lframerica.com Blog

April 3, 2008

Officials Fear Growing Recklessness Of Coyotes

http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/officials_85497___article.html/increasingly_recklessness.html

McALLEN - Human smugglers are employing increasingly risky and dangerous methods to transport illegal immigrants since security tightened along the U.S.-Mexico border, law enforcement officials said.

“They’re getting less area they can successfully enter,” said Oscar Saldaña, a U.S. Border Patrol spokesman.

“That’s why were seeing more of these desperate acts. And unfortunately, we anticipate there’s going to be more of these types of events.”

On Thursday a Ford F-150 carrying more than 20 illegal immigrants collided with another vehicle on Expressway 83 in Peñitas, leaving three dead and another 14 injured.

They were the latest victims of what appears to be a growing and often fatal trend in the Rio Grande Valley of human smugglers, or coyotes, filling cars and trucks with loads of immigrants far beyond the vehicles’ capacity and then driving at high speeds, often to elude law enforcement.

Law enforcement’s presence here has increased significantly over the past six years, since President Bush ordered federal law enforcement agencies to tighten control of the U.S.-Mexico border.

The number of Border Patrol agents in the Valley has risen from about 1,200 in 2002 to more than 2,200 this year, Saldaña said. And local law enforcement agencies - from small-town police departments to the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office - have been awarded a series of state and federal grants to dedicate officers to border security details.

“You’re talking about human smuggling and drugs,” Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Treviño said. “There’s no doubt in the last five years the attitude of the human smuggler has taken a 180. They have transformed themselves into a commodity broker that has no limitations to getting their cargo to where they want to go.”

Less publicized than their counterparts in the drug trafficking industry, human smuggling organizations tend to be highly structured, with resources and operatives spread across the globe, said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Janice Ayala, who directs investigations between Laredo and Brownsville.

Fees range anywhere from $300 to $50,000 per person, depending on where the immigrant is coming from and wants to go, as well as the difficulty of the route, she said. A person traveling from China might have one smuggler take them to Central America, another take them to Mexico, another to take them across the border and another to move them through the United States.

“These are organizations moving people from one country to another to another, so they need a very sophisticated network in order to do that,” Ayala said.

“Most of these alien smuggling organizations are paying passage to a large (drug) cartel, because they have the routes to the U.S.”

Officials uniformly expressed dismay at what Treviño described as the “abrasive and violent” attitude of the coyotes.

“Back in the day, a coyote would take money for helping people across, but they were maybe more of a compañero, more of a surrogate,” Treviño said.

The Mexican government, at both the state and federal level, is in the midst of a public relations campaign to warn Mexican nationals of the growing danger of crossing the border illegally.

Billboards in the United States and Mexico caution against traveling with coyotes, and government-written newspaper columns tell horror stories of immigrants drowning in the Rio Grande or being left to die in the desert heat.

“We share the tragic stories of migrants, so people can talk to relatives and discourage them,” said Miriam Medel, vice consul of the Mexican Consulate in McAllen.

“(The coyotes) are our worst enemy, and we’re always trying to tell people not to trust them.”

In Washington, D.C., where Congress is expected to address immigration reform again next year, the recent worsening of the human smuggling problem has not as yet gained traction as a political issue, said Douglas Rivlin, a spokesman for the National Immigration Forum, a pro-immigrant advocacy group.
In fact, despite heightened interest early in this presidential campaign, illegal immigration has fallen off as a talking point for the candidates over the last two months, he said.
“I think (some people are aware) in terms of just some of the press coverage we’ve seen about immigrants being held captive by smugglers, but not in terms of people being aware that we’re in a new era of smuggling,” Rivlin said.
‘Our worst enemy’
‘Abrasive and violent’

April 2, 2008

Agent Rescues Immigrants Moments Before Highway Crash

http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/border_85587___article.html/agent_doty.html

RACHAL - U.S. Border Patrol agent Adam Ruiz had to act fast as the van full of undocumented immigrants veered into the path of a hurtling 18-wheeler.

Should he pursue the vehicle’s driver, who bailed out on the shoulder of U.S. 281 and left the van’s gear in drive? Or chase down the van and its occupants as they edged closer and closer into oncoming traffic?

In seconds, Ruiz sprang into action. The eight-year agency veteran bolted toward the moving vehicle, leaped through the passenger side door and steered the vehicle to safety.

His quick thinking and fast action may have saved the lives of the nine Mexican nationals later found sitting the back of the van without any type of safety restraints, local Border Patrol spokesman Daniel A. Doty said.

“This happens more than people know,” Doty said. “Our first concern is for the safety of the people involved.”

But as daring as the March 11 rescue near Rachal sounds, it’s a situation border agents are encountering more often as they step up efforts to crack down on human smugglers.

Ruiz, a supervisory agent stationed in McAllen, declined interview requests about the rescue. But its details emerged Monday in court documents filed against the van’s driver, 30-year-old Ramiro Regalado Garcia.

Immigrant smugglers, or coyotes, are increasingly putting their passengers’ lives in danger in efforts to avoid arrest, Doty said. Some have even left still-moving vehicles to hurtle into trees, fences and highway barriers.

In a similar case earlier this year, 22-year-old accused smuggler Jose Padilla lost an ear as he tried to jump out of a moving vehicle during a police pursuit in La Joya. The six Honduran and Salvadoran immigrants police say he was carrying managed to escape the eventual crash without major injury.

“At one time several years ago, people would just park the car and start running,” Doty said. “Now that we’ve increased our manpower, they’re starting to adopt new strategies to get away.”

But Border Patrol agents have also adjusted their tactics to address these dangerous situations, he said. Now, one group of agents focuses on apprehending fleeing drivers while another group works to ensure the safety of his immigrant cargo.

Operating under new training strategies, Ruiz ran after the endangered Mexican nationals while Border Patrol helicopters kept tabs on a fleeing Regalado. Agents apprehended him yards from where his van was eventually stopped.

On Monday, Regalado pleaded guilty to human smuggling charges and remains in federal custody pending a sentencing hearing scheduled for June 9.

But thanks to some fast thinking from Ruiz, the coyote’s nine passengers were all able to return to Mexico safely.

“He is an exceptional agent,” Doty said. “But he doesn’t like to take the spotlight for something any other agent would have done in that situation.”

March 28, 2008

3 Dead As Pickup Carrying Up To 20 Hits SUV In Valley

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5653393.html

PENITAS — A pickup truck crammed with suspected illegal immigrants collided with a sport utility vehicle near the Mexican border Thursday, killing three people and injuring 14 others.

Police said there were at least 20 people in the truck when it crashed before dawn on U.S. Highway 83, the main east-west artery along the border in the Rio Grande Valley.

“There were bodies all over the place,” said Penitas interim Police Chief David Harris.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokeswoman Nina Pruneda said three illegal immigrants were in custody. Pruneda said 14 others were being treated for a variety of head and back injuries in five hospitals; one was believed to be paralyzed.

The majority of those found are thought to be Mexican. Pruneda said all were men except for one woman and a 15-year-old boy, who had extensive internal injuries.

Investigators were trying to determine if the driver was among those injured or if he escaped, Pruneda said.

Information was not immediately available on the condition of the other driver. Department of Public Safety troopers were investigating the cause of the accident.

Some of the survivors told police they had been hurried into the back of the truck and had not gone far before the accident. “I think they had paid a fee” to be smuggled across the border, Harris said.

Blood stained the grass at the scene, which happened to be in front of L&I Funeral Home. The gold pickup came to rest against a telephone pole, just feet from the funeral home’s display headstones.

The area is a major immigrant-smuggling corridor. Lately there had been an influx of immigrants from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, but most of those involved in Thursday’s crash are believed to be Mexican, La Joya police spokesman Joe Cantu said.

The smugglers have little regard for the safety of their passengers. Accidents where immigrants are tossed from the open beds of pickups are not unusual, Cantu said.

Looking at the smashed pickup with an extended bed, Cantu estimated there could have been as many as 30 in it. “They get in — it’s like sardines,” he said.

The smugglers often escape when the groups are nabbed, Cantu said, adding, “These guys run like gazelles.”

March 24, 2008

19 Illegal Immigrants Found In Van

SOURCE (www.cbs46.com)

Lawrenceville,Ga — A van driver could face federal charges after Gwinnett County police discovered 19 illegal immigrants in the vehicle Monday.

Gwinnett’s Police Interdiction Unit found the immigrants during a routine traffic stop on Interstate 85 north at Buford Drive.

Police pulled the van over because the window tinting was darker than is legally allowed, investigators said.

The driver, Lazaro Ayala, 23, is also in the U.S. illegally, according to police.  Ayala was driving the others from Texas to New York.

The passengers’ ages ranged from 6 to 47. Three of the passengers were children 13 and younger.

Agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement took the immigrants into custody.

March 15, 2008

Mom Reunited With Kidnapped Baby

10/17/2007

We often hear about what happens to the United States as a result of our open borders, but truth be told there is just as many issues, and often far worse issues, in Mexico which could be deeply reduced if our borders were secured.

NEWS RELEASE 

ICE, Mexican authorities reunite kidnapped baby girl with Mexican mother.

Pair separated for three months after adbucted infant was smuggled into U.S. 

LAS VEGAS - A woman from Juarez, Mexico, whose 7-month-old daughter was kidnapped from their home three months ago, was reunited with her child here earlier today, capping an intensive effort by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Procuraduria General de la Republica (the Mexican Attorney General’s Office, commonly known as the PGR) to locate the infant and return her.

The mother, Francisca Garcia-Favila, was paroled into the United States and escorted to Las Vegas by ICE agents and representatives from the PGR. This morning marked the first time Garcia-Favila had seen her daughter, Alexandra, since the child was kidnapped shortly before Thanksgiving and brought into the United States by members of a Juarez-based human smuggling ring. Representatives from the local Mexican consulate attended today’s reunion and are providing assistance to the mother.

“Seeing this child reunited with her mother was deeply gratifying for everyone involved,” said Kevin Kozak, deputy special agent in charge of the ICE office that oversees the agency’s investigative efforts in Las Vegas. “There were moments when we weren’t sure the case would have a happy ending, but law enforcement agencies on both sides of the border persevered and this reunion is a direct result of our extraordinary cooperative efforts.”

The child was allegedly abducted by Rosario Hernandez, a Mexican national living in Las Vegas, who was a distant acquaintance of the victim. After snatching the child, authorities say Hernandez sought assistance from a human smuggling organization to help her and the infant illegally cross the border. After the pair arrived in the United States, Hernandez and the infant became separated. Hernandez was arrested and detained after being intercepted at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection Border Patrol checkpoint in New Mexico. Meanwhile, the smuggling organization brought the infant to Las Vegas and turned her over to Hernandez’s former boyfriend, Gamaniel Villapando-Triste. According to investigators, Hernandez had told Villapando-Triste he was the child’s father, a claim Villapando-Triste believed because Hernandez was pregnant when the two separated. Villapando-Triste did not know Hernandez had subsequently suffered a miscarriage.

As Garcia-Favila waited for word about her daughter, investigators on both sides of the border worked around-the-clock following up on leads. Within days, agents with ICE and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) received a tip the infant might be in the custody of Child Protective Services (CPS) in Las Vegas. Working with CPS, federal investigators determined that Villapando-Triste had surrendered the infant to the agency, using an alias for himself and the child.

But the saga was not over. Villapando-Triste still insisted he and Hernandez were the child’s parents. The case then moved to Clark County Family Court. The Court, following a series of hearings and DNA tests, determined Garcia-Favila was the child’s biological mother, paving the way for this week’s reunion.

As for the others involved in the case, Hernandez was deported to Mexico last month, where she is expected to be formally charged with kidnapping. Villapando-Triste, a prior deportee with an extensive criminal history, was taken into custody by ICE last month on felony immigration violations. He pleaded not guilty and remains in custody awaiting trial, which is set for April 7.

Editor’s Note: An ICE digital photo of today’s reunion is available on ICE’s website at www.ice.gov or by calling ICE public affairs at (949) 360-3096.

March 13, 2008

Victim 3556: Child

Saloman Renteria-Valdez (61), an illegal alien, is facing deportation after sexually molesting an unidentified child.  This would be his third deportation.
Renteria-Valdez also has been arrested in connection with human trafficking, robbery, possession of illegal drugs, and an assortment of other crimes since 1977.

March 8, 2008

Smugglers Hiding in Construction Zones

March 6, 2008

newschannel5 

(Link has video report)

Police say trucks blend in with crew

LA JOYA - Human smugglers are using construction zones to avoid detection.

Police say they’re using work trucks, like a Ford F-250, to blend in with the construction crews along Highway 83 in La Joya.

“This vehicle blends in easily with the construction work out there,” says Joe Cantu with the La Joya Police Department.

We’re told many people don’t give the trucks a second glance.

Police tell us the driver of a white Ford F-250 pulls off the highway, loads 20 or more people, and then speeds off. Clouds of dust make it difficult for officers to catch up.

“This organization knows they’re doing,” Cantu tells us.

He says the smuggler has been spotted since the beginning of the week, when the construction started.

Police say they’ve told construction workers about the smuggling. But now officers need to catch the criminals.

Cantu tells us, “As long as people want to come over, people will provide the services for pay.”

La Joya officers say they’ll be on the lookout for the smugglers. If you see it happening, they ask that you call the police department.

You can bet if it’s happening there…it’s happening all over the border states. 

March 6, 2008

Victim 3530 - 3533 - Two Adults & Two Children

It began with a chase of a smuggler van full of illegal aliens.  It ended with an accident, where two adults and two children suffered minor injuries.

The driver, after hitting the vehicle carrying the two unidentified adults and children, refused to stop and render aid.

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”.
_________________________________________________________________________________

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 29, 2008

Victim 3249 & 3250: James & Emilia Lee

In yet another unnecessary death caused by illegal aliens.  James (75) and his new bride Emilia (71) were killed after only six weeks of marriage.  They were killed on Oct. 16th when a truckload of at least 17 illegal aliens traveling at 90 mph crashed into several vehicles near the town of Sierra Vista.  The aliens were trying to escape police who gave chase after they failed to stop at a stop sign. The truck rammed into a line of nine vehicles waiting for a turn light.

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