SAN DIEGO - The crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Alert, a 210-foot cutter homeported in Astoria, Ore., recovered more than 3.3 tons of marijuana from the Pacific Ocean approximately 90 miles west of San Nicolas Island, Calif., Sunday morning.
A Sacramento-based Coast Guard C-130 Hercules aircraft located the suspected smugglers' vessel during a routine offshore patrol. The suspects began jettisoning bales as the boat sped south at a high rate of speed. The C-130 vectored the Alert to the area where the crew recovered more than 245 bales of contraband.
"Thanks to our Coast Guard crews in the air and on the water, we disrupted this smuggling threat and recovered a huge amount of drugs today," said Cmdr. Daniel Pickles, commanding officer of the Alert. "I am proud to say that several thousand pounds of illegal drugs, worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, will be kept off our streets and away from our children."
"The persistent presence of Coast Guard assets, along with those of our law enforcement partners, off of California's shores, is essential to stop the pangas smuggling people and drugs into the U.S.," said 11th Coast Guard District Commander Rear Adm. Karl Schultz. "The Sinaloa cartel and other criminal organizations are exploiting these sea routes to move their illicit cargo and fund their broader illegal enterprises."
The Coast Guard Cutter Alert is based in Astoria, Ore., and was commissioned on August 4, 1969. It is the last of the Coast Guard's 210-foot medium endurance cutters constructed. The 75 crewmembers conduct law enforcement, search and rescue and environmental protection missions from Alaska to the Eastern Pacific Ocean.
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