WHAT A HAUL: : Officers with the California Highway Patrol and the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Department hauled bales of marijuana from a drop-off site in San Simeon to an approximately 18-foot-long trailer that eventually was filled. Credit: PHOTOS BY STEVE E. MILLER

Just months after San Luis Obispo County got its first taste of maritime drug smuggling in recent memory, a second panga boat beached north of San Simeon—near the same location as the last one.

ARIAL VIEW: : A CHP helicopter transported the marijuana from the beach to a secured location on the other side of U.S. Highway 1. Credit: PHOTOS BY STEVE E. MILLER

The difference: The last bunch of smugglers got away with it. This batch didn’t. And now they’re talking.

On Sept. 6, the SLO County Sheriff’s Department received an early-morning report that a small, motorized fishing skiff—known to be used for narcotics and human trafficking—was spotted on the sand near the Piedras Blancas Lighthouse.

Sheriff’s deputies and California Highway Patrol and California Department of Fish and Game officers were dispatched to the area, where a roughly 35-foot boat was located near Carpoforo Creek Road, according to a department release.

By the time the scene was secure, officials had seized 43 bales of marijuana, weighing more than 3,000 pounds and estimated to be worth more than $4.5 million.

A witness reported people carrying parcels to a motor home located nearby. Officers stopped the motor home, as well as a white truck and a black sedan also suspected to be involved, south of the scene on U.S. Highway 1 near Geronimo Road, just north of Cayucos.

WHAT A HAUL: : Officers with the California Highway Patrol and the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Department hauled bales of marijuana from a drop-off site in San Simeon to an approximately 18-foot-long trailer that eventually was filled. Credit: PHOTOS BY STEVE E. MILLER

By the end of the day, 20 suspects had been arrested. According to an affidavit filed by Homeland Security Special Agent Daniel R. Olgren, three suspects are U.S. citizens, while the rest are Mexican nationals. According to the report, some suspects agreed to waive
their Miranda rights and speak without an attorney present.

The suspects’ statements seemed to follow a similar pattern: Most claim they were approached by someone they didn’t know, who promised good pay for just a few short hours of work. A few suspects claimed they were seized at gunpoint and told that if they didn’t comply with the work, their families would be harmed.

However, one suspect claims he never saw a gun or heard threats, and that everyone involved understood the nature of the situation.

According to Sheriff’s Department spokesman Tony Cipolla, the suspects have been transported to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles, where they’re facing federal drug trafficking charges.

Similar incidents have occurred with increasing regularity in southerly coastal areas, and as more arrests are made in those regions, authorities expect panga operators to set their sights farther north: toward SLO County. According to the affidavit, this panga boat embarked from Ensenada, Mexico.

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