Tunnel between Ciudad Juárez and El Paso fully sealed by March 31, 2025?
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Official announcements from U.S. and Mexican authorities
300-Meter Smuggling Tunnel Between Ciudad Juárez and El Paso Sealed
Jan 19, 2025, 05:15 AM
Authorities in the United States and Mexico have discovered and are sealing a clandestine tunnel connecting Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, and El Paso, Texas. The tunnel, hidden within a storm sewer system and linked to the Boone Street storm-drain system, spans approximately 300 meters on the Mexican side and is equipped with lighting, ventilation, and structural reinforcements. It is believed to have been used for smuggling drugs, migrants, and other contraband. Officials estimate the tunnel, measuring 1.8 meters in height and 1.2 meters in width, took one to two years to construct and may have been operational for a similar period. The passage was reportedly used by transnational criminal organizations, including the La Empresa cartel, to smuggle over 800 people weekly, with migrants paying up to $6,000 per crossing. Discovered on January 10, 2025, following a joint operation by U.S. and Mexican security agencies and an anonymous tip, the tunnel's existence was partly uncovered through social media posts by traffickers. Investigations are ongoing, with the Mexican Attorney General's Office probing potential complicity by local authorities. Both nations have intensified security measures along the border, and sealing operations using concrete have commenced on both sides to prevent further use.
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Undetermined • 25%
Smuggling Drugs • 25%
Smuggling Migrants • 25%
Smuggling Other Illicit Goods • 25%
Investigation Inconclusive • 25%
Tunnel Dismantled • 25%
Arrests Made • 25%
New Security Measures Implemented • 25%
Successful prosecution • 25%
Ongoing investigation • 25%
Lack of evidence • 25%
Other • 25%
Drug trafficking • 25%
Human trafficking • 25%
Both drug and human trafficking • 25%
Other purposes • 25%
Both equally • 25%
Other • 25%
Drug trafficking • 25%
Human trafficking • 25%
Joint task force • 25%
Mexican law enforcement • 25%
FBI • 25%
Other • 25%
U.S. Border Patrol • 25%
Joint Task Force • 25%
Mexican Security Forces • 25%
Less than 500 • 25%
500 to 800 • 25%
Unknown • 25%
More than 800 • 25%
Sinaloa cartel • 25%
Other • 25%
La Empresa cartel • 25%
Jalisco New Generation cartel • 25%