• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Ryn Gargulinski

Creativity on Fire

  • home
  • Shop Art
  • Shop Books
  • about
  • Services
  • contact

drug smuggling tucson

NEWS: Narcotic cops say Tucson’s gone to pot

You may be living next to a stash house and not know it.

With a record 1.2 million pounds of marijuana confiscated in Arizona from Oct. 1, 2006, to Sept. 30 – nearly half of it in Pima County – Tucson has developed a thriving business as a distribution hub.

The area is a way station where marijuana is stashed until it is moved to its ultimate destination, often on the East Coast.

“It’s just a major, major stash house area,” Counter Narcotics Alliance Sgt. Helen Hritz said of the Tucson area. “There can be 11,000 pounds in one house.”

The alliance is made up of local and federal law enforcement agencies.

Smuggling has also become more constant, with no major spike in activity during harvest season and no lulls in between, Hritz said. The only difference harvest season makes is that the buds are fresher.

“There’s no break in the action anymore,” she said. “It’s no longer seasonal. It’s very much flowing year-round.”

One of the Sheriff Department’s recent seizures, on Oct. 22, included 11,000 pounds discovered in a home in the 1000 block of East Orange Grove Road.

One of the largest single busts in the history of the Pima County Sheriff’s Department was 32,000 pounds – that’s 16 tons – found in a house in the 11000 block of East Speedway Boulevard in 1984.

Stash houses are not confined to downtrodden neighborhoods. They can be found throughout the city and county, Tucson police Sgt. Mark Robinson said. He said they are almost always rental homes.

He said those running stash houses tend to be transient types because if they don’t own the house, it is not seized by authorities.

“They have nothing to lose,” Robinson said, “except their load.”

Even if the drug does not stick around the house for long, its temporary presence can make for some perilous living.

Robinson said stash houses can be dangerous for neighborhoods because they become the target for home invasions by drug dealers or other criminals.

“They very often invade the wrong house,” Robinson said. “Innocent people often become the victims.”

He said the extreme level of violence of the invasions, coupled with high-powered weapons, can lead to hazardous conditions.

“They often have assault rifles,” Robinson said. “The only thing that can stop that ammunition is a brick. It can go through wood frame, windows, doors.”

Other drug smuggling activity can lead to high-speed chases when suspects flee the police, another situation that puts innocents at risk.

The Tucson area is especially suitedfor stash houses because of its network of roadways, Hritz said. In addition to a maze of backroads, two major interstates help smugglers.

Interstate 19 makes a beeline from Mexico directly to Tucson. Midvale Park, an area just west of I-19 and north of Valencia Road, was riddled with stash houses, home invasions and drug-induced violence until residents formed a watch group and took back their neighborhood last year, Robinson said.

Interstate 10 stretches from the Pacific Ocean to Jacksonville, Fla., and connects with a series of northbound routes along the way.

Arizona is a major drug-smuggling corridor for many of the same reasons it is the nation’s busiest corridor for illegal immigration. Wide-open areas, rugged terrain and decoy loads give smugglers the openings they need to get drugs through the desert.

Even much of Florida’s marijuana smuggling, which had its heyday in the late 1970s and early 1980s, has moved to southern Arizona.

“We had well-established routes, not necessarily for drugs, but for human smuggling,” said Counter Narcotics Alliance Sgt. Ramon Delatorre. “It wasn’t like they had to make a new route. Now there is smuggling of undocumented aliens and narcotics at the same time.”

Of the illegal drugs shuttled through the desert, marijuana is king.

“It’s the largest type of narcotic we see and seize,” Hritz said. “In the desert areas they blaze their own trails, carry the bundles for miles and miles.”

The desert is also a place brimming with Mexican drug cartels.

Now allied with Colombian cartels, Mexican smuggling rings rake in enough cash to purchase superior weaponry, bribe police or hire well-trained Mexican army deserters.

Mexican cartels earned an estimated $8 billion to $23 billion from U.S. drug sales in 2005 and run street distribution gangs in “almost every region of the United States,” the Government Accountability Office reported.

“The only thing that holds the cartels back is their imagination,” said Ramona Sanchez, Drug Enforcement Administration spokeswoman.

Drug smugglers in Arizona have been found carrying assault rifles or shoulder-fired rocket launchers.

When the National Guard built steel vehicle barriers on the Tohono O’odham Nation, smugglers built a ramp to drive over them.

Also, numerous tunnels have been dug under border fences to get drugs to the U.S. side.

In addition to the wide range of smuggling operations and the year-round availability of pot, the increase in pot seizures can also be attributed to an increase in law-enforcement manpower, said Border Patrol Agent Sean King.

He said the Border Patrol confiscated 305,390 pounds of marijuana in fiscal year 2002 in southern Arizona, when 1,800 agents guarded the border.

In the first 11 months of fiscal 2007, the Border Patrol, now expanded to 2,900 agents in southern Arizona, seized 754,298 pounds

A recent series of busts over a four-day period netted Border Patrol agents more than 9,000 pounds of marijuana.

The largest haul in that series included nearly 3,000 pounds found in two stolen vehicles abandoned after an off-road pursuit on the Tohono O’odham Nation on Nov. 12.

“There’s a lot more area we can cover,” King said. “In the past, we could cover the major smuggling routes. Now we can cover all the major routes and a lot of other routes.”

In cities, one of the best ways to protect a neighborhood is to take part in a neighborhood watch, Robinson said.

“You should know your neighbors,” he said. “You never know who’s living next door.”

———

THE NUMBERS

Marijuana seizures are up, but how much? Finding figures that give the big picture is tricky. Federal and state agencies have different fiscal years, and many agencies make seizures. A sampling:

High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program, which covers the border and Colorado River counties:
2007*: 1.2 million pounds

2006: 885,573 pounds

2005: 891,280 pounds

Pima County totals:

2007: 534,035 pounds

Counter Narcotics Alliance: Pima County totals:
2007*: 160,948 pounds

2006: 138,076 pounds

2005: 95,687 pounds

2004: 123,589 pounds

U.S. Border Patrol, Tucson sector totals:
2007*: 754,298 pounds

2006: 616,534 pounds

2005: 488,760 pounds

2004: 446,757 pounds

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, statewide totals:
2007: 72,526 pounds

2006: 47,709 pounds

2005: 54,710 pounds

2004: 61,503 pounds

———

Arizona Republic reporter Sean Holstege contributed to this article. *HIDTA collects information from federal, state and local agencies. All numbers are for federal fiscal years from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30. Past data for Pima County was not immediately available. *Through first 11 months of county’s fiscal year, which ended June 30 *Through first 11 months of the federal fiscal year.

__

Award winner: This article won third place for public safety reporting from the Arizona Press Club.

This article originally appeared in the Nov. 21, 2007, issue of the Tucson Citizen newspaper.

Filed Under: news and features, writing Tagged With: drug smuggling tucson, marijuana, rynski news, southwest drug corridor

Two reasons why our border security stinks

Arizona has the fine distinction of being the weakest link along the Mexican border.

Photo Ryn Gargulinski
Photo Ryn Gargulinski

With agents like the two who were recently busted, it’s not hard to see why.

Two border employees were recently charged with accepting bribes to help drugs and illegal immigrants make their way from Mexico into the United States, according to news releases from the District of Arizona’s Office of the U.S. Attorney.

Former U.S. Border Patrol Agent Yamilkar Fierros, who was arrested Oct. 30, allegedly accepted bribes totaling $5,500 to help the drug trade thrive. A four-count federal indictment was unsealed the day he was arrested.

Fierros, from Tucson, reportedly accepted four separate bribes to give purported drug traffickers the following information and assistance:

* $1,000 for furnishing a law enforcement sensitive map of San Rafael Valley, which depicts road, trails, landmarks and terminology used by border patrol to track down drug traffickers on Sept. 30.

* $3,000 for giving out a list of 109 sensor location in and around Sonoita on Oct. 2

* $1,000 for handing over a list of yet more Sonoita sensor locations – 65 new ones – and

* $500 for agreeing to help sneak a load of narcotics from Patagonia to Tucson on Oct. 23

His $5,500 is a pretty paltry sum for a load of valuable information. The guy must not have been a business major.

On a scarier note, who knows how much farther all that information traveled. Maybe copies of the map and lists are hidden beneath rocks along the way.

Thanks, guy.

Photo Ryn Gargulinski
Photo Ryn Gargulinski

Another agent, a man from Yuma, recently pleaded guilty to accepting bribes to help smuggle illegal aliens into the country.

Former U.S. Customs and Border Protection Officer Jose Carmelo Magana was staffing a lane at the San Luis Port of Entry back in 2007 where he would reportedly not bother to perform proper inspections.

Ooops. Didn’t see that illegal hiding in the wheel well, sorry.

Magana admitted he was in cahoots with Brenda Covarrubias, Ana Bertha Calderon, Jesus Gastelum-Rodriguez, Guadalupe Milan de Gastelum, all of whom already pleaded guilty in this case to Conspiracy to Bring Illegal Aliens to the United States.

In addition to the bribe, Magana also said he got a portion of the smuggling fees charged by the smugglers.

We must thank this guy, too.

The maximum sentence for Attempting to Bring Illegal Aliens into the U.S. is 10 years in federal prison with a minimum mandatory penalty of three years in prison. It can also carry up to a $250,000 fine.

The bribery charges could cost each guy 15 years in the federal pen, a fine of $250,000, or both. Fierros faces four of those charges, which would make his maximum sentence, if convicted, 60 years and the maximum fine at $1 million. OK. But we have to wonder where he’d get the $1 million if he’s sitting around in prison.

Maybe he can rake in more bribe money.

wb-logolilWhat do you think?

Is there any bribe large enough that would propel you into illegal action?

How can such actions be better prevented in the future?

Have you heard other unscrupulous border stories? Do tell.

Filed Under: blogski, crime, danger, gross stuff, life, police, fire, law, stupidity Tagged With: arizona mexico border, arizona weak link border, border patrol bribes, crime, danger, drug smuggling tucson, gross, illegal immigrant smuggling tucson, tucson border patrol, us customs and border patrol tucson

Footer

Stay in the loop

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Etsy
  • Pinterest

Copyright © 2021 · Author Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in