lframerica.com Blog

April 4, 2008

Million-Dollar Drug Bust In Newberry Springs

Filed under: Uncategorized, Drugs, State & Local, California, CrimeMarch, Drugs, United States News — Administrator @ 2:42 am

http://www.desertdispatch.com/news/cocaine_2982___article.html/wielenga_officials.html

April 3, 2008

NEWBERRY SPRINGS - Officials confiscated approximately $1 million worth of cocaine during a routine traffic stop late Wednesday afternoon on Interstate 40 at Newberry Springs.

During the traffic stop, officials said the driver began acting suspiciously. While searching the vehicle officials said they uncovered 25 kilograms of cocaine according to Sgt. Gregg Wielenga of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s High Intensity Criminal Interdiction Team.

“This is our biggest seizure of 2008 so far,” said Wielenga. “This was obviously part of a large drug-trafficking operation.”

On the street, a kilogram of cocaine is worth approximately $40,000, making the entire load worth $1 million, he said.
The vehicle transporting the cocaine had began its journey in the Los Angeles-area with North Carolina as the destination, said Wielenga. The origin of the cocaine or where it entered the U.S. is still unknown.

Deputy Antonio Juarez was conducting the stop due to the driver’s failure to wear a seat belt, when the driver’s actions warranted a search of the vehicle, said Wielenga.

April 2, 2008

Guatemala Overrun By Mexican Narcotic Traffickers

Filed under: Uncategorized, Drugs, World News, Mexico, South America — Administrator @ 4:34 pm

The National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers (NAFBPO) extracts and condenses the material that follows from Mexican and Central and South American on-line media sources on a daily basis.

El Diario de Coahuila (Saltillo, Coahuila) 4/1/08

Organized Mexican narco traffic has succeeded in virtually occupying Guatemala after creating powerful and dangerous organizations of Guatemalans to smuggle Colombian cocaine to Mexico and the U.S. and by penetrating a series of strategic political, business, police, security and judicial systems. Allied in the multimillion dollar business of narco traffic, Mexicans and Guatemalans have cast a web of corruption that brought death, fear and silence in Guatemala. “If we say that Mexico is a narco state, Guatemala is a criminal state,” said Iduvina Hernandez, director of Security in Democracy, a nongovernmental organization. “Guatemala suffers a transnational siege by organized crime.” The crisis of the incursion in Guatemala by the Sinaloa, Tijuana, Gulf and Juarez cartels, among others, was revealed last Tuesday with the gun battle between narco groups in a town east of Guatemala City that left 11 dead. “The slaughter put in headlines a reality that was a secret for too long,” added Hernandez.

——————–

El Universal (Mexico City) 4/1/08

1. Four municipal police and a public official died of gunshots in an ambush by an armed group in Ayutla, Guerrero. The public Security and Protection Agency (SSPPC) reported that five police officers and two public officials traveling in a patrol vehicle were fired upon yesterday resulting in the five deaths and two wounded. The attackers then took their money and firearms.

2. In Ocampo, Guanajuato, after an 18-hour search, police and military located the bodies of three executed smugglers after a fourth one reported the killings. The group of four had been attacked by an armed group and left for dead. However, one was only wounded and made the report. The police later arrested two suspects. “The victims and the aggressors were involved in the illegal traffic of people destined to the U.S.,” the official noted.

3. In crimes related to organized crime yesterday, four people, one of them a 15-year-old, were killed in Sinaloa, two in Durango, two in Morelos and another who died from a shooting last Friday, and six in Chihuahua. In Tabasco, a police chief was wounded and his neighbors’ houses shot up when gunmen fired some 80 rounds at him.
——————–

El Imparcial (Hermosillo, Sonora) 4/1/08

1. The Mexican government will send a delegation to Nicaragua to plan the transfer of eight members of the Sinaloa drug cartel confined in a maximum security prison near Managua. The “special commission” will arrive in Managua within the next 20 days to coordinate the transfer of the prisoners to Mexico to complete their sentences. Some 21 members of the Sinaloa cartel, including the eight Mexicans, have been confined since last April serving sentences of 10 to 22 years. The group was convicted of drug trafficking and possession of restricted firearms. The Sinaloa cartel had bought a ranch 40 miles north of Managua where they constructed a clandestine landing strip to transport drugs from South America. The petition for the transfer was made by the Mexican government which has great interest in having their nationals complete their sentences in Mexico where they are considered “high risk.” The group had failed in an escape attempt last October.

2. The Mexican government sent a diplomatic note of protest to the U.S. regarding the Supreme Court decision rejecting the judgment of the International Court of Justice to revise the death sentences of 51 Mexicans in the U.S. The message informed the U.S. that Mexico reserves the right to continue pursuing, by all means available, respect for the international Court’s decision.
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La Voz de la Frontera (Mexicali, Baja California) 4/1/08

The states of Jalisco and Zacatecas are Mexico’s principal suppliers of cheap underage labor to the U.S. In the past five years, the flight of minors has continued to increase due to a lack of economic opportunity as well as the lack of hope for improved conditions. These kids often cross the border intending to work a few months, but then do not return home until after they become adults. An investigative report by the University of Guadalajara stated, “unfortunately, when minors cross the border they nearly always end up in juvenile prostitution, drugs and frequently kidnapped by smugglers. Some return, but others die and no one knows under what circumstances.”
——————–

Excelsior (Mexico City) 4/1/08

An encounter between police and military in Juarez, Chihuahua resulted in one policeman gravely wounded. In the confrontation, six municipal police were arrested for transporting marihuana and use of unauthorized firearms. The incident took place shortly after midnight today when the police vehicle refused to stop for a military inspection. The soldiers then opened fire.
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Norte (Cd. Juarez) 4/1/08

In an op/ed, a columnist who goes by the name Don Mirone writes, in part, that along with the military operation in Juarez, there will be more attention given to the importation of firearms from the U.S. The port of entry into Juarez is one of the principal points of crossing of such weapons. He claims that “hundreds of assault rifles, pistols and even .50 caliber machine guns pass through the port. He refers to an arrest of three men in El Paso on March 23 having to do with a load of 24 firearms they had acquired in different sales places that they intended to cross over the border. He also cites two men arrested in Mexico on March 25 who had come through the crossing at Santa Teresa with 17 firearms and thousands of cartridges without incident at customs. He calls for increased vigilance by Mexican authorities.

-end of report-

Mexican Drug Cartels Move Into Human Smuggling

Filed under: Uncategorized, Illegal Alien, Drugs, World News, Mexico, United States News — Administrator @ 1:11 am

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/03/31/MN8MV94C7.DTL

At the Center to Aid Migrants in Exodus shelter, would-be immigrants to the United States shared stories of violence at the hands of human smugglers working for drug cartels.

“You used to be able to walk across” the border, said Javier Corazon, 48, who says he lived in Tucson for decades before being deported two years ago. “Now you never know what’s going to happen. They may leave you, beat you or worse.”

The 30 or so beds at the shelter in this small Mexican town near the Arizona border were filled mostly with Mexicans and a few Central Americans, some of whom remain determined to cross the border.

“The only thing they have to look forward to when dealing with the ‘coyotes’ is more abuse,” said Rosa Soto Moreno, a shelter volunteer.

Immigrants as commodities

As U.S. border security has tightened, Mexican drug cartels have moved in on coyotes, human smugglers who are paid to bring illegal immigrants into the United States. The traffickers now use their expertise in gathering intelligence on border patrols, logistics and communication devices to get around ever tighter controls. They are slowly gaining control of much of the illegal passage of immigrants from Mexico to the United States, U.S. border officials say.

“This used to be a family business. The coyote and the migrant were from the same town; they were connected,” said Carlos Vélez-Ibáñez, chair of the department of transborder Chicana/o and Latina/o studies at Arizona State University. “Now, because of the so-called security needs of the border, what’s been created is this structure of smuggling in the hands of really nasty people who only treat the migrant as a commodity.”

U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Special Agent Joe Romero and other law enforcement officials say the Mexican drug cartels have even merged human smuggling with drug trafficking, forcing immigrants to act as “mules” in transporting drugs as the price of passage.

“The drug cartels have determined this is big business,” Romero said as he overlooked a narrow strip of desert between El Paso, Texas, and the nearby Mexican city of Ciudad Juárez. Drug cartels “control these corridors. Just like we’re watching them here, they’re watching us. … It used to be, ‘Get across the fence and run.’ Now it’s a lot more organized.”

Moreover, crimes committed by drug gangs that have become common in Mexico are now crossing the border, police officials say. Phoenix Police Cmdr. Joe Klima notes that 350 kidnappings were recorded in the city last year, a crime he describes as previously nonexistent.

Another cartel novelty is the numbers of “drop houses” - homes on the U.S. side where illegal immigrants take refuge after crossing the border. Last year, Phoenix authorities discovered a record amount - 163 such sites - according to Alonzo Peña, special agent-in-charge of the Phoenix Office of Investigations for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Not surprisingly, Arizona police say there have been numerous reports of violence committed at drop houses, usually when immigrants fail to pay the entire fee. Peña says many typically pay half in Mexico and half after they cross the border.

Phoenix tries new strategy

Klima and Peña say tighter border controls in Texas have made Arizona a more popular spot for crossing the border, forcing them to change tactics. In the past, officials mainly targeted illegal immigrants for deportation. Now Klima says Phoenix police are relying on a new strategy: reaching out to illegal residents for information on the infrastructure behind the human smuggling business.

Some analysts say that program may be in jeopardy after Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon’s recent decision to allow police to ask a suspect his or her immigration status - a reversal of a 10-year-old policy - which may make many illegal immigrants reluctant to talk to police. Phoenix is the only major U.S. city that allows its police to ask criminal suspects for residency status.

Meanwhile, drug cartel coyotes from Texas to California are playing an increasingly sophisticated game of cat-and-mouse, of surveillance and countersurveillance, with U.S. authorities, border agents say. When coyotes are caught, violence against U.S. officials is becoming more common. Romero says that even though illegal immigration and crime has decreased in the El Paso area, attacks on U.S. agents have increased by 150 percent.

The rampant violence on both sides of the border has not gone unnoticed by the governments of both nations.

Just last week, Mexican President Felipe Calderon sent 2,500 soldiers and federal agents to Ciudad Juárez to tamp down a bloody drug war. In October, Calderon and President Bush announced the Merida Initiative, a $550 million aid program to help fight transnational crime and drug cartels, and to improve border security. The White House calls the plan a “new paradigm for security” between the two countries.

But some Democrats have not embraced the initiative. They are upset that they were not consulted and that Mexico receives financial aid while funding for the federal Byrne Justice Assistance Grant Program, which provides money for local drug task forces in the United States, has been cut from $520 million to $170 million.

“As long as there is demand for illegal narcotics in the United States, suppliers will sell their cocaine, methamphetamine and heroin on our streets,” Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., said at a February congressional subcommittee hearing on the plan. “So we have to fight the scourge here at home just as we help our partners to the south address the problem in their countries.”

Coyote abandon immigrants

Back at the Agua Prieta shelter, some would-be immigrants to the United States complained that coyote fees had increased dramatically, from $500 in 1993 to $2,500. Others said the coyotes left them at the first sign of the U.S. Border Patrol or when weather conditions worsened. With most of their money in the hands of the coyotes, they had little choice but to return to Mexico.

Gabriel Clemente, 34, said he is looking for work on the Mexican side because of high coyote fees and the increased difficulty in getting across the border without assistance.

Corazon, the migrant worker who lived for years in Arizona, has decided to stay in Agua Prieta, earning $80 a month unloading boxes of food. “This is home now,” he said.

April 1, 2008

Corcoran Police Make Trio Of Drug-Related Arrests In Single Day

Filed under: Uncategorized, Drugs, State & Local, California, CrimeMarch, United States News — Administrator @ 9:47 pm

http://www.hanfordsentinel.com/articles/2008/03/31/news/doc47f1290eefe84888877478.txtby Joe Johnson

The possession and use of controlled substances led to the arrest of numerous Corcoran residents on March 21, as local police officers conducted three drug-related busts within hours of one another. It began at 8:49 a.m., when Fernando Molina, 41, was pulled over during a routine traffic stop in the 2100 block of Sherman Avenue. When officers approached his vehicle, they discovered the man trying to hide 0.1 grams of heroin inside his mouth while still attempting to speak.

He was booked into the Kings County Jail on charges of possession, transportation and being under the influence of a controlled substance. His bail was set at $35,000.

At 1:04 p.m., Corcoran Police officers assisted state parole agents in searching the resident of Joel Guzman, 26, who was wanted on a parole violation. During a search of his residence in the 600 block of Miller Avenue, Guzman was found in possession of 5.7 grams of suspected cocaine.

He was arrested on charges of possession and being under the influence of a controlled substance, as well as possessing a controlled substance for sales. He is currently being held on $30,000 bail and a parole violation.

Closing out the evening, an officer stopped 30-year-old Joseph Becerra at 6:38 p.m. while biking through the 1100 block of San Joaquin Avenue. The man identified himself to police and was found with 0.2 grams of methamphetamine on his person, as well as assorted drug paraphernalia.

Becerra was transported to the Kings County Jail in lieu of $20,000 bail. He was charged with possession, transportation and being under the influence of a controlled substance and a separate charge of possessing drug paraphernalia.

None of the three arrests are believed to be connected.

$8 Million Load Of Marijuana Seized in Calexico

Filed under: Uncategorized, Drugs, State & Local, Arizona, CrimeMarch, United States News — Administrator @ 10:03 am

http://www.yumasun.com/news/calexico_40335___article.html/load_marijuana.html

(Sun Staff Writer Sarah Reynolds)

A routine search of a trailer passing through a commercial inspection station this week in Calexico, Calif. uncovered 11,000 pounds of marijuana, California Highway Patrol announced Thursday.

The street value of the drug shipment is estimated at $8 million, according to CHP.

“That’s the largest one that I’m aware,” said Sgt. Mark Kirchhof of the CHP’s Calexico inspection station. “I don’t know if it’s the largest for Customs but … around the highway patrol that’s the largest one I’ve ever been around.”

According to CHP, a 2001 Freightliner tractor pulling a 53-foot box trailer attempted to pass through CHP’s Calexico Inspection Facility Tuesday afternoon. It had just entered the United States via the east port of entry.

CHP officials said the trailer, owned by Swift Transportation, was supposed to be carrying water heaters. However, during the routine commercial inspection an officer became suspicious that drugs might be concealed at the rear of the trailer.

The Calexico Police Department was called, with their drug-detection canine, which immediately noted the presence of drugs at the rear doors.

When the doors were open numerous large boxes containing multiple packages of marijuana were discovered on top of the water heaters. When the truck was unloaded a total of 100 large cardboard boxes and 600 packages were discovered, totaling 11,000 pounds of marijuana.

“The whole top half of the trailer was filled with boxes of packaged marijuana,” Kirchhof said.

Due to what CHP officials describe as “the enormous size of the load,” the case was referred to the California Department of Justice, Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, who took possession of the marijuana and the truck.

The driver, Ricardo Torres Villa, 28 of Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico, was subsequently booked into the Imperial County Jail for possession of marijuana and transportation for sales, both felonies.

March 15, 2008

Lake County Seeing Increase In Heroin Use

Filed under: Uncategorized, Drugs, State & Local, Illinois, United States News — Administrator @ 4:42 pm

The Lake County law enforcement officials have announced they are witnessing an increase of heroin traffic in the area.

For the last three months of 2008 there have been 5 heroin-related deaths in Lake County, this is compared to the 18 deaths in total for all of 2007.

In only three months so far this year 20 grams have been seized in Lake County. A massive increase from the 31 grams in total for all of 2007.

Heroin is not a home grown drug and is often found being smuggled in across our Nations borders.  The ability to control such substances will never be able to be accomplished until the borders also can be controlled.

March 14, 2008

Canada Gets It, Why Can’t Our Government?

If Canada understands the sheer cost of illegal immigration to the fate of the United States, why is it so difficult for our own government to grasp what is logical?   

Canadafreepress 

Why Illegal Immigration is a Threat to the United States and How Local Communities are Fighting Back.

by Tom Deweese, Wednesday, March 12, 2008

n June, 2007 a solid eighty percent of the American people let Congress know they wanted the government to put the brakes on illegal immigration; they turned thumbs down on the President’s guest worker amnesty plan; and they wanted tax-paid services to illegals stopped.

Most Americans understand that new laws are not needed to stop illegal immigration. What is necessary is repeal of some laws granting taxpayer-financed services to illegals along with enforcement of existing laws. These two acts would be enough to stop the migration. In simple fact, they are called “illegal” because they are breaking the law.

In truth, the battle over the Senate’s guest worker-amnesty plan is really a battle over attempts to open the border as called for in programs such as North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP). Both plans call for open borders and economic integration of North America. Open borders are required to fully implement the plans.

The Bush Administration and those promoting illegal immigration were frankly stunned at the force and determination of U.S. citizens to reject the Senates immigration plan. Proponents played a very heavy hand in attempting to force the scheme on a resisting citizenry. Such powerful forces are not used to losing. Today they continue to seek new ways to work around the opposition and pass the legislation, as a whole or incrementally.

However, the anti-illegal fervor refuses to abate and in fact, dramatic new developments are taking place in local communities across the nation that may well stop the unpopular Federal schemes.

Meanwhile, in an attempt to weaken the resolve of opponents, they are called fringe fanatics. A common tactic employed by immigration proponents is to accuse opponents of racism. They charge that opponents want to deny a new breed of immigrant the chance to become Americans as many of our immigrant forefathers did. They paint a Norman Rockwell-type picture of honest, hard working immigrants, planting gardens, working in fields, doing the work “no Americans want to do.”

So, in town after town across the nation the battle rages. And that is really the point. Illegal immigration is not just a border issue. It is a national issue affecting every large city and almost every small town. It must be understood that illegal immigration is not just a matter of some unhappy peasants hoping to seek a better life. It is a $300 billion a year industry, combining the interests of multinational corporations with those of drug cartels and Latino street gangs. Caught in between are American communities and the American way of life. Some cities, especially those along the points of entry at the border have become dangerous no-mans lands, where no property is safe, no American citizen is able to leave their home unarmed and some politicians turn a blind eye as they profit under the table. As a result American civilization is beginning to break down. That is why so many Americans refuse to back down on the issue, continuing to demand a crack down, no matter what name calling they must endure.

THE ECONOMIC COST OF ILLEGALS

Federal law (the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act) mandates that all hospitals with emergency-room services must treat anyone who shows up - including illegal aliens. In most cities across the nation, illegals now use the emergency rooms as free primary care. And the hospitals have to keep taking them.

Health Care

The annual cost for uncompensated emergency care to Mexican Border States (California, New Mexico, Arizona and Texas) is $200 million. California taxpayers paid $79 million for illegal alien health care. Four major Los Angeles hospitals were bankrupted and shut down in 2004. Texas paid $74 million. Georgia ran a $63 million deficit for 64,000 unpaid doctor visits in 2002. Cochise County, Arizona spent 30% of its annual budget on uncompensated care to illegal aliens. University Medical Care in Tucson, Arizona spent $10 million on uncompensated care to illegal aliens. 77 hospitals in the four Border States now face financial emergencies. Legal citizens are forced to fly emergency patients to other cities for treatment. Taxes are going up to compensate.
Meanwhile, as a result of the Federal Emergency Medical Act, Mexican ambulance drivers are transporting hospital patients unable to pay for medical care in Mexico to facilities in the United States. The ambulances are driving through unguarded potions of the border with “little resistance” at the instruction of Mexican officials.

Education

Federal laws and a Supreme Court decision mandate that schools cannot deny free education to illegal aliens. Over 300,000 pregnant women enter the nation illegally every year. Taxpayers pay for food, housing medical care and school. The average annual cost per child for education is $7,161, totaling $109 billion to educate illegal aliens annually. The average cost of bilingual education is $1,200 per illegal student. U.S. schools annually educate 1.1 million illegal children. Schools have become over crowded and unruly. Teacher shortages (especially those who speak Spanish) are a growing problem for local school districts.

One teacher has reported what it is like in the classrooms in schools where federal tax dollars pay for free medical, free baby sitters for student mothers as young as thirteen, and free breakfasts (where “the waste of food is monumental, with trays and trays of being dumped in the trash uneaten”), new computers are “carved with graffiti by students.” “I have had to intervene several times for young and substitute teachers whose classes consist of many illegal immigrant students here in the country less than three months who raise so much hell with the female teachers, calling them “Putas” (whores) and throwing things that the teachers were in tears” she reports. Such is the atmosphere in today’s schools which are overrun by illegal aliens who speak no English and there is no ability to control or discipline.

Moreover, state run colleges and universities are being forced to allow illegal aliens to receive in-state tuition discounts that are supposed to be reserved for residents of that state. In California, a law, (Assembly Bill 540) allows undocumented high school graduates who have been in residence for three years to enroll in community colleges and the California State University and University of California systems without paying nonresident tuition. The same is true in many other states across the country.

The Jobs Americans Don’t Want

In 2003, illegal aliens displaced American workers at a cost in excess of $133 billion, while American college and high school students can’t find summer jobs in yard care, landscape, fast food or service jobs – because illegal aliens work those jobs at a third of the wage – often under the table.

Crime

Crimes committed by alien criminals, such as rape, murder or drug distribution costs U.S. taxpayers $1.6 billion in prison costs alone. The figure doesn’t include the cost of lost property, medical bills of the victims, time lost from work to recover, higher insurance costs, etc. Today, illegal aliens make up twenty nine percent of the U.S. prison population - or 500,000 illegals.

Latino gangs like Mara Salvatrucha 13 (MS13) constitute most of the crime from the ranks of the illegals. They originated in El Salvador and today their U.S. leadership still comes from there. They steal cars and use them to run drugs over the border. They terrorize local citizens with violence. They are the chief source of drug sales for the cartels. And they are racists.

MS13 is the largest and most violent of all gangs in the US today. They have overtaken the Crips and the Bloods both in size and violence. MS13, which began its operations in Los Angeles has now moved east and is prominent on the East Coast.

In Los Angeles, Mexican gangs declared “ethnic cleansing zones” in specific parts of the city. They kill whites and blacks. In New Jersey, recently, MS13 gang members killed three college students in execution style.

NO MANS LAND AT THE BORDER

No legal citizen of the United States of America, living under the Constitution and the Bill of Rights should have to live as those who reside near the U.S. / Mexican border. Here there are no property rights, no ability to be safe in their homes, and no peace. One dare not go to the movies, the grocery or visit a relative without carrying a weapon for protection. Through out the community the streets are teaming with drug dealers, loiterers and gangs bent on violence.

The illegals flood across their property having just crossed the border. As they pass over the ranches and private property they leave a trail of trash, human waste and dead farm animals and pets. Found in the trash that is dropped all along the trail are pieces of paper containing contact phone numbers. Also found are Korans dropped by obvious Muslims who have made their way across the border.

Sometimes the illegals walk right in to the living rooms and steal what they want. Many homes on the border are now little more than prisons for the residents, surrounded by barbed wire, searchlights, with loaded guns at the ready.

The Tucson, Arizona area is one of the prime crossing points for illegals. The organization for transporting illegals is almost a precision military operation. On the Mexican side of the border is a landing strip where planes fly in on a regular basis with their cargo. Some of it human; some drugs. It’s all the same to those providing the transportation.

The planes land and the cargo is loaded onto busses with the windows whited out. Young girls prepare for the trip by taking birth control, for they know what awaits them on the trip across the border from their “travel assistants” - rape. It’s just part of the price for crossing the border into the promised land of America.

The busses drive to a specific location on the border. Here the cargo is unloaded and the process of walking across the border begins. Each of the human cargo is given information on what to do once they reach the other side, including a phone number of someone to call. The number is not necessarily a local number. It may be a location in Virginia, or Maine or Utah. Anywhere in the U.S. The person on the other end gives instructions on how to gain transportation to their location where they will be brought into the illegal community in that city.

And so the journey across the border begins. Somewhere in the middle, between Mexico and the U.S. is a tree. From the branches of that tree hang women’s panties. It’s called the panty tree. Why? Trophies from the raped women of previous journeys. It’s just the cost of doing business with the “Coyotes,” the murderous thugs who run the illegal immigrant trade. They don’t care who lives or dies. These are the ones who will leave illegals locked in trucks without food or water or ventilation. They charge enormous fees – up front. To them the cargo is all the same. They carry the drugs with the humans. They make deals with terrorists for the same trip. They rape, maim and kill. And go back for another load. Business is booming.

Once the cargo is inside the U.S., more buses are there to pick them up and transport them to drop off points. Here the phone calls are made for arrangements of more transportation across the nation. And in that highly organized manner, illegal aliens make their way into American cities.

Some are “Sanctuary Cities” where politicians have decided it’s good for the community to encourage illegals to live. In such communities no one can ask for the country of origin, even if a crime as horrible as murder is committed. The sanctuaries permit 20 million illegals, drug smugglers, child sex rings, ID forgery networks, and an assortment of run of the mill criminals to live lawlessly inside the United States. They are provided with income, identification, driver’s licenses, credit, housing, education, and medical care at taxpayer expense.

As stated, it’s a $300 billion a year industry. That buys a lot of politicians. Along the Border States no one talks about it. And, no surprise, a lot of politicians do nothing to stop it. Our fear and their greed are destroying the American dream.

MEANWHILE IN YOUR LOCAL COMMUNITY…

How a community treats the illegals is key as to how many come there. The main magnet is the establishment of a day labor center. The nation-wide illegal network knows where to send them. If a community opens its arms, of course they flock there. If a community stands up to them, they leave.

But that is easier said than done. First, federal laws or lack of enforcement hampers efforts against the illegals, no matter the sentiment of the community. Federal courts strike down local laws, such as just happened in Hazleton, Pennsylvania when a federal judge degreed that laws the community had passed to crack down on illegals were unconstitutional. Federal agencies say it is illegal for local police to ask if anyone is an illegal. The federal government argues that immigration is a federal issue and for local communities to take action interferes with U.S. foreign policy.

On the local level too, there is great pressure on elected officials to do nothing. Strong lobbying arms protect the illegals. The ACLU, of course, threatens lawsuits. But many Americans would be surprised to learn of the Hispanic forces behind much of the pressure applied to their local officials.

Many immigrant groups are joined together through the La Raza movement. These are the groups which organized the massive demonstrations in cities across the nation last year. It is past time for all Americans to know what is at the root of those demonstrations and the extent to which our nation is at risk to the La Raza movement.

One of the most prominent Hispanic organizations pushing for “immigrant rights” is the National Council of La Raza – the Council of “the Race.” The mainstream media and most members of Congress depict La Raza as little more than a Hispanic Rotary Club. In 2005, La Raza received $15.2 million in federal grants, of which $7.9 million was in U.S. Department of Education grants for Charter Schools, and undisclosed amounts to get-out-the-vote efforts supporting La Raza political positions including lobbying for open borders and amnesty for illegals. Had the Senate’s immigration bill passed, several million more dollars were budgeted for La Raza.

Behind the respectable front of the National Council of La Raza lies the real agenda of the La Raza movement. This radical agenda, pushed by secondary groups contains the reasons behind the demonstrations and the strong lobbying efforts in our communities.

Key among those secondary groups is the radical racist group Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan, or Chicano Student Movement of Astlan (MEChA). MEChA seeks to carve a racist nation out of the American West. MEChA opposes assimilation into American society. MEChA is a leader in the effort to “Reconquista” or reconquest our western states.

MEChA’s founding principles state: “In the spirit of a new people that is conscious not only of its proud historical heritage but also of the brutal gringo invasion of our territories, we, the Chicano inhabitants and civilizers of the northern land of Aztlan from whence came our forefathers, reclaiming the land of their birth and consecrating the determination of our people of the sun, declare that the call of our blood is our power, our responsibility, and our inevitable destiny…Aztlan belongs to those who plant the seeds, water the fields, and gather the crops and no to the foreign Europeans…For La Raza to do. Fuera de la Raza nada.” That closing two-sentence motto is chilling to everyone who values equal rights for all. It says: “For The Race everything. Outside The Race, nothing.”

These words don’t come from a fringe radical element. These come straight from the official MEChA sites at Georgetown University, the University of Texas, UCLA, University of Michigan, University of Oregon, and many other colleges and universities around the country.

Another leading Hispanic group involved in community organization, promoting the pro illegal position is Mexicanos Sin Fronteras. The translation of the name means “Mexicans Without Borders.” This group is active throughout the country and many times works with the “Zapatista Army of National Liberation.” These groups seek to radicalize the Latino community. The official website of the Mexicanos Sin Fronteras states that it is “anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist in the capital of the most terrorist country of world-wide history” (Washington, DC). It goes on to say it pledges its support to “other campaigns” of the radical illegal Hispanics with material and financial assistance.

In Manassas, Virginia the Mexicanos Sin Fronteras and the Zapatista Army of National Liberation are the two most prominent “pro-Hispanic” voices. In fact, these two groups are spearheading the illegal alien lobby in Prince William County, where Manassas is located. This is the “mainstream opposition” to efforts to curb illegal immigration in that community. Together, these groups are holding rallies and calling for boycotts and even the violent overthrow of the United States. Again, these groups are not fringe radicals. They are the most prominent voices for the illegals.

The photo on this page is of a meeting in Mexico with many of these groups. It is interesting to note that speaker in this picture, with his face covered, is Arnoldo Borjas a member of Mexicanos Sin Fronteras and a resident of Woodbridge, Virginia. He is one of the main leaders in that local movement. Further, in Prince William County, there are several candidates running for local office as well as the state legislature who are closely aligned with these two radical organizations.

FIGHTING BACK

While Congress fiddles and the Bush Administration issues meaningless pronouncements on “get tough” programs it never intends to enforce, local communities and state legislatures are beginning to fight back. And they are meeting with success.

State Legislatures, forced to deal with the failure of the federal government to fix the immigration laws, have considered 1,404 immigration bills this year and enacted 170 of them. These laws are aimed at curbing employment of illegals and making it more difficult to obtain state identification documents like driver’s licenses.

In May, Oklahoma passed the “Taxpayer and Citizen protection Act” which denies illegals state identification, and requires all state and local agencies to verify citizenship status of all applicants before authorizing benefits.

On the local level incredible success is being achieved in Northern Virginia. Last year two residents of Herndon, Virginia, with no prior political experience, began an effort called Save Herndon. The issue was the establishment of a day labor center in the community. The center would give illegals a gathering place in the community to help them get jobs, identification and benefits from the community.

The two began a campaign that at once made a major issue out of the establishment of the center. When the mayor and the city council moved forward and voted to establish the center over the objections of a majority of the citizens, Save Herndon began a campaign to assure these representatives were not re-elected. They succeeded beyond their wildest expectations, helping to out the mayor and everyone on the city council who voted for the center.

Now the movement is growing across the Northern Virginia area. There is now Help Save Manassas, Help Save Loudoun (County), Help Save Fairfax, Help Save Virginia and Help Save Maryland. Together these purely grassroots movements have succeeded in enacting legislation in Loudoun County (the nation’s fastest growing county) and in its neighbor, Prince William County which stops county tax-payer services to illegals. Incredibly, under challenge from federal and state officials, the members of county commissioners are holding tough behind the laws.

The key, as stated earlier, is the day labor centers. If your city has one, then the message has gone out to the illegal infrastructure that your community welcomes them. Get rid of it and send the message that they are no longer welcome. If faced with lawsuits from the ACLU and La Raze, welcome them. Tell them you will gladly have a news conference to discuss their suit in front of the cameras. Do not be afraid.

Here are a few guidelines to help organize locally and face the coming onslaught of charges of racism.

DON’T express anger at what is happening to your community. DON’T express annoyance because illegals refuse to assimilate into your community or abide by your customs. DON’T make the issue economic and safety issues. Overcrowded housing and commercial vehicle zoning violations or that specific individuals are illegal aliens.

The pro-illegals will try to tell the public that there is uncertainty as to who is illegal, creating doubt. They will talk about how impossible it is to check everyone’s legal status. It will be easy to charge racism.

Instead, make the issues about the abrogation of law. Focus your efforts against the individuals, businesses and politicians who create this problem and cheat honest business owners and workers by allowing illegal hiring practices under the table. In short, make the issue about enforcement of the law, cost and corruption. It’s working in Virginia.

Today, we have the chance to not only stop the flood of illegal aliens, but in the process, deflate the size and power of the federal government in the process. It’s time to organize Help Save America.

March 13, 2008

Mexican Drug Cartel Boss Released From U.S. Prison

March 6, 2008

MEXICO CITY, Mexico — Francisco Rafael Arellano Felix (58), a convicted Mexican drug cartel boss has been freed to return back to Mexico just weeks after he began his sentence in a U.S. Prison.

Felix is the eldest of a clan of brothers who ran Mexico’s popular Tijuana cartel.  As he had no pending charges in Mexico against him he was allowed to go as a freed man.

Just one more example of why America fails on the war on drugs.

March 4, 2008

Matricular Cards Connected To Drug Cartels

This falls under information they didn’t want you to know.  It just represents another reason why American’s far and wide should fight and fight hard to stop Matricular cards in the United States.  As you read this information, watch for the key word “remittances”.
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From Jeff Schwilk - SDMM - March 4, 2008  (Email Alert)
Ahh, the real reason the Mexican Government wants to flood America with alien matricular cards….they know damn well that drug cartels use them to send tens of billions of dollars of drug money to Mexico.

This is yet another “secret” Enrique Morones and the Mexican Consulates try to conceal! Is anyone surprised?  Open borders are mostly about illegal drugs and the money the rich and elite (on both sides of the border) make off the massive drug trade from Mexico.  Connect the dots and follow the money!

PARTIAL TRANSLATION FROM:

http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2008/03/01/index.php?section-politica&article=012n1po1 

According to a report from the U.S. government, in the last five years, the Mexican drug cartels have achieved “to repatriate” to Mexico 22 Billion dollars, by means of transactions in the financial system and by conduit of the companies that the migrants use for their remittances.

The 2008 report of the International Narcotics Control Strategy, of the American State Department, notifies that Mexico is one of the jurisdictions that more challenges represent for the authorities of the neighboring northern country (U.S.) regarding money laundering, since by Mexico’s northern border they pass dollar cargos from the sale of drugs in the United States.

It stands out that, besides utilizing sophisticated traditional financial system, of banks and exchange stores, the drug-traffickers have responded to a new tactic to use the companies specialized in remittances, to launder money.

MATRICULA CONSULAR

It is easier to disguise the illicit origin of money shipments, as if were remittances, since migrants should only present their matricula consular as identification, to summarize the shipment of dollars to their relatives in Mexico, without the need to open a bank account.

“This makes lawful remittances more accessible, but also leaves open the potential for money laundering of groups of organized crime.”

According to the report, it is estimated that from 2003 to this date, the bosses of drug trafficking managed to introduce to Mexico 22 billion dollars, product of the sale of drugs in the United States.

February 23, 2008

Suspect’s Aliases Emerge In Slaughterhouse Case

Full story - PE.com

–Summary and comments–

The Chino slaugherhouse case has triggered national outrage as well as the biggest meat recall to date. But what many won’t hear about is what else was found inside Hallmark/Westland Meat Co.

Luis Sanchez , aka Jose Luis Sanchez, aka Rafael Sanchez Herrera, aka Sanchez Herrera, aka Rafael Sanchez, surrendered this week, and after a slip of the tongue, gave the name Jose Luis Sanchez to the booking officer, and his birthday a month earlier then the one on their current records. This slight slip prompted further research which dug up numerous aliases and pending drug cases against Mr. Sanchez (or whatever his true name is).
Sanchez (or whatever his true name is), has been charged with three misdemeanor counts of using equipment to move animals in the slaughter house known as ‘downer cows’.  This crime is chargeable with a maximum punishment of 1 1/2 years in country jail.

Mr. Sanchez (?) pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor drug possession charge in December 2003, avoiding jail time (and obviously deportation) by agreeing to enroll in a drug-rehabilitation program.  He failed to show up for his final court hearing in that case.

Around the same time he was charged with felony possession of drugs for sale under another alias. An American citizen would be charged $60,000 in bail for the same charges.  But Mr. Sanchez (?), he has no bail set because he’s in the country illegally.

Time will tell how long before he is back on our streets again, under yet another alias.

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