LA JOLLA, Calif. — At least one person died and 10 others were rescued from a suspected smuggling boat that eventually capsized off the San Diego coast at La Jolla early Thursday, authorities said.
The incident is one of at least four at-sea human smuggling attempts in San Diego in just the past week, and comes nearly three weeks after three undocumented immigrants drowned when their boat crashed near Cabrillo National Monument.
In predawn darkness, lifeguards used boats and at least one rescue board to pluck people from the water near Marine Street on Thursday. The panga then continued north and eventually came into shore about a mile away, where it capsized in the surf line near the Children’s Pool. A submerged victim was found nearby and did not survive.
In all, 15 people were taken into custody from the small panga-style vessel, said Border Patrol Supervisory Agent Jeffrey Stephenson.
Agents first spotted the boat off the coast near Point Loma around 5:10 a.m. Pacific time and tracked it to La Jolla, hoping to see where it was going to make landfall.
Around 5:20 a.m., an agent saw several people in the water who appeared to be in distress and called San Diego lifeguards, said Border Patrol Agent Jacob MacIsaac.
Video shot by OnScene TV showed a Coast Guard helicopter circling over the water as lifeguards on a rescue boat and a rescue board worked to pluck people out of the ocean.
“When our lifeguards got at scene, there was people in the water — we did not have visuals of anyone on the actual vessel,” Lifeguard Capt. Maureen Hodges told reporters at a news conference. “Most of the victims did have life jackets either on or were holding onto them.”
Those who were rescued were transported by boat to lifeguard headquarters, where they were met by ambulances. After being evaluated, eight patients were transported to hospitals to be treated.
“The conditions out there today were rough,” Hodges said. “We have 4- to 6-foot surf and some heavy currents.”
The panga continued heading up the coast after the group of passengers jumped off. A short time later, it came into shore at Wipeout Beach near Coast Boulevard, about a mile away.
That’s where a person was found submerged in the water, said Lifeguard Lt. Ric Stell.
As the boat neared shore, it capsized in the surf line, Stell said.
“Usually when boats go into the surf they flip,” he said. The boat righted itself and ended up in an upright position in the sand.
The person in the water was brought to shore and CPR was performed but he or she did not survive, San Diego Fire-Rescue spokeswoman Mónica Muñoz said.
Some people were able to make it to shore on their own after jumping off the boat. OnScene TV showed at least two men on the beach being assisted by Border Patrol agents.
Information about the deceased victim and the other passengers, including ages and nationalities, were not immediately available.
People seeking to cross the border are increasingly turning to the sea as enforcement is heightened at land borders.
The La Jolla coastline has become a common area for smugglers to land boats. However, three previous attempts in the past week have targeted the shores near Sunset Cliffs, according to criminal complaints filed in San Diego federal court and interviews with authorities.
The first occurred in the early morning hours on May 14.
A Border Patrol agent watching the waters with an infrared camera spotted a panga-style boat about 2:15 a.m. approaching the coastline below Sunset Cliffs, according to court records.
The boat landed about 30 minutes later, in an area known as Garbage Beach, and the agent watched as a group of people made their way up a staircase and into the side yard of a nearby home.
Agents surrounded the home and ultimately found 14 people hiding the back yard. All were determined to be Mexican nationals.
Another boat laden with undocumented immigrants landed in the same area a day later.
The panga was spotted about 5:15 a.m. Saturday, again by an agent monitoring the coastline.
A group scrambled up the cliffs, and one person broke away and walked toward a vehicle parked nearby. The man approached the driver and asked in Spanish if he was there to pick them up.
Turned out, the driver was a Border Patrol agent — wearing a ballistic vest with his badge and the agency’s insignia — who had responded to the radio call. The agent identified himself as such and arrested the man.
While handcuffed, the man tried to run away but was quickly caught, according to the complaint.
Sixteen others, all Mexican citizens, were found in the surrounding area and detained on suspicion of being in the country illegally.
Early Monday, the Coast Guard was sent out to intercept another panga coming in near the same spot about 2:50 a.m.
The boat’s driver ignored commands to stop. As the boat neared the surf line at Osprey Reef, its engine died and it began to drift toward rocks. San Diego lifeguards, aided by the Coast Guard, responded in a small boat and hooked the panga with a rope to pull it away from the cliffs.
Twenty Mexicans and three Guatemalans were detained unharmed.
“The real danger here definitely is to the migrants that are on these vessels,” Agent MacIsaac said. “These are basically open hulled fishing vessels, they are loading them, overloading them with occupants, with gas cans.”
The crash May 2 on the rocks near Cabrillo differed in that the boat was not a traditional panga but a larger trawler-like vessel. It was overloaded with 33 people when it ran aground and broke apart, throwing people into the sea. Three migrants, all Mexican, drowned. The suspected operator of the boat, a U.S. citizen, is facing federal criminal charges.
Border Patrol agents urge people not to put their lives into the hands of smugglers.
The boats used by smugglers often are “grossly overladen,” lack safety devices and sometimes are found off the coast “dead in the water,” MacIsaac said.
At least 116 people have died so far this year during attempts to cross the U.S.-Mexico border or as they journeyed north in the interior of Mexico, according to data tracked by the International Organization for Migration.