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posted by mattie_p on Tuesday February 25 2014, @08:37AM   Printer-friendly
from the what-happens-underground-stays-underground dept.

girlwhowaspluggedout writes:

"The US Border Patrol has a new tool in its battle against the tunnels that are used to smuggle in drugs from Mexico. Since the cartels' diggers operate outside the range of the agency's cameras, motions detectors, and drones, and because filling the tunnels with concrete hasn't stopped the smugglers, the US Border Patrol now regularly employs robots to search through the underground drug trafficking routes.

The Border Patrol operates four remote-controlled robots along the US-Mexico border. Three of the four are assigned to its station in Nogales, Arizona, the final destination for most of the tunnels that have been discovered so far near the southern border. The agency's robots, which include Applied Research Associates' Pointman Tactical Robot and Inuktun Services' Versatrax 300, can easily fit in closed quarters. The tunnel that the Border Patrol shut down last month, for example though it was equipped with electric lighting, ventilation fans, and wood shoring was only 3 feet and high 2 feet wide. It spanned a whopping 481 feet, the largest tunnel discovered in Nogales by the Border Patrol.

The robots' ability to travel through areas where the air is unsafe to breath for extended periods is especially valuable in Nogales, AZ, whose popularity with drug smugglers is due to its sewer system, which is easily accessible from the adjacent city of Heroica Nogales, Mexico."

 
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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by TheLink on Tuesday February 25 2014, @12:01PM

    by TheLink (332) on Tuesday February 25 2014, @12:01PM (#6690)
    I can't believe they are really serious about stopping it, otherwise more bankers would be in jail for laundering billions of drug money.

    They put small timers in jail for laundering magnitudes less (or for installing secret compartments into cars), but when it's billions, the banks just get fines they can bear. Who in HSBC, Wachovia, etc is in jail for laundering all that money?

    Without those billions of laundered money the piles of severed heads would be much smaller - not as much money to pay for all the armies and wars. Those bankers and their friends really have blood on their hands.
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  • (Score: 2) by mcgrew on Tuesday February 25 2014, @03:23PM

    by mcgrew (701) on Tuesday February 25 2014, @03:23PM (#6857) Homepage Journal

    Of course they don't want to stop it, dry up their cash cow? The people who are vehemently against legalizing and regulating drugs are those who profit from their illegality. I wonder how much campaign cash has been funneled to US politicians by the cartels, who would be out of business if drugs were legal? Or by bankers who launder the drug money? Or owners of private prisons?

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