Border securitySecond drug submersible seized

Published 13 July 2010

Colombia’s drug cartels frequently use semi-submersible vessels to smuggle large amounts of cocaine past American and Colombian patrol boats to Central America en route to the United States; law enforcement discovers and seizes second submersible in as many weeks: the first was seized in Ecuador, the second in Guatemala

Ddrug-smuggling submersible captured off the coast of Costa Rica // Source: wordpress.com

Four Colombians have been detained by Guatemalan authorities after being found on board a submarine carrying five tons of cocaine bound for the United States, the Guatemalan military said Sunday.

Colombia Reports says that the operation, which was carried out jointly by the Guatemalan navy and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), located the 55-foot (17-meter) vessel off Guatemala’s Pacific coast on Friday. The four men on board were identified as Colombian nationals and taken into custody.

Armed forces spokesman Byron Gutierrez said the crew attempted to sink the boat when surprised by navy units and the DEA. The vessel was recovered by authorities with no casualties.

There was a sleeping compartment, another (compartment) for the engine, and a third for cargo which was full of cocaine,” the official said.

Colombia’s drug cartels frequently use semi-submersible vessels to smuggle large amounts of cocaine past American and Colombian patrol boats to Central America en route to the United States (see “Drug smuggling becomes more sophisticated, II,” 19 June 2009 HSNW).

In July the first fully-submersible submarine was uncovered at a jungle shipyard in Ecuador. The DEA described the100-foot (33-meter) vessel as a “quantum leap” in drug-smuggling technology, capable of long-range underwater operation.