U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Alert Returns to Port Canaveral After Patrol to Counter Illegal Fishing in Gulf of America

By  //  May 5, 2025

210-foot, Reliance-class medium endurance cutter homeported at Port Canaveral

The Coast Guard Cutter Alert WMEC 630 crew returned to their home port in Cape Canaveral, following a 55-day deployment in the Gulf of America. ((USCG  image)
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BREVARD COUNTY • CAPE CANAVERAL, FLORIDA — The Coast Guard Cutter Alert WMEC 630 crew returned to their home port in Cape Canaveral on Friday, following a 55-day deployment in the Gulf of America.

Alert is a 210-foot, Reliance-class medium endurance cutter homeported at Port Canaveral.

The cutter’s primary missions are counter-narcotic and migrant interdiction operations, protection of living marine resources, and search and rescue support for U.S. Coast Guard operations throughout the Western Hemisphere.

Alert’s crew deployed under the tactical command of the Eighth Coast Guard District to counter illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing in the region.

During patrol, the crew enforced federal law at sea and defended the United States’ Exclusive Economic Zone by interdicting illegal fishing in U.S. territorial waters.

While underway, crew members conducted law enforcement boardings, which ranged from routine safety inspections to federal fisheries enforcement, to deter illicit activity such as illegal maritime migration, fishing, and smuggling.

On April 20, Alert’s crew coordinated with the Coast Guard Cutter Jacob Poroo WPC 1125 and Coast Guard Station South Padre Island to interdict a lancha with three Mexican fishermen aboard.

The fishermen were engaged in illegal fishing north of the U.S. maritime boundary line in the Gulf of America.

The Coast Guard Cutter Alert WMEC 630 crew returned to their home port in Cape Canaveral, following a 55-day deployment in the Gulf of America. (USCG  image)

Alert’s crew also detained four additional Mexican fishermen suspected of illegal fishing after they were transferred aboard the cutter from Jacob Poroo.

All seven apprehended Mexican fishermen were later transferred to U.S. Customs and Border Protection for processing.

“I am proud of our crew guarding America’s southeastern maritime border, a mission set maintained by the Coast Guard for over 200 years,” said Cmdr. Lee Crusius, commanding officer of Alert.

“The protection of U.S. sovereign interests throughout the maritime domain has been the staple of our service, and this patrol was no exception.”

A lancha is a fishing boat used by Mexican fishermen that is approximately 20-30 feet long, has a slender profile, has one outboard motor, and can travel at speeds exceeding 30 mph.

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Lanchas are frequently used to illegally fish in the EEZ near the U.S. – Mexico border in the Gulf of America. The illegal harvest and trade of red snapper and other fish species are often a revenue stream for criminal organizations.

Apart from their use for illegal seafood harvesting in U.S. waters, lanchas may also be used to move illicit drugs and aliens into the United States.

Headquartered in New Orleans, the Eighth Coast Guard District is responsible for U.S. Coast Guard operations in 26 states, including the Gulf of America coastline from Florida to Mexico, the adjacent offshore waters and outer continental shelf, and the inland waterways of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, and Tennessee River systems.

The Coast Guard Cutter Alert WMEC 630 crew returned to their home port in Cape Canaveral, following a 55-day deployment in the Gulf of America. (USCG  image)

Alert is a 210-foot, Reliance-class medium endurance cutter. The cutter’s primary missions are counter-drug operations, alien interdiction, enforcement of federal fishery laws, and search and rescue supporting U.S. Coast Guard operations throughout the Western Hemisphere.

Alert falls under the command of the U.S. Coast Guard Atlantic Area, which is based in Portsmouth, Virginia. U.S. Coast Guard Atlantic Area oversees all Coast Guard operations east of the Rocky Mountains to the Arabian Gulf. In addition to surge operations, they allocate ships to deploy to the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific to combat transnational organized crime and illicit maritime activity.

For information on how to join the U.S. Coast Guard, visit Go Coast Guard.com to learn about active duty and reserve, officer and enlisted opportunities.

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