Pubdate: Tue, 29 Jun 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323 Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Adriana Gomez Licon INSIDE THE TUNNEL: BOYS USED IN DRUG-SMUGGLING ROUTE EL PASO -- It is a tunnel straight out of "The Shawshank Redemption." Mexican drug cartels used boys and small adults to dig a tunnel crawling the width of the Rio Grande. Through it, smugglers would bring contraband to the United States, officials said. Border Patrol agents thought the river would be an obstacle to building tunnels in El Paso and east of the city. They were wrong. Agents were surprised Friday to find a cross-border tunnel extending underneath the Rio Grande from the Mexican side to a maze of storm drains on the U.S. side. "El Paso sector hasn't seen anything like this before," said Joe Perez, a Border Patrol agent at the site. The El Paso sector covers all of New Mexico and West Texas. The Border Patrol has discovered more than 100 tunnels along the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona and California. The man-made tunnel is the first of its kind in the El Paso sector. Its opening -- in the concrete wall of a storm drain -- is smaller than a manhole, with a diameter of about 20 inches. "You can probably just get your head and one of your shoulders in. You have to be pretty small," Perez said. "So they would also use a lot of children to smuggle." Inside the tunnel, the space is more ample. The air cools off but becomes more suffocating. It smells like a fish factory, and insects fly around. Smugglers possibly endured smells of rotten meat, moldy cheese and other odors of decomposed food. "It's a way of life for these smugglers. They are very ruthless. They are very ingenious. They don't think of the lives they are putting in danger," Perez said. Water with algae ponds in the storm drain near the Bridge of the Americas where the tunnel hid. The walls inside the storm drain and tunnel opening throw back the echoes of any footsteps. The echoes were probably what gave away a 17-year-old boy from Mexico who was found nearby early Friday. Border Patrol agents became suspicious when they heard noises around the storm drain and used electronic devices to find the tunnel. "Usually they won't use these tunnels for people to cross," Perez said. "These, they will reserve for narcotics." More than 200 pounds of marijuana were found in the tunnel. Perez said marijuana is what they suspect had been smuggled through the tunnel because other drugs would go bad in the humid conditions. A specialized Border Patrol team discovered that the tunnel traveled underneath the river to the grassy embankment on the Mexican side, where a square hole is visible. The team used a breathing apparatus to explore the tunnel. Smugglers dug the tunnel two feet under the Rio Grande, Border Patrol agents said. Because the riverbed is covered in concrete, water did not enter the tunnel, which allowed smugglers to continue excavating dirt. Perez said the Border Patrol had not noticed the man-made tunnel before because smugglers would not come out of it near the border. Instead, they would navigate the arteries of the storm-drain system of El Paso. These spacious tunnels lead to places such as Paisano Drive and the University of Texas at El Paso. Border Patrol agents said they do not know how long the tunnel has been in place or how long it took to build. In the 1994 film "The Shawshank Redemption," an inmate tunnels his way out of a prison by excavating a length of five football fields in two decades. Perez said many hours of labor were put into digging the Rio Grande tunnel, about the length of half a football field. Although it is the first man-made tunnel in this area, smugglers in the past have used storm drains to cross from Mexico into the United States, Perez said. The city of El Paso has about 300 miles of storm drains. The system flows down to 19 openings of different sizes on the riverbank. Meanwhile, Border Patrol agents are keeping an eye on the tunnel while they find a way to coordinate with Mexican authorities to seal it. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt