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View Full Version : Sand Dunes a Draw for Marijuana Smugglers


kd6ecz
04-21-2005, 02:54 PM
Well here's a new use for the Imperial Sand Dunes:


Sand Dunes a Draw for Marijuana Smugglers

Thu Apr 21, 3:24 AM ET

By ELLIOT SPAGAT, Associated Press Writer

IMPERIAL SAND DUNES, Calif. - The man at the wheel of a roaring dune buggy rips a swirling trail over the desolate landscape on a morning ride. He veers to the south, and then whips back.

That prompts U.S. Border Patrol agent Danielle Suarez to pull him over and give him a warning. The dune rider doesn't know it, but he just crossed into Mexico and back.

Here, along a five-mile stretch of constantly shifting sands, the border is invisible. It's an opportunity for drug smugglers to slip over the line and mix with the off-roading crowd — and a challenge for the agents trying to spot them.

At one point, the international line sits just a half-mile south of Interstate 8, the main link between San Diego and Phoenix.

The Imperial Sand Dunes, a desolate desert expanse, is a giant playground for all-terrain vehicle enthusiasts. On busy weekends between fall and spring, when the temperatures are tolerable, ATV riders, dune buggy fans and campers in motor homes swarm over the sands. A holiday weekend can draw close to 200,000 people.

"It's so easy for them (smugglers) to blend in, looking for a way to get onto I-8," Suarez says as she meanders the hills in a pickup truck. "There's really nothing separating the two countries."

The southern edge of the dunes, the Buttercup Dunes, is remote enough to have served as a film location for parts of "Star Wars: Return of the Jedi."

The only marking for the international border: a couple of concrete obelisks about 15 feet high.

Since late February, there have been seven drug busts along the dunes, and a string of others before that. Federal agents have yet to uncover any elaborate criminal enterprise, but the arrests show how the dunes are being used to funnel dope into the United States.

Marijuana smugglers appear to have used Buttercup since about 1999, said Ricardo Sandoval, special agent in charge of the Homeland Security Department's Immigration and Customs Enforcement bureau in El Centro, about 35 miles west of the dunes. He declined to elaborate.

In one typical bust last month, a Border Patrol agent spotted seven all-terrain vehicles streaking across the border at sunset — five of them with large duffel bags strapped to the seats. At the main campground, two men loaded the bags on a trailer.

Agents stopped the trailer on I-8 and found 558 pounds of marijuana in a secret compartment, according to charges filed in federal court. The driver said a woman in nearby Mexicali, Mexico, promised him $500 for each duffel bag. He admitted delivering four bags to a truck stop in El Centro a few days earlier.

If they don't mix with large crowds in daylight, smugglers sneak in under the cover of darkness.

Last May, Border Patrol agents spotted two abandoned ATVs about 150 yards from the border, shortly before midnight. They followed tracks and saw several ATVs cruising through the dunes without lights, heading for a campground. At a campsite, they saw several people loading bags from the ATVs into a trailer.

Agents seized 1,644 pounds of marijuana in 90 bundles at the campground, according to charges filed in federal court. Several drug runners escaped on foot as Border Patrol planes circled above. One who got caught said he was paid $1,000 to deliver the drugs to El Centro.

The Border Patrol's El Centro sector, which extends along 76 miles of the Mexican border in eastern California, has 68 ATVs in its fleet, up from only five in 1997. Four camera towers along the five-mile stretch of dunes beam images to a Border Patrol station about 40 miles west in Calexico, where they are monitored around the clock.

Some agents cruise in dune buggies, while others survey the landscape from perches that are up to 300 feet high. They look for dune buggies that carry duffel bags or appear to be holding lots of weight.

Sometimes, smugglers will send about 10 or 15 ATVs across, only a couple carrying drugs, said agent M.E. Schultz.

ATV "scouts" often scour the terrain to see where Border Patrol agents are roaming, agents say. They use walkie-talkies to tell contacts in Mexico where the drug-laden vehicles should cross.

"When they feel they don't have a chance, they just turn around and go back," agent Gerardo Guerrero said during his morning patrol.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=519&ncid=519&e=21&u=/ap/20050421/ap_on_re_us/drugs_in_dunes

Mike
04-21-2005, 03:10 PM
Legalize pot and the problem instantly goes away.

Later,
....Mike

drabnor
04-21-2005, 03:24 PM
Legalize pot and the problem instantly goes away.

Later,
....Mike
:xrocker::xsmokin1::xzzz::D:xpimp::clap:

Dick Foster
04-21-2005, 03:27 PM
Damn, you are really smart. I'm gonna vote for you in the next election. LOL

Mike
04-21-2005, 03:33 PM
Damn, you are really smart. I'm gonna vote for you in the next election. LOL

You would think that our government would see it as another stream of tax revenue. They are always looking for new and innovative ways to steal more of our money.

Later,
....Mike

BLOWNYOTA
04-21-2005, 03:53 PM
I second that. I'm a "sticky icky" believer myself, but that doesn't mean that they should be able to run across the border with it. Lets face it, no matter what the government does, I could still find someone in about 5 minutes to buy a sak off of. Thats really sad if you think about it. At the age of 16 it was easier for me to go buy weed than get alcohol. I don't know about the rest of you but, guys riding quads through the dez at sunset with black duffle bags sounds like a bad movie to me. kinda like tipple X. thats just my .02

Dick Foster
04-21-2005, 04:01 PM
Actually, it used to be. The laws against pot started out as a tax law then they decided to use it as a weapon against the 60's generation and other non conformists.

Freedom is somewhat of an illusion in this country and that illusion is becoming foggier by the day.

Baja Belk
04-21-2005, 04:48 PM
"Some agents cruise in dune buggies,"

- sounds like a sweet job to me....

elgecko
04-21-2005, 07:11 PM
Our current government isn't really into "legalizing" things...they're all about banning stuff. Uh oh, wass that too "political"? :)

equin
05-05-2005, 02:41 AM
That news story is a blast from the past! I used to work as an asst. district counsel for INS in El Centro, CA (before it got swallowed up in the Homeland Security mess) prosecuting drug trafficking cases in immigration court. I don't know why that special agent said they began using the dunes in '99 - the smugglers have been using them for way much longer than that. I had to ride in those Border Patrol Broncos back then along those very same dunes paving them clean and cuttin' sign (looking for tracks). Much of the Border Patrol duties include intercepting smuggling activities, not just catching non-citizens entering without inspection, and patrolling the dunes included busting the drug traffickers.

As for banning/legalizing MJ - the story I heard was that the powerful cotton growers lobby viewed the hemp harvest (for you young bucks, clothing was once made using hemp) as a competitive threat. But who knows? I can understand banning cocaine, heroin, meth and all the other hardcore drugs - I've seen guys so addicted to that stuff it's a real tragedy, plus you can actually die from overdosing on that junk (not to mention "overdosing" and dying of alcohol poisoning from binging too much). But I have to admit, I've never heard of anyone dying from an "overdose" of weed. But I'm no doctor or toxicologist, and I'm sure there are negative health effects to smoking most anything, including MJ, so I don't really know.

elgecko
05-05-2005, 11:21 AM
]
As for banning/legalizing MJ - the story I heard was that the powerful cotton growers lobby viewed the hemp harvest (for you young bucks, clothing was once made using hemp) as a competitive threat.

That's one theory, another one is the potential threat of hemp oil to the petroleum industry. I don't buy it thought, I just think that the powers that be (and have been) refuse to entertain the though due to the moral implications (read: EVIL) associated with weed.[/QUOTE]

rokbrkr
05-06-2005, 08:25 AM
A guy told me one time that you could go to the state office building here in Idaho and buy a tax stamp for MJ, and if you had one and got cuaght with the MJ that there wasn't as much they could do to you :confused: I don't know how much truth there is to that,....... but I do know if they legalized it and taxed it, they could probly take the money from that alone and wipe out the nat. debt in no time at all, then maybe they could lower the income and sales taxes :D :2cents:

Dunk
05-06-2005, 01:16 PM
[

Freedom is somewhat of an illusion in this country and that illusion is becoming foggier by the day.[/QUOTE]


I agree with you 100%.

equin
05-06-2005, 01:26 PM
but I do know if they legalized it and taxed it, they could probly take the money from that alone and wipe out the nat. debt in no time at all, then maybe they could lower the income and sales taxes :D :2cents:

LOL!! Ain't that the truth!

Paul
05-06-2005, 07:03 PM
A guy told me one time that you could go to the state office building here in Idaho and buy a tax stamp for MJ, and if you had one and got cuaght with the MJ that there wasn't as much they could do to you :confused: I don't know how much truth there is to that,....... but I do know if they legalized it and taxed it, they could probly take the money from that alone and wipe out the nat. debt in no time at all, then maybe they could lower the income and sales taxes :D :2cents:
No kidding. The same guy comes to my first class baked off his ass every single morning.