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Tons of Marijuana Found In San Diego, Mexico Drug Tunnels

Tons Of Marijuana Found San Diego

By ELLIOT SPAGAT   12/ 1/11 06:51 AM ET   AP

SAN DIEGO -- The investigation into the largest marijuana bust at a cross-border tunnel followed a familiar timeline. It began in May and ended in November.

The secret passage linking warehouses in San Diego and Tijuana – equipped with a hydraulic lift, electric rail carts and a wooden staircase – highlights an emerging seasonal trend. For three years, authorities have found sophisticated tunnels on the U.S.-Mexico border shortly before the winter holidays in what officials speculate is an attempt by drug smugglers to take advantage of Mexico's fall marijuana harvest.

Two weeks ago, authorities seized 17 tons of marijuana in connection with a tunnel linking warehouses in San Diego and Tijuana. Authorities began investigating that passage in June, according to court filings.

Tuesday's find netted more than 32 tons of marijuana – nearly 17 tons at a warehouse in San Diego's Otay Mesa area, about 11 tons inside a truck in the Los Angeles area and 4 tons in Mexico. According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, it ranks as the second-largest pot bust in U.S. history if the drugs found on the Mexican side of the tunnel are counted and the third-largest without the Mexican stash.

As U.S. authorities heighten enforcement on land, tunnels have become an increasingly common way to smuggle enormous loads of marijuana. More than 70 passages have been found on the border since October 2008, surpassing the number of discoveries in the previous six years

Raids last November on two tunnels linking San Diego and Tijuana netted a combined 52 tons of marijuana on both sides of the border. In early December 2009, authorities found an incomplete tunnel that stretched nearly 900 feet into San Diego from Tijuana, equipped with an elevator at the Mexican entrance.

Authorities say central Mexico's marijuana harvest in early October presents drug cartels with a familiar challenge for any farmer: how to quickly get products to consumers.

"It's a significant amount of inventory that the cartels need to move and they need to move it in the most expeditious and efficient way," said Derek Benner, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's special agent in charge of investigations in San Diego. "It's like any other business. You've got a pile of inventory that you need to get moving and generate profits."

William Sherman, the DEA's acting special agent in charge in San Diego, said drug traffickers also may go on a pre-Christmas smuggling push to give themselves a "little bit of hiatus" over the holidays to visit family in Mexico. DEA wiretaps tend to go quiet during the holidays, he said.

It's unclear whether cartels are building the tunnels in time for the winter holidays or if that's when authorities just happen to find them.

Some U.S. authorities are inclined to think the cartels are timing construction for the fall harvest, based on their belief that this year's two major finds in San Diego and one last year in San Diego were discovered shortly after they were completed. Heightened activity around building and operating the tunnels drew suspicion and exposed smugglers to getting caught.

It takes roughly six months to a year to build a tunnel, authorities say. Workers use shovels and pickaxes to slowly dig through the soil, sleeping in the warehouse until the job is done. Sometimes they use pneumatic tools.

The tunnel discovered Tuesday was about 40 feet deep, 4 feet wide and 4 feet high. It featured a wooden staircase at the U.S. entrance, located inside a large, white building with a long line of trucking docks.

The Mexican warehouse was on the same block as a federal police office and sits next to a runway at Tijuana's main airport. It featured a hydraulic lift at the tunnel entrance that dropped about 30 feet. Its carpeted floors were found littered with garbage and dirty linen. The kitchen was stocked with tortillas and oranges, with a window painted black.

Six men were charged in federal courts in Southern California with conspiracy to distribute marijuana. No arrests were made in Mexico.

U.S. authorities linked last November's find to Mexico's Sinaloa cartel, led by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, that country's most-wanted drug lord. U.S. and Mexican authorities declined to link Tuesday's discovery to a specific cartel.

___

Associated Press writer Mariana Martinez contributed to this report from Tijuana, Mexico.

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SAN DIEGO -- The investigation into the largest marijuana bust at a cross-border tunnel followed a familiar timeline. It began in May and ended in November. The secret passage linking warehouses in S...
SAN DIEGO -- The investigation into the largest marijuana bust at a cross-border tunnel followed a familiar timeline. It began in May and ended in November. The secret passage linking warehouses in S...
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Dezembrr
Winging it...
01:53 AM on 12/03/2011
We save tons of money because we’re not wasting our resources on a failed prohibition policy.
We make tons of money because we have a growing, productive, and very lucrative industry that pays taxes!
What’s not to like?
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Fattonecat
whoops !!
06:44 PM on 12/02/2011
legalize it
04:11 PM on 12/02/2011
Trust me, NOBODY CARES.
06:31 PM on 12/11/2011
I don't appreciate anyone speaking for me Mr.Lucas Isreal. As an American tax payer, I resent ANY space being used in the U.S. for ANY illegal activities, and yes, that includes saturating this country with a product we not yet are ready to accept as a legal profitable product, nor any other illegal product that also makes it way illegally across our border. WE DO CARE about our country and feel it's been under attack and being saturated with illegal product, but when we are ready to legallize marijuana, we WILL be choosing American growers who WILL CONTRIBUTE to our economy, not take from it and run.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ickymcpooh
yes I get it my grammur is bad and I cant spell.I
12:55 PM on 12/02/2011
boooo no one cares about ur unjust laws USA land of the not so free.
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dbrett480
09:01 PM on 12/02/2011
Because cartels should be allowed to do whatever they want?
11:55 PM on 12/02/2011
No, it should be legalized so that the brutally violent cartels have no more reason to exist. Drug cartels are only around because we insist on keeping certain substances illegal, and so they step in and make a profit off selling those products on a violent black market. If you want the cartels to go away, then legalize the drugs they're selling and regulate the marijuana, mushrooms, etc. so as to create a safe, stable business out of it. We had prohibition of alcohol in the 1920's, and you see how that worked out with Al Capone and other famous mobsters and gangs. Today's prohibition is no different, and creates the same problems. We repealed the laws against alcohol, and you know what? I haven't seen a single business shot up by an angry mafia because they didn't pay protection money, and I haven't read any stores about innocent people getting shot in drive-by shootings by ethanol cartels.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ickymcpooh
yes I get it my grammur is bad and I cant spell.I
01:50 PM on 12/05/2011
The cartels would go the way of the bootleggers durring the last prohabition.
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Tracee Collins
APATHY = COMPLICITY
12:23 PM on 12/02/2011
WOW! Law enforcement at its FINEST, keeping us SAFE, from all manner of...... ...(?)
Meanwhile, thousands of REAL CRIMES were going on under thier noses, as they took thier cut.
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dbrett480
09:02 PM on 12/02/2011
This isn't grandma growing in the backyard. We are talking about Mexican drug cartels; groups that have made Mexico more deadly than Iraq and Afghanistan (and that's just the bodies that are found).
11:49 PM on 12/02/2011
You silly fool, the cartels only exist in their current violent state because there's no LEGAL means for them to enforce the legitimacy of their business, which means they will inevitably resort to violence as a way to resolve disputes and expand their turf! If you want to stop the violence then yes, LEGALIZE IT!
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
11:18 AM on 12/02/2011
Damn it! Now it's gonna be even MORE expensive!
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meanlady21
11:11 AM on 12/02/2011
This aint nothing new. Besides the cops will probably smoke and sell some of it.
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Curtis Scarbrough
10:01 AM on 12/02/2011
The nation is safe once again. We kept the pot out, so people who smoke pot can't go out and... um,..... and do whatever it is that pot smokers do to endanger the country.
In other news the stock prices of all makers of junk food fell 3 points.
11:12 AM on 12/02/2011
That was HILARIOUS! I blurted out laughing in my office and now, everyone is laughing :)
05:58 PM on 12/01/2011
Those expensive fences are really working.
09:49 AM on 12/02/2011
Well they did get the good stuff, chain link man.... strong stuff
04:24 PM on 12/01/2011
nearby residents could not be located for comments as they were all busy eating
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I AM BRO
Do you smell what the bro is cookin!!
11:18 AM on 12/02/2011
ahaah!!
02:39 PM on 12/01/2011
Who gets pot from Mexico? The good stuff comes from California.
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I AM BRO
Do you smell what the bro is cookin!!
11:17 AM on 12/02/2011
the better stuff comes from Boulder, Co. actually Colorado in general. :p
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Fattonecat
whoops !!
06:46 PM on 12/02/2011
Wa State indoor. :))
06:35 PM on 12/11/2011
I totally agree my friend !!