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US Coast Guard shoots out migrant boat engine in high speed chase
US Coast Guard shoots out migrant boat engine in high speed chase

Yahoo

time15-05-2025

  • Yahoo

US Coast Guard shoots out migrant boat engine in high speed chase

A San Diego-based Coast Guard crew on May 10 stopped a vessel smuggling illegal migrants by firing four shots into the boat's engine, putting an end to a dramatic chase. Coast Guard watchstanders initially kept the 18-foot cabin vessel under surveillance after it was spotted speeding northbound off Point Loma around 5:50 p.m., according to a service release. A Coast Guard response boat was dispatched to approach the vessel. However, as personnel attempted to establish contact, the boat accelerated in an attempt to evade. Giving pursuit, the Coast Guard issued numerous verbal commands via radio and also fired warning shots. Crew members then fired disabling shots at the boat's engine, as is customary procedure in such a sequence. After boarding the vessel, Coast Guard personnel found a total of eight foreign nationals attempting to enter the country illegally, including five adult men, one adult woman and two young adults aged 16 and 17. The migrants were taken to Ballast Point, along with their vessel, and transferred to the custody of the Department of Homeland Security. Although firing on a migrant vessel is less common, the standard measure when boats fail to obey verbal commands and subsequent warning shots is not without precedent. For example, in 2013, the Coast Guard shot out the engine of a go-fast boat smuggling illicit drugs after the vessel's crew failed to respond to commands or warning shots. The chase on May 10, meanwhile, was just one at least three human smuggling operations in the area that were halted by the Coast Guard the same day. Two miles south of Point Loma, a Coast Guard cutter took three illegal migrants into custody from a 20-foot pleasure craft, the service announced. Another vessel carrying around 13 illegal migrants fled from the Coast Guard and beached near Windandsea Beach. Seven foreign nationals, including five adult males from Mexico and one adult female from Guatemala, were taken into custody. Six others evaded capture. The Coast Guard Pacific Area notes that human smuggling is a money-making venture for organized crime groups, which charge migrants exorbitant sums to transport individuals illegally into the United States in unsafe conditions. There has been a noticeable uptick of late in illegal activities, including drug smuggling and human trafficking, via maritime routes due to new barriers to overland smuggling routes into the U.S. via the southern border. The trend prompted the U.S. Navy to deploy warships with members of Coast Guard LEDET teams aboard. Accordingly, the Coast Guard has seen a rise in high-profile interdiction missions. On April 23, the Coast Guard in San Diego offloaded over $214 million in illegal cocaine that had been seized from February through April. On May 9, the Coast Guard reported that a counter-drug patrol had seized $191 million in cocaine trafficked via maritime routes during an 84-day patrol in which they interdicted five smuggling vessels and arrested 18 suspects.

Over $275 million worth of cocaine seized in San Diego by Coast Guard
Over $275 million worth of cocaine seized in San Diego by Coast Guard

Yahoo

time15-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Over $275 million worth of cocaine seized in San Diego by Coast Guard

SAN DIEGO, Calif. - A major drug bust in San Diego as the US Coast Guard offloaded more than $275 million worth of illegal cocaine. The crew of Cutter Waseche seized 37,256 pounds of cocaine on Thursday. According to Coast Guard officials, the offload was a result of 11 separate suspected drug smuggling vessel interdictions off the coasts of Mexico and Central and South America by the Coast Guard Cutter Waesche from the months of December 2024 to February 2025. "This offload represents a small part of a large and enduring multinational, multi-agency effort to combat international drug cartels and deter the flow of illegal narcotics coming to the United States, said Vice Adm. Andrew J. Tiongson, commander, Coast Guard Pacific Area. During a press conference Thursday, he said drug trafficking is the financial fuel for cartels, who bring illegal cocaine and fentanyl into the US. The Coast Guard is increasing their operations to disrupt and seize transnational shipments of illicit drugs.

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