Pubdate: Tue, 10 Dec 2002 Source: Nogales International (AZ) Copyright: 2002 Nogales International Contact: http://www.nogalesinternational.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1615 Author: Patti Lewis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Border+Patrol BP SEIZES 4 LOADS OF MARIJUANA The United States Border Patrol Station in Sonoita is responsible for 25 percent of marijuana seizures in the entire Tucson sector. For this fiscal year, which started Oct. 1, 2002, to date, the Sonoita station has seized 15,135 pounds of marijuana, said Al Kramer, Agent in Charge. Marijuana seizures during the current fiscal year for the Tucson sector, of which Sonoita is a part, total 60,135 pounds, Kramer said. For the Sonoita station, seizures have increased by 19 percent, year to date, Kramer said. Agents intercepted 1,864 pounds of marijuana Thursday during four unrelated seizures. Agents responded to a suspicious vehicle report near the western gate of Fort Huachuca on Cimarron Road. The vehicle had left by the time agents arrived. The agents searched the surrounding area with a canine unit, and found an abandoned marijuana load weighing 729.2 pounds, Kramer said. It was determined that the bundles were left at that location the previous night, as they were covered with frost. No arrests were made. Later that morning, agents responded to a call from the Patagonia Marshal's Office, Kramer said. A marshal's deputy conducted a traffic stop on a recreational vehicle on Highway 82. A group of people, thought to be undocumented aliens, ran from the camper, Kramer said. Border Patrol searched the area along Highway 82, and came upon the footprints of another group who had recently traveled through the area. A canine unit located an abandoned stash of marijuana, weighing 426.4 pounds. No subjects were apprehended. "And that was before 9 a.m., Kramer said. Around mid-day, agents observed a sports utility vehicle crossing the border in the San Rafael Valley, near Lochiel. The vehicle was apprehended on Highway 83. As the vehicle pulled over, two male subjects bailed out near the Black Oak Cemetery, Kramer said. Agents found 504.3 pounds of marijuana in the vehicle. They searched, but could not locate the two subjects who had fled. Later that afternoon, agents were checking a known smuggling trail east of Patagonia when they came across another marijuana stash, weighing 204.4 pounds, Kramer said. The marijuana was turned over to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. Drug smugglers will often abandon a load and flee when threatened with detection and capture, Kramer said. "They know the drugs will bog down our agents." Agents who intercept a substantial amount of narcotics have to secure the area. They can't abandon the drug load to pursue a fleeing subject, he explained. Kramer said that most drug loads are backpacked across the border. The loads are stashed, and a contact person with a vehicle will come, pick it up, and transport it. Sometimes, in a very remote area, agents will have to haul the intercepted loads on foot, he said. An Arizona Department of Public Safety helicopter has assisted agents with drug seizures in remote locations. "The helicopter will drop the cargo net, and carry the drugs to a vehicle, or to our station," he said. The helicopter was not necessary for any of Thursday's seizures. The San Rafael Valley, which is the responsibility of the Sonoita station, has seen an increase in drug trafficking, Kramer said. The remote location, and lack of a large physical barrier, makes the valley a favorite spot for smugglers. The lack of a law enforcement presence on the Mexican side of the border also makes the area attractive to drug traffickers, Kramer said. Smugglers try to get north of Sonoita, where a vehicle will often be waiting, Kramer said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake