw this on the news as well, looked like a real good thought out professional setup. Nice video footage of the setup as well.


    I tried dig a tunnel but just got a hole.


    ick
     
  9. i know i could do it, but i have a few smaller plans i gotta get to first. :)
     
  10. Yea ........I wanna dig a tunnel straight from Pittsburgh to Amsterdam. :).........Better get started :eek:
     
  11. find me a ride into Pittsburgh and i'll help ya do it
     
  12. Roach make sure it comes through Tennessee. I'll help dig the rest of the way!!
     
  13. wonder how many more tunnels are under teh borders?
     

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