California faces threat at sea from drug smugglers (Video)

In the last few years, law enforcement officials said they have seen a considerable spike in smugglers loading drugs or immigrants onto boats in Mexico’s northern Baja Peninsula, then motoring north to offload their illegal cargo along a 300-mile-long stretch of California beaches, sometimes within sight of the many luxury homes on the coastline.

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On a starry night in the hills overlooking the Pacific Ocean north of Los Angeles, a two-man California National Guard special forces surveillance team sets up a sophisticated night scope. Their mission is to search the horizon and the waters below for an increasing number of Mexican drug traffickers offloading multi-ton loads of marijuana–and sometimes illegal immigrants–on remote U.S. beaches.

“These service members are the eyes and ears of federal law enforcement here,” said Lt. Kara Siepmann, of the Guard’s National Drug program. When asked about what specifically they are looking for, one of the surveillance team members said, “We’re looking for blacked out vessels and any suspicious activity we can find, any unusual boats coming through the area.”

The soldiers work quietly and in the dark, aware that the Mexican traffickers have their own spotters here watching out for U.S. law enforcement personnel. “They don’t want to land where the National Guard or the Border Patrol are looking for them,” said Siepmann.

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