Drug traffickers going coastal as they use boats to sneak drugs into Texas
June 4th 2012 · 12 Comments

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection crew navigates a 33-foot Secure-Around-Flotation-Equipped boat while on patrol near Corpus Christi. SAFE boats are used to pursue and board vessels in rough waters. Photo: Michael Paulsen / © 2012 Houston Chronicle
A U.S. Navy frigate hides in the darkness just over the horizon, its Seahawk helicopter’s turbines fired up, ready for liftoff.
Some 30 miles away, Colombian sailors on patrol boats hug the South American coast as they covertly close in on a motorboat suspected of ferrying cocaine. U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in the air on a P-3 plane capture everything on radar, part of an orchestrated multinational trap to nab bulk loads of drugs long before they make it to the United States.
While America has pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into securing the U.S. border across Texas and elsewhere, the mammoth sea still beckons with possibilities, absent the sensors, cameras, massive manpower and fences found on land.
Fortified as never before, drug traffickers increasingly are bypassing the heavily guarded land crossings for the comparatively naked seas and 367 miles of shore where they are more likely to cross paths with fishermen than federal agents – and where snagging smugglers is a puzzle based on intelligence, surveillance, patience and luck.
“I think we’ve got a guy coming out of the bay now, this could be our boy,” said a veteran CBP officer flying in the P-3 at about 12,500 feet over choppy waters.
But it wasn’t. Not this time.
“You get information from a confidential informant. Maybe somebody stubbed their toe, or the wind wasn’t right,” the agent joked of the litany of things that could have delayed the journey. “Mañana,” he said, using the Spanish word for tomorrow. “We refer to it as ‘doper time.’ ”
‘Going to get worse’
The Caribbean is a long way from the shores of Texas, but this is where the smuggling begins, where huge loads of cocaine are slipped out of the jungle-lined coasts and jumped to Central America, or the Caribbean Islands, then methodically moved toward the United States.
Today, bundles of marijuana and cocaine are drifting onto Texas beaches as a result, loads likely abandoned or lost before they could be intercepted.
“I don’t see it getting any better; if anything, it is going to get worse,” Travis Poulson, chief ranger for the Padre Island National Seashore, said of traffickers turning to the coast. “There is money in it.”
Authorities still make many more busts on the land border between the United States and Mexico than along the beaches, but concede they don’t know exactly what is happening on waters that stretch far and wide, and lap the Third Coast of the United States.
“As we make the land border more secure, they will find any way they can to get in,” said U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul, an Austin-based Republican who heads a committee that oversees the Department of Homeland Security. “They will certainly turn to the sea to get their product in.”
McCaul, who represents part of Harris County, is to preside over a hearing June 21 in Washington to examine the maritime threat posed by drug traffickers.
He noted that 165,000 metric tons of illegal drugs were seized in the Caribbean, Bahamas and Gulf of Mexico last year, up 36 percent from 2008.
In April, 55 pounds of cocaine washed up on San Jose Island in Aransas County.
In other recent incidents, U.S. Fish and Wildlife officers searching for nesting turtles found 23 pounds of pot on Matagorda Island; and 1,186 pounds of marijuana were seized near Corpus Christi aboard a boat making its way up the Intracoastal Waterway.
They are among at least 15 known “wash ups” and seizures along Texas’ coast this year, but given the number of counties and jurisdictions involved, there could be many more.
In southern California in May, 8,000 pounds of marijuana were found floating off the coast.
Part of federal law enforcement’s fighting fleet is the 39-foot Midnight Express.
“Coming up,” a U.S. CBP boat pilot shouted on a recent evening as he hit the throttle on the Midnight Express. It has 1,200 horsepower and the CBP contends it is the fastest law enforcement boat in the world.

Photo: Michael Paulsen / © 2012 Houston Chronicle

Photo: Michael Paulsen / © 2012 Houston Chronicle

Photo: Michael Paulsen / © 2012 Houston Chronicle

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nothing that a few coastal patrols with 50 cal couldn’t stop….shoot first ask questions later…outside territorial limits…
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That works for me Alan…
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Gun Action, Fire at Will!
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Easier to sink a boat load than to catch them when they are running on land.
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I agree with Alan. You want to stop smuggling, you shoot down any plane that enter US airspace without authorization or sink any ship. And don’t bother picking up survivors.
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What survivors?
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Lets see, I was In the navy,there is no horizon,the horizon is what u make it.Did I miss somethinf?
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And this administration refuses to do anything to stem the flow of drugs (or people) into this country.
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Torpedoes needed… Go Navy!!!
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Go Navy and I am so proud of those sailors and also the Border Patrol
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Carpet bomb the Mexican drug cartels. There are plenty of military bases in TX, AZ and CA to support that operation.
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I hope some of those Beaners drown
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