Border Patrol Destroys Tunnel In Rio Grande Valley

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HIDALGO, TX - NOVEMBER 02: U.S. Army soldiers from Ft. Riley, Kansas carry fence posts while installing protective wire along the Rio Grande at the U.S.-Mexico border on November 2, 2018 in Hidalgo, Texas. U.S. President Donald Trump ordered the troops to the border to bolster security at points of entry where an immigrant caravan may attempt to cross in upcoming weeks. The troops in Hidalgo were from the 97th MP Battalion and had arrived to the Rio Grande Valley the day before. (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images)

A reminder today that there are ways around a border wall. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced that they have “destroyed a tunnel created in an attempt to bypass technology and infrastructure.”

The CBP says:

On January 5, 2019, Rio Grande Valley Sector Riverine Units discovered an unfinished tunnel along the U.S. riverbank near Hidalgo, Texas. Agents determined that a transnational criminal organization constructed the man-made tunnel in an attempt to avoid detection while importing people or narcotics. On Wednesday, CBP contractors filled the entire tunnel with concrete.

Melissa A. Lucio, the Patrol Agent in Charge of the McAllen Border Patrol Station said:

“Transnational criminal organizations are constantly attempting new methods of exploiting our vulnerabilities when attempting to get their illicit contraband, be it narcotics or human, into the United Sates.  This dangerous tunnel has been filled with concrete and will no longer be used by the criminal element.”