Border Patrol Disables Nearly 3,000-Foot Smuggling Tunnel Linking Tijuana and San Diego
- In early April 2025, U.S. Border Patrol agents uncovered an extensive drug trafficking tunnel beneath the US-Mexico border connecting Tijuana and San Diego.
- The tunnel was found during active construction beneath part of the Otay Mesa Port of Entry after coordinated efforts by U.S. and Mexican authorities.
- The tunnel featured lighting, electrical wiring, ventilation, a track system for contraband, and barricades intended to delay law enforcement progress.
- Acting Chief Patrol Agent Jeffrey D. Stalnaker emphasized that halting narcotics trafficking through tunnels is vital for the safety of Americans, and mentioned that large amounts of concrete will be poured soon to seal off the tunnel.
- This discovery adds to more than 95 tunnels decommissioned in San Diego since 1993 and underscores ongoing border security efforts against narcotics and terrorist threats.
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66 Articles
Half-mile drug-smuggling tunnel connecting Tijuana to San Diego shut down by Border Patrol
U.S. Border Patrol agents shut down the construction of a 2,918-foot-long tunnel connecting Tijuana and San Diego with the aid of Department of Homeland Security officials and Mexican authorities.
Border Patrol Found a Massive Tunnel From Tijuana to the U.S.
PULSE POINTSWHAT HAPPENED: Border Patrol agents discovered a sophisticated cross-border smuggling tunnel connecting California to Tijuana, Mexico.WHO WAS INVOLVED: U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), and Mexican law enforcement officials.WHEN & WHERE: The tunnel was discovered in April under the Otay Mesa Port of Entry in San Diego, with its entrance in…


San Diego Sector Border Patrol uncovers sophisticated cross-border drug smuggling tunnel
U.S. Border Patrol agents have located and disabled a large, unfinished drug smuggling tunnel stretching from Tijuana into the Otay Mesa area of San Diego. The tunnel extended more than 1,000 feet into U.S. territory and included lighting, ventilation, electrical wiring, and a rail system.
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