Dozens of migrants were caught on camera jumping off a speed boat that came ashore a California beach over the weekend and running into the nearby city in what locals are saying is becoming a regular occurrence.
Video posted online shows the speedboat racing towards the shore in Carlsbad on Saturday, narrowly missing a nearby surfer.
Almost as soon as it landed, a group of adult migrants were seen jumping off the boat and sprinting towards a row of oceanfront houses.
The migrants were then seen piling into a black SUV near Ocean Street, but the driver appeared to be in such a rush that one woman almost fell out as it started moving.
Other migrants who were not able to fit inside the vehicle were then seen crossing the street, and walking into the affluent city.
“It looked like it was a planned deal,” resident Susan Hargis told KUSI.
The man who filmed the incident also said it “looked like a military exercise,” as he told KGTV he counted 22 people jumping off the speedboat.
“To see it live like that, I mean even police and border patrol said they never caught it live like I did,” the unidentified resident said.
“So to see one coming toward the shore at 40, 45 miles an hour and not turning, it was like a movie… and the lifeguards were just sitting there, so I thought it was a planned, staged event.”
Border Patrol agents were notified by police that the boat came ashore at around 11 a.m. on Saturday, and found an abandoned vessel “consistent with human smuggling,” a spokesperson for the agency told The Post.
No arrests have been made, and an investigation is ongoing, the spokesman added.
But the video came as the San Diego border sector recorded the highest number of encounters in the country over the past week, with 6,997 encounters, KUSI reports.
Between 2020 and 2023, there has also been a 139% increase in human smuggling events.
At the same time, nearly 8,000 people have been apprehended while trying to enter the US illegally through the Pacific Ocean, its coastlines or its inlets, according to Fox News.
Migrant drowning deaths off the coast of San Diego County have also spiked in recent years, with 33 migrant deaths between 2020 to 2023, compared to just one in the previous four years.
Researchers have hypothesized that the rise could be linked to the increase in the border fence height from 17 feet to 30 feet — prompting some migrants to cross via water.
“Smugglers have convinced migrants that the maritime environment is an easier route. It’s more of a sure thing,” said Brandon Tucker, the director of Customs and Border Patrol’s Air and Marine Operations in San Diego, adding that people with hip, knee or other mobility issues may also prefer to travel by boat.