Teens Are Smuggling Deadlier Drugs Across the Border
A Chula Vista high school student was聽聽with recruiting classmates to smuggle drugs from Mexico into the United States. Separate charges were brought against another San Diego man for recruiting high school students at San Ysidro High School to do the same.
础耻迟丑辞谤颈迟颈别蝉听聽smuggling fentanyl across the border back in March.
It鈥檚 part of an unsettling trend that, according to Customs and Border Protection, began around 2009, in which criminal organizations recruit teenagers to smuggle drugs and people because they believe they鈥檒l be less scrutinized. The pattern has reached new levels of urgency as teens are being recruited to smuggle increasingly deadlier drugs across the border.
鈥淲e noticed the disturbing trend of juveniles attempting to smuggle narcotics by strapping packages of marijuana to their bodies and walking across the border in 2009,鈥 said CBP spokeswoman Angelica De Cima. 鈥淎t that time, it was mostly marijuana.鈥
Since 2013, De Cima said, the agency has apprehended juveniles聽鈥 mostly teenagers聽鈥 attempting to smuggle hard narcotics, like methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin. (One particularly grisly case in 2013 involved a Tijuana teen who聽聽at the San Ysidro Port of Entry while agents questioned him about the substance in his backpack.)
Most recently, the agency has seen a surge in teenagers with fentanyl strapped to their bodies.
鈥淔entanyl as a whole across San Diego has gone from a minor amount in 2016 to a steady increase,鈥 said Ernie Verina, supervisor and assistant special agent in charge in San Ysidro for Homeland Security Investigations. Fentanyl smuggling has gone up, in general, he said, which is likely why we鈥檙e seeing more teens try to cross with the drug.
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid, with聽, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The potency has led to a significant increase in overdoses and overdose-related deaths. Fentanyl can be absorbed through the skin or inhaled, meaning a ruptured package strapped to someone鈥檚 body could mean exposure to the deadly drug.
鈥淭his is dangerous and not worth the risk to one鈥檚 life through unintentional exposure,鈥 De Cima said.
In the past three years, CBP鈥檚 San Diego office has made hundreds of drug seizures from minors crossing the border, reaching 256 seizures last year of mostly methamphetamine.
A Chula Vista high school student was聽聽with recruiting classmates to smuggle drugs from Mexico into the United States. Separate charges were brought against another San Diego man for recruiting high school students at San Ysidro High School to do the same.
础耻迟丑辞谤颈迟颈别蝉听聽smuggling fentanyl across the border back in March.
It鈥檚 part of an unsettling trend that, according to Customs and Border Protection, began around 2009, in which criminal organizations recruit teenagers to smuggle drugs and people because they believe they鈥檒l be less scrutinized. The pattern has reached new levels of urgency as teens are being recruited to smuggle increasingly deadlier drugs across the border.
鈥淲e noticed the disturbing trend of juveniles attempting to smuggle narcotics by strapping packages of marijuana to their bodies and walking across the border in 2009,鈥 said CBP spokeswoman Angelica De Cima. 鈥淎t that time, it was mostly marijuana.鈥
Since 2013, De Cima said, the agency has apprehended juveniles聽鈥 mostly teenagers聽鈥 attempting to smuggle hard narcotics, like methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin. (One particularly grisly case in 2013 involved a Tijuana teen who聽聽at the San Ysidro Port of Entry while agents questioned him about the substance in his backpack.)
Most recently, the agency has seen a surge in teenagers with fentanyl strapped to their bodies.
鈥淔entanyl as a whole across San Diego has gone from a minor amount in 2016 to a steady increase,鈥 said Ernie Verina, supervisor and assistant special agent in charge in San Ysidro for Homeland Security Investigations. Fentanyl smuggling has gone up, in general, he said, which is likely why we鈥檙e seeing more teens try to cross with the drug.
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid, with聽, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The potency has led to a significant increase in overdoses and overdose-related deaths. Fentanyl can be absorbed through the skin or inhaled, meaning a ruptured package strapped to someone鈥檚 body could mean exposure to the deadly drug.
鈥淭his is dangerous and not worth the risk to one鈥檚 life through unintentional exposure,鈥 De Cima said.
In the past three years, CBP鈥檚 San Diego office has made hundreds of drug seizures from minors crossing the border, reaching 256 seizures last year of mostly methamphetamine.
A Chula Vista high school student was聽聽with recruiting classmates to smuggle drugs from Mexico into the United States. Separate charges were brought against another San Diego man for recruiting high school students at San Ysidro High School to do the same.
础耻迟丑辞谤颈迟颈别蝉听聽smuggling fentanyl across the border back in March.
It鈥檚 part of an unsettling trend that, according to Customs and Border Protection, began around 2009, in which criminal organizations recruit teenagers to smuggle drugs and people because they believe they鈥檒l be less scrutinized. The pattern has reached new levels of urgency as teens are being recruited to smuggle increasingly deadlier drugs across the border.
鈥淲e noticed the disturbing trend of juveniles attempting to smuggle narcotics by strapping packages of marijuana to their bodies and walking across the border in 2009,鈥 said CBP spokeswoman Angelica De Cima. 鈥淎t that time, it was mostly marijuana.鈥
Since 2013, De Cima said, the agency has apprehended juveniles聽鈥 mostly teenagers聽鈥 attempting to smuggle hard narcotics, like methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin. (One particularly grisly case in 2013 involved a Tijuana teen who聽聽at the San Ysidro Port of Entry while agents questioned him about the substance in his backpack.)
Most recently, the agency has seen a surge in teenagers with fentanyl strapped to their bodies.
鈥淔entanyl as a whole across San Diego has gone from a minor amount in 2016 to a steady increase,鈥 said Ernie Verina, supervisor and assistant special agent in charge in San Ysidro for Homeland Security Investigations. Fentanyl smuggling has gone up, in general, he said, which is likely why we鈥檙e seeing more teens try to cross with the drug.
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid, with聽, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. The potency has led to a significant increase in overdoses and overdose-related deaths. Fentanyl can be absorbed through the skin or inhaled, meaning a ruptured package strapped to someone鈥檚 body could mean exposure to the deadly drug.
鈥淭his is dangerous and not worth the risk to one鈥檚 life through unintentional exposure,鈥 De Cima said.
In the past three years, CBP鈥檚 San Diego office has made hundreds of drug seizures from minors crossing the border, reaching 256 seizures last year of mostly methamphetamine.
鈥淪mugglers are exploiting minors,鈥 De Cima said.聽鈥淚t鈥檚 all about money; teens are promised easy money with little risk, and the smugglers only care about money, not the teens they exploit.鈥
Teens can be offered anything from $100 to thousands of dollars, depending on the situation and what they鈥檙e smuggling.
鈥淐oercion is never off the table, but in our investigations to date, they were paid and it was often the allure of social status,鈥 said Verina. 鈥淲e have a big population that crosses for school and that population can be targeted.鈥
It鈥檚 important to look at the cross-border teen experience to give some context to this group of children. These are teens who often fall through the cracks and may be at risk for recruitment by criminal organizations.
While not the case in every instance where a teen is smuggling illicit substances the border, the transactions often involve schools in some way. In a number of cases, the recruiting is happening at U.S. high schools, Verina said.
Many of these kids live lives on both sides of the border, crossing either for school or to see family. It鈥檚 hard to get a solid number of how many students in our binational region cross daily or weekly, for a variety of reasons.
Public schools, for instance, weren鈥檛 allowed to enroll students who didn鈥檛 live in the country until聽聽allowing the practice in the case of a parental deportation. That meant many of these students wouldn鈥檛 share their transborder situations with their schools.
But we know that there are likely tens of thousands of them.
Melissa Floca, an associate director of UC San Diego鈥檚 Center for U.S.-Mexico Studies who has been researching this student population, shared some statistics with me.
- Of the more than 500,000 U.S.-born children who are now living in Mexico, one in 10 is in Baja California.
- At San Diego Unified and Sweetwater High School districts, roughly one in five students has spent time being educated in Mexican schools or living in Mexico.
- In Tijuana, one in 10 students has spent time in U.S. schools or living in the United States.
Not all of these students cross the border daily, but we know that tens of thousands of them do, Floca said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not easy to neatly categorize the experiences of children in this region,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ne student might be born in the U.S., move to Mexico, go to school in Mexico, be a transborder student for part of their education聽鈥 who gets up and crosses the border聽鈥 and then later stay with an aunt in San Diego during the week.鈥
Students who have cross-border lives face unique challenges. Last week, a Senate Select Committee on California-Mexico Cooperation hearing聽in Sacramento聽.
Floca told me that these students fall through the cracks for many reasons. Their home situation聽鈥 perhaps a parent has been deported聽鈥 and the realities of their hours-long commute or adjusting to life in Mexico can make students depressed, exhausted or stressed, which can lead to them not being engaged at school.
The students often struggle in both languages, in schools that don鈥檛 have good bilingual education programs or bilingual teachers. They may be able to use Spanish and English conversationally, but struggle with writing or reading well in both languages.
Then there are the administrative problems.
Students can only take exams required to enroll in high schools in Baja California once or twice a year, so depending on when they move, they might have to spend months crossing the border to continue school. Or they might just stop attending for months. For students who spend time in Mexican high schools, they often have issues transferring credits to U.S. schools to help them meet graduation requirements.
These factors can become barriers that keep them from being engaged and successful, both academically and socially, at school. At worst, they can increase the students鈥 likelihood of dropping out.
Several agencies, including the San Diego County district attorney鈥檚 office, CBP, Homeland Security Investigations and other school and community groups are working to bring more awareness to teens about the dangers and consequences of drug smuggling, particularly with deadly fentanyl, through public service announcements and presentations at schools.
The Trump Administration Is Eyeing San Diego
Last week, President Donald Trump told reporters that San Diego has been begging for its part of the border wall. So he鈥檒l deliver.
Several local news orgs, like聽听补苍诲听, tried to figure out if that鈥檚 true. It鈥檚 not.
- County Supervisor Kristin Gaspar and Escondido Mayor Sam Abed聽鈥 who both introduced motions that passed to support 国产视频 so-called 鈥渟anctuary鈥 lawsuit聽鈥 are聽聽to talk immigration. (Union-Tribune)
- Gaspar also聽聽on Fox News last week to talk 鈥渟anctuary鈥 cities, border walls and drones.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions made an appearance last week along San Diego鈥檚 border with Mexico, where he talked about a new policy that will result in聽聽who are apprehended at the border.
Sessions also made clear that this administration is聽.
- The surge in prosecutions of immigration-related crimes, like illegal re-entry, is聽聽than in San Diego鈥檚 federal courts. (Los Angeles Times)
Other Border News
- Border Patrol聽聽on U.S. soil. (CNN)
- ICE arrested an immigrant father who had been previously removed from the United States from his National City home聽. His 11-year-old daughter caught the arrest聽. (Union-Tribune, Telemundo)
- The California National Guard has聽聽with Customs and Border Protection. (Associated Press)
- In response to the arrival of the migrant caravan to San Diego鈥檚 border, roughly 20 people have begun gathering to聽聽鈥 a volunteer border-monitoring and patrolling group. The last time the group聽, during a surge in Central American unaccompanied minors arriving at the border. (Union-Tribune, NBC7)
- 础听聽could help Customs and Border Protection, which includes both Border Patrol and the officers who man the Ports of Entry, solve staffing shortages at the border. The current test has a high failure rate, which has forced the agency to turn away potential hires as it struggles to fill positions. (Arizona Republic)
This article in the Voice of San Diego.