ABC News January 29, 2020

Record-long drug-smuggling tunnel found from Mexico to San Diego

WATCH: Longest illegal underground tunnel found

Authorities are revealing what they called "the longest illicit cross-border tunnel" from Mexico to the San Diego area.

The tunnel, which begins in Tijuana, Mexico, was located in an industrial area a half-mile from the Otay Mesa Port of Entry and was concealed by a small industrial building, according to a Wednesday news release by the U.S. Border Patrol San Diego sector and its partners.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Handout photo taken Oct. 30, 2019 and released Jan. 28, 2020, shows the longest illicit cross-border narco-tunnel from Mexico ever discovered along the Southwest border after a multi-year, inter-agency investigation by U.S. Border Patrol San Diego Sector and partners.

Deputy Chief Patrol Agent Aaron M. Heitke said during a news conference Wednesday that the initial discovery had been made on the U.S. side due to "intelligence gathering and technologies." He would not specify which technologies had been used.

"With the help of Mexico, we were able to exact a location of the tunnel itself," he said.

MORE: Major Drug Tunnel Found on California-Mexico Border, 6 Arrested

The tunnel along the Southwest border "travels north into the U.S. bending slightly west and extending an astonishing 4,068 ft. from the border, with a total length of 4,309 feet," the news release said.

The tunnel, which measures 5.5 feet tall and 2 feet wide, "includes an extensive rail and cart system, forced air ventilation, high voltage electrical cables and panels, an elevator at the tunnel entrance and a complex drainage system," the news release said. The tunnel also has an average depth of 70 feet from the surface.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Handout photo taken Oct. 30, 2019 and released Jan. 28, 2020, shows the longest illicit cross-border narco-tunnel ever discovered along the Southwest border. The tunnel is around five and a half feet tall by two feet wide and 4,309 feet long.

"They could've smuggled any ... contraband they wanted to," Heitke said Wednesday. "They'll try anything they can to get their illicit products into the United States."

MORE: Border tunnel found in Arizona after 4 migrants caught

Border Patrol said that an offshoot of the tunnel had been found at approximately 3,529 feet into the U.S.

"This offshoot traveled several feet then came to an end without breaching the surface. The main tunnel extended another city block at which point agents discovered several hundred sandbags blocking the suspected former exit of the tunnel in the Otay Mesa warehouse district within the U.S.," Border Patrol said in its release.

Border Patrol said no arrests or seizures had been made after the tunnel's discovery.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Handout photo taken Oct. 30, 2019 and released Jan. 28, 2020, shows the longest illicit cross-border narco-tunnel ever discovered along the Southwest border. The tunnel is around five and a half feet tall by two feet wide and 4,309 feet long with a ventilation system, electricity and rail system designed to move large packs of drugs.

"The sophistication and length of this particular tunnel demonstrates the time-consuming efforts transnational criminal organizations will undertake to facilitate cross-border smuggling,” said Cardell T. Morant, Acting Special Agent in Charge of Homeland Security Investigations San Diego, in the release.

Authorities said the second-longest tunnel in the U.S., which was found in San Diego in 2014, was a little less than 3,000 feet long.

MORE: Largest single group of migrants ever tunnels under border wall in Arizona, says Border Protection
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Handout photo shows the longest illicit cross-border tunnel ever discovered along the Southwest border after a multi-year, inter-agency investigation by U.S. Border Patrol San Diego Sector and partners. The tunnel is around five and a half feet tall by two feet wide and 4,309 feet long with a ventilation system, electricity and rail system designed to move large packs of drugs.

“As efforts to strengthen security on our Southern border increase, Mexican drug cartels are forced underground to smuggle their deadly drugs into the United States,” said DEA Special Agent in Charge John W. Callery. “The sophistication of this tunnel demonstrates the determination and monetary resources of the cartels."

An investigation into the tunnel was ongoing, authorities said.

ABC News' Jennifer Watts contributed to the reporting in the story.