The U.S. Coast Guard rescued 17 illegal aliens aboard a disabled boat floating about 50 miles southwest of San Diego on March 30.
The boat was taking on water and requested assistance, the Coast Guard reported.
A helicopter air crew at the Coast Guard Air Station in San Diego was joined by the guided-missile destroyer USS Spruance to make the rescue.
The Spruance launched a 23-foot-long rigid hull inflatable boat crew to bring the people to safety.
The helicopter air crew then picked them up from the Spruance to take them into San Diego, according to the report.
In all, one American and 17 illegal immigrants were brought to the Coast Guard’s base in San Diego in two separate flights.
All 18 people were transferred to the Department of Homeland Security, the Coast Guard reported.
“Irregular maritime migration aboard unseaworthy or overloaded vessels is always dangerous, and often deadly,” the Coast Guard warned in a news release Monday. “Do not take to the sea. You could lose your life.”
California local and state representatives say there has been a rise in illegal maritime crossings in the state, likely due to the Trump administration’s efforts to slow the flow of land crossings.

Nationwide, the Border Patrol reported apprehending an average of about 330 illegal crossers a day in February, the first full month since President Donald Trump took office.