“History, to some extent, is repeating itself,” said Sheriff Bill Brown. The modern day problem of small boats launching from Mexico and smuggling drugs and people up California's coastline, he explained, is not dissimilar from the Prohibition-era issue faced by Santa Barbara Sheriff's deputies who played cat and mouse with Mexican bootleggers sneaking tequila by boat into the county. “What's going on now is very reminiscent of similar problems in the 1930s,” he said. “But now it's narcotics rather than alcohol.”
Brown and a big group of representatives from local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies — Coast Guard, Homeland Security, and Border Patrol — met Thursday behind closed doors at the Santa Barbara Harbor and brainstormed ways to deal with the rapidly rising challenge of maritime smuggling along the West Coast. Congressmember Lois Capps and 3rd District Supervisor Doreen Farr also attended, but media wasn't allowed in and few details were released.
View 2011-2012 Panga Boat Activity in a larger map
Santa Barbara's increased attention to misbehaving panga boats — small, open fishing craft usually equipped with multiple motors and able to carry a ton of cargo — is brought by their recent proliferation in area waters: In the last two years, there have been 21 recorded panga-related incidents compared to less than 10 in 2008 and 2009 combined. In June, six men, including two Mexican nationals, were arrested near El Capitán State Beach for trying to sneak 1,400 pounds of marijuana — worth an estimated $4.2 million — to shore. On February 22, an empty “super panga” was found near Refugio Beach, bigger and with more horsepower than any other vessels seized.
This push out to sea, all seem to agree, is a direct result of increased security on the United States' southwest border. According to a June 19 Border Patrol report to a House Committee on Homeland Security, apprehensions and seizures along the border have decreased 53 percent since 2008 and are less than one-fifth of what they were at their peak in 2000. More recently, the president's Fiscal Year 2013 Budget Request will put 43,600 Border Patrol agents in the field, the largest deployment in the agency's history. Boots on the ground are supported by more than 270 aircraft, including nine unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) and more than 300 patrol boats.
Capps and Brown said they would like to better tap into these federal resources, which are already enjoyed by jurisdictions farther south like San Diego, Orange, and Los Angeles counties. Brown stressed local-federal cooperation is already strong, but he hopes to boost coordination even more. He noted that while the Sheriff's Department has a boat on duty, it's really meant as a platform for dive teams and isn't built for speed. The Coast Guard's Blackfin cutter has been an effective deterrent, he went on, but could use help patrolling the channel. In a letter he sent to Capps's office in April, Brown also pointed out that investigations into Southern California smuggling activity revealed that drugs from countries other than Mexico — notably China — have made their way to land via panga.
Both Capps and Brown said Thursday's briefing was productive and that concrete crackdown strategies were examined. “My goal is to disrupt this activity,” said Capps after the meeting, explaining she was pleased about the free flow of information between agencies. “Protecting my constituents is the number-one priority,” she said. Brown said his office is looking at the possibility of getting another boat through the Federal Surplus Program and that more sit-downs are planned for the near future.
But time, it seems, is of the essence as smugglers are already adapting to current crackdown measures: The House Committee report notes that smugglers in the Gulf of Mexico and along the Eastern seaboard are using self-propelled semi-submersible vessels (SPSS) — which sit low in the water and are virtually undetectable by sight — to sneak drugs across the border. Another recent trend, it stated, is the use of larger pangas in the Pacific that can transit hundreds of miles north.
Related Links
- More Smugglers Taking to the Sea [ February 3, 2012 ]














Previous Month



Comments
"How Do You Solve a Problem Like Pangas?"
Answer: Re-legalize drugs which by doing so the prices would drop and the profit-margin incentive would be reduced.
Sadly, it seems all America seems to know how to do now is pass more laws to solve our problems.
billclausen (anonymous profile)
July 9, 2012 at 7:47 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Yeah, time to get tough on crime and put more people in jail, but lets not look at the real problem which is people like to get high for medical and recreational reasons.
AZ2SB (anonymous profile)
July 9, 2012 at 9:10 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Re-open the Ranger Station on the Channel Islands and step-up channel patrols, employ the local fishermen to pass-on sightings of suspicous watercraft and task the local civil air patrol and report low and fast watercraft that show a larger than personal watercraft size.
dou4now (anonymous profile)
July 10, 2012 at 5:14 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The far right conservative side of our political spectrum would steer the U.S.A to put up fences along our coasts. Drones, warships, trained sharks with freakin laser beams attached? More public dollars for private prisons, militias and whatever wild, nutty and ineffective, unrealistic and wasteful conservative ideas?
President Obama will need a big push from the public in his second term to decriminalize and roll back the 40 plus years of entrenched drug-war policies and agencies. Obstruction and fits from the opposition will be as great as the health car wars. But Obama will do it! Obama can do anything. Even with the obstructionism. Vote for Obama/Biden!
DonMcDermott (anonymous profile)
July 10, 2012 at 7:22 a.m. (Suggest removal)
@DonMcDermott,
The Independent Side of our political spectrum thinks you have a screw loose with all your rants.
Alcohol Prohibition caused the same problems and creation of violent organized criminal activity.
The solution to Alcohol Prohibition and all its evils was anyone, anyone, Legalization and Regulation of Alcohol.
So how about do nothing Lois Capps, stepping up and supporting Legalization and Regulation.
This from an politically Independent, non-user of drugs.
howgreenwasmyvalley (anonymous profile)
July 10, 2012 at 9:31 a.m. (Suggest removal)
To answer the question in the headline here: patrols empowered with a few 20-mike-mikes.
John_Adams (anonymous profile)
July 10, 2012 at 11:29 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Hm, gee wiz, what was it that ended the boat runners during the first prohibition? Oh that's right - ending prohibition!
Num1UofAn (anonymous profile)
July 11, 2012 at 10:44 a.m. (Suggest removal)
In Portugal all drugs have been decriminalized. Addiction, crime, overdosing and other problems related to drug abuse have PLUMMETED there, contrary to what the corporate "weasel media" and the establishment were predicting.
There are many reasons why drugs remain illegal in the US, and will likely remain so: Here are a few, at random.
1. The largely privatized for-profit prison industry makes $billions in taxpayer funded corporate welfare; the income stream from the drug laws is their largest cash cow.
2. Those mostly targeted by the 'war on drugs' have been end users - disproportionately poor people of color and working class white, highlighting institutionalized racism and a "screw the poor" attitude by the powers that be.
3. People have been emotionally blackmailed into believing the LIE that the war on drugs is waged "on behalf of public health", and "to protect our children". This is bogus, 180º from the truth - and perpetuated by corrupt officials and the mainstream media. Any change of policy is smeared as "going soft on drugs" - a catch phrase which gets the public's knees jerking wildly - in other words, the public remain clueless on the issue.
4. Widespread corruption exists within law enforcement agencies. Powerful players in major city police departments, the DEA and other federal agencies are working WITH the cartels for their own personal enrichment.
The war on drugs enriches both those who control it, and the organized crime cartels.
bloggulator (anonymous profile)
July 11, 2012 at 11:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The tide has turned, the drug war is as popular as Vietnam. Don't vote for ANYONE who will prolong it.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
July 11, 2012 at 11:10 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The Obama administration has carried out more raids than the George W. Bush administration when it comes to medical marijuana and has been the hardest president when it comes to the "War on Drugs", so what are you smoking Don?
AZ2SB (anonymous profile)
July 11, 2012 at 4:42 p.m. (Suggest removal)
In fact Obama reneged on his campaign promise not to harass California's medical marijuana dispensaries and collectives.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
July 11, 2012 at 5:55 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Don_McDermott: Assuming your statement is true that Obama wants to repeal the War on Drugs, he would need a supportive congress and senate and from what I see none of the politicians who make the local news, i.e. Capps, Boxer, Feinstein, are for ending this laughable drug war.
From what I see, the excuse made by status quo politicians is that there is some invisible force that is stopping them from getting things done. So *who are* the politicians getting in the way?...or did I strike at the root by pointing out none of the fair-haired-children of the so-called progressive movement (de facto status quo) have stood up and spoken out against this failed policy.
You mean well Don, but I really think you put way too much faith in people who have little regard for your freedoms. I know what I'm talking about because a number of years ago I would have made the same argument you are now making.
billclausen (anonymous profile)
July 11, 2012 at 8:53 p.m. (Suggest removal)
"neak 1,400 pounds of marijuana — worth an estimated $4.2 million "
You got to be kidding me...you can't hardly give that dirt weed away. Who buys Mexican weed?.....NO ONE. at least around here, they must truck it to the Midwest.
Brown is an idiot.....you might as well try to stop the tide from coming in.
LEGALIZE ALL DRUGS, DISBAND THE DEA
rstein9 (anonymous profile)
July 13, 2012 at 8:50 a.m. (Suggest removal)
totally agreed on legalization rather than wasting money on patrols and interceptors....but that isn't going to happen...too logical.
The USCG Blackfin is pretty useless to combat these fastboat pangas. 1. The USCG Blackfin seems to spend more time along side the pier than on patrol, anyone who sits at the bar at brophy's knows that. 2. That gray Panga boat had 1400hp on it and is only made out of fiberglass and wood!!!! Rocket ship!!!! The Blackfin is Fast but it isn't that fast.
To be effective USCG Dolphin helos with a gunner need to be used, works great off of florida to intercept fast boats. Also they are far better for patrolling a large area.
cmetzenberg (anonymous profile)
July 14, 2012 at 5:42 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Blah, blah, blah. Like it or not we have lost the war on drugs. People want'em and the gangsters are providing them. The only people who oppose legalizing or at least decriminalizing marijuana ( I am not talking about heroin, cocaine or other drugs that is a more nuanced and complex argument) are drug lords, prison guards and cops and a few misguided Carrie Nation types. We have far more pressing problems than people smoking pot! Hang out at any ER and count on the fingers of one hand the number of people who are brought in for over doses of or serious adverse effects from marijuana. Alcohol and prescription drugs ("medicines") on the other hand would need all your fingers and toes and those of your two best friends.
Noletaman (anonymous profile)
July 16, 2012 at 9:02 p.m. (Suggest removal)