Anonymous ID: d93810 Oct. 28, 2020, 11:08 p.m. No.3328   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3358

New border wall in San Diego forces smugglers out to sea, where federal agents wait

 

SAN DIEGO — Border Patrol agents who work in the Pacific Ocean off the southern coast of California saw a dramatic increase in the number of arrests made over the past 12 months, an indication that the addition of new border wall in the region since 2017 is prompting smugglers to find new ways to move people and drugs into the United States.

 

"Over the past year, within 2020, we’ve had a record number of marine interdictions, including pangas [small, fast boats], jet skis, swimmers, and paddle boaters,” Border Patrol San Diego Chief Patrol Agent Aaron Heitke told the Washington Examiner during a land and sea tour. “The wall structure itself is solidifying the land border, and it’s forcing the smugglers to come out into the maritime environment.”

 

Agents, using jet skis and boats to patrol the 20-mile stretch from Chula Vista at the border up past downtown San Diego, made 302 interdictions in fiscal 2020, which ran from Oct. 1, 2019, through Sept. 30, compared to 195 the previous year and 88 in 2015. One such incident resulted in the seizure of a small boat that was loaded with more than 3,000 pounds of methamphetamine.

 

Arrests of illegal immigrants and smugglers jumped 92% from 662 in 2019 to 1,271 in 2020. Comparatively, 219 people were arrested in 2015.

 

Border wall in this region stretches approximately 100 feet into the ocean, which prevents some unlawful entries, but cannot block people from jumping into the ocean and swimming around it or going the boating route. Smugglers will take off in boats from Tijuana and attempt to evade detection while entering U.S. waters, then order people on board to run ashore, where they can quickly blend in with the 3.3. million residents of San Diego County. Some smugglers will go 50 to 200 miles out into the ocean, then north, and finally back east to San Francisco or another Northern California town to try to avoid detection by federal agents and cameras that line the San Diego coast, Heitke said.

San Diego.png

Google Maps

Because Tijuana and San Diego are heavily populated, it is easier for smugglers to hide narcotics or migrants who have paid them to get smuggled into the U.S. and then rush them across the border, by land or sea, at a moment’s notice.

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/new-border-wall-in-san-diego-forces-smugglers-out-to-sea-where-federal-agents-wait

Anonymous ID: d93810 Oct. 28, 2020, 11:33 p.m. No.3351   🗄️.is đź”—kun

MEME Makers this is for you!

 

We have 6 days to go.

 

Do you have what it takes to join a Lit GOP Meme Making Chat?

 

Comment with your best work to be considered

 

https://twitter.com/MatthewFoldi/status/1321561308777586688?s=20

Anonymous ID: d93810 Oct. 28, 2020, 11:56 p.m. No.3370   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Jim Acosta really is mentally disabled…People need to get louder with CNN sucks chant…

 

https://twitter.com/Acosta/status/1321657153275326464?s=20