lframerica.com Blog

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.”

April 1, 2008

Patrol Locates Runaway, Detains Illegal Alien Gang Member

http://www.yumasun.com/news/locates_40329___article.html/patrol_runaway.html

A 16-year-old runaway girl and an illegal alien who claimed to be a gang member were in Border Patrol custody Wednesday after being detained the night before at a Yuma bus station, the patrol said.

Authorities were in the process of reuniting the girl with her parents in California, who had previously reported the girl as running away from home, the patrol said in a news release.

The unidentified girl, a U.S. citizen, and the alien, a Mexican national, were located at the Greyhound bus station, 170 E. 17th Place, at 8:45 p.m. Tuesday, said Ben Vik, a Border Patrol supervisory agent.

“He claims to be a gang member with the Sureno 13 gang. As far as we know, he does not have any criminal records in the U.S. He is a Mexican national and he is in the United States illegally.

“He is currently undergoing prosecution for immigration violation,” Vik said Wednesday. “Today was his first court day and he was presented before the U.S. magistrate on immigration charges.”

Vik described the Sureno 13 as a Southern California gang.

No other details were available from the patrol.

March 31, 2008

Army Engineers Restructure International Ditch

Filed under: Uncategorized, Border Patrol, U.S. Security, State & Local, Arizona, United States News — Administrator @ 6:05 pm

http://www.douglasdispatch.com/articles/2008/03/29/news/doc47ee9c3b7e1a8228683964.txt

The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers is preparing the International Wash on 1st Street for an extreme makeover.

In support with the U.S. Border Patrol, the army engineers are re-grading and lining the channel bottom and slopes with concrete. They are also doing work on the road there.

The International Wash stretches from A Avenue to J Avenue, which is east of the Douglas Port of Entry.

The project is scheduled to continue until August 2008.

On Monday, March 31 through Friday, April 4, milling will continue on E Avenue between 11th Street and 12th Street.  Crack-sealing will continue between 11th Street and 15th Street from Van Buren to Washington.  Curb, gutter, and sidewalk demolition continues on A Avenue between 10th Street and 11th Street. 

The City is urging motorists not to park their vehicles in the area. Earthwork and drainage realignment work is still in process on Chino Road. Please be alert of detours in these areas.

Water main extension continues on Irvin Street from Douglas Avenue to Udall Avenue in Pirtleville.  Please be alert to possible street closures and detours.

Fire hydrant maintenance and water system maintenance continues throughout the city.  A Avenue from 1st Street to International Avenue excavation will continue to install a fire hydrant and for water main work.

Water main excavation will take place on 15th Street and Dolores Avenue and 15th Street and Florida Avenue.  Caution should be taken when driving or walking near or around an area where city personnel are flushing and testing fire hydrants.

There will also be other miscellaneous concrete repairs, pothole patching, and graffiti cleanup throughout the city.

If you should have any problems with water and or sewer services on the weekend or a holiday, please contact the Douglas Police Department at 364-8422 and staff on call will be dispatched to your residence.

The City of Douglas asks that you please use caution while driving or walking through these construction zones.  Please help keep everyone safe.

March 29, 2008

Slain Border Patrol Agent’s Kids Get Education Bonds

Filed under: Uncategorized, Border Patrol, U.S. Security, United States News — Administrator @ 7:58 pm

By Pam M. Smith, Sun Staff Writer

The two surviving children of Border Patrol Agent Luis Aguilar, who was killed while on duty in the Imperial Sand Dunes in January, will each receive a $30,000 educational scholarship bond.

Jacques-Andre Istel, mayor of Felicity, Calif., where ceremonies were held Friday morning, explained the bonds are from the Marine Corps-Law Enforcement Foundation, founded 13 years ago and funded by more than 12 annual charity events across the country.

“The foundation has donated more than $33 million - about 80 percent in bonds - to more than 2,200 children and, interestingly, about 20 percent in scholarships and medical aid where gaps occur in VA coverage,” Istel said.

Yuma Sector Chief Patrol Agent Paul Beeson accepted the bonds on behalf of the family, who were unable to attend the ceremony.

Opening and closing of the ceremonies was by a color guard from the Marine Corps Air Station in Yuma. Among those attending were Yuma Mayor Larry Nelson and his wife, representatives from the Yuma County Sheriff’s Office, Border Patrol and Arizona Department of Public Safety.

Technology, Manpower Help Border Patrol Stop Illegals

Filed under: Uncategorized, Illegal Alien, Border Patrol, U.S. Security, United States News — Administrator @ 7:27 pm

BY MARK RANDALL, SUN STAFF WRITER

When the U.S. Border Patrol was established back in 1924, agents were given a badge and a revolver.

They had to furnish their own horse. The government kicked in a supply of oats.

The pay? $1,680 a year.

They didn’t even get uniforms until 1928.

In the early days, those first agents - made up mostly of former Texas Rangers, city police officers, sheriffs and deputies - basically were there to make sure liquor wasn’t coming into the country during Prohibition and to enforce the numerical restrictions on immigrants.

In fact, it wasn’t until 1952 that border agents were given the authority to board and search vehicles for illegal immigrants.

Today’s agents have since traded in their horses - at least in the Yuma sector - for all-terrain vehicles and sport utility vehicles.

And technology has become a major player in the Border Patrol’s efforts to stop the stream of illegal immigrants along the Mexican border.

“When the Border Patrol was first founded there was a guy in the desert on horseback picking up signs,” said Yuma sector Border Patrol spokesman Rick Hays. “Fast forward to today. We’ve got ground-based radar, remote surveillance cameras, increased air patrols, infrared imaging - you name it. That has probably been the biggest change over the last 10 years, how we have incorporated that technology.”

He calls it the “smart border” approach - a combination of technology, manpower, and better cooperation with local law enforcement agencies.

“It’s not just one thing,” Hays said. “It’s the right combination of resources, the right combination of technology, the right combination of tactical infrastructure and manpower. Those things together are what we attribute to our success in Yuma.”

Border Patrol agents in the Yuma sector have become so adept at using modern technology that they made a record number of arrests last year, more than 130,0000 illegals.

Hays expects that record to be shattered again this year.

This year they have already made 96,190 arrests so far this fiscal year, which is a 13 percent increase from this time last year.

“Not only do we attribute that 13 percent to successful enforcement, but we have greater use of technology and greater manpower here. So we are apprehending more.”

According to Hays, the Yuma sector has seen its manpower and budget increased over the last five years.

In 2001, the sector had just over 300 border agents. Today there are just over 700 agents.

“We’re seeing a significant amount of resources being allocated to the Yuma sector,” Hays said. “Just since last year we have nearly doubled the size in our sector as far as manpower is concerned.”

Hays attributes that rise to the increased political awareness of the illegal immigration problem on the border and President Bush’s commitment to beef up border security.

***image2:right*** “President Bush has stated that Arizona would be receiving the lion’s share of funding for border security,” Hays said. “And we have seen that first hand.”

The Yuma sector has increased its tactical infrastructure by beefing up roads and installing barricades. It is also making better use of technological advances.

The increased use of surveillance cameras is one of the most effective advances.

Yuma sector employs 25 remote surveillance cameras.

The cameras are able to monitor sites along the border and radio in suspicious activity to agents in the field.

One communications assistant monitoring a screen can cover a huge expanse of territory that previously took up to eight agents on the ground to cover.

“Those provide a huge tactical advantage,” Hays said. “With this technology we may only have to deploy two or three agents.’

The Border Patrol has also made several physical improvements within the sector.

The agency has been able to cut the number of illegal vehicle entries along the border by nearly half by installing a number of vehicle barriers.

The barriers are drilled over seven feet into the ground and are filled with a resin-like material making them nearly impossible to cut with a torch.

They can also withstand the impact from a vehicle at speeds of up to 40 miles an hour.

“What we do is we put a blockade in their way to prevent vehicles from entering the United States,” Hays said.

Last year 2,700 vehicles drove across the border illegally.

To date, that number has been cut to 1,800.

Hays said the Border Patrol has also installed secondary fencing and lighting, lowered the gates on canal bridges along the Colorado River to cut off the access of smugglers, and built an all-weather road on the west side of San Luis, Ariz., which allows agents to
respond more quickly and effectively to any type of crisis.

“The dragnet, if you will, is being pulled tight,” Hays said.

That increased success however, has come with a price.

Violence against Border Patrol agents has increased, a sign that Hays says proves that their efforts to clamp down are paying off.

“Unfortunately, one of our key indicators of our success against smugglers is we have seen an increase in violence against our agents,” Hays said. “As we continue to gain more operational control of the border we have disrupted their operations and frustrated their illicit trade. As a result, they lash out in frustration and that is through violence.”

Border Patrol agents have been assaulted, had stones hurled at them and are seeing more guns being pointed in their direction than ever before.

Last year agents were assaulted 74 times. This year, that number is already at 94 incidents.

Hays said the recent discovery of a drop house which held 153 illegals is a sign that their efforts have put a pinch on the smuggling trade.

“We’ve never seen one like that before,” Hays said. “That tells us that the smuggler’s operation has been seriously disrupted. It lets us know our checkpoints are working and that we have hindered their operations to such a degree that they are scratching their heads wondering what do we do to carry on with this.”

And the people of Yuma in general are not tolerating such activity in their neighborhoods and are alerting Border Patrol, Hays said.

The agency has also seen a change in the way they go about enforcing the law.

While Border Patrol’s primary mission is to enforce immigration laws, the agency has also taken on a role as rescuer.

Often times Border Patrol agents find illegals in poor condition after making the hazardous trek through some dangerous terrain.

Many have been abandoned by smugglers, robbed of their possessions and treated as a commodity.

“Our agents need to, at times, not only be the enforcer of those laws, but sometimes they find themselves in the role of rescuer.”

Agents have erected 12 rescue beacons in the Yuma sector and plan to deploy another seven soon.

The 25-foot-high beacons are in strategic locations where illegals have been rescued in the past and along known crossing points.

“They are marked by signs in Spanish and English that say you can’t walk to safety from this point. You are in danger of dying if you don’t summon help,” Hays said.

So far this year agents have rescued 280 people.

After successful border crackdowns in places like San Diego, El Paso, and Tucson, Hays said word is already starting to get out that the Yuma sector isn’t the sure bet place to cross over illegally anymore.

“Yuma has become the choke point,” Hays said. “The smuggling organizations and those looking to come in to the country via the Yuma area are finding with the additional resources we have, this is not the place to do it.”

March 28, 2008

Mexican Military Invasion

http://www.allamericanblogger.com/2324/media-finally-notices-mexican-military-crossing-our-border/

MSNBC Report

Chinese Teens Picked Up By Border Patrol

http://www.thetimesherald.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080325/NEWS01/803250305

Three teenage Chinese nationals are being housed in the St. Clair and Washtenaw county jails after being arrested in Clay Township shortly after officials said they illegally crossed the border.

The teens — ages 16, 17 and 18 — were picked up by border patrol about 11 p.m. Saturday while walking along M-29 about two miles north of the Walpole Island ferry crossing, agent Kurstan Rosberg said. They were wearing wet clothes, Rosberg said. He didn’t know where they crossed the St. Clair River.

The 17- and 18-year-old told officials they are from the city of Hangzhou in Zhejiang province, an area just south of Shanghai. The youngest refused to give a hometown.

All three spoke poor English, Rosberg said. They had passports but no other travel documents.The case has been turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, Rosberg said, which will move the group out of the jails to a contracted immigration detention facility. Rosberg did not know when the three will have an immigration hearing.

Rosberg said catching illegal immigrants from China is unusual. Last year, only seven of the 904 illegal immigrants picked up by the Detroit sector of U.S. Customs and Border Protection were Chinese.

Sector Detroit has monitoring stations along Michigan’s eastern border from Sault Ste. Marie to Trenton. More than three-quarters of the people arrested by the sector last year were Mexicans, Rosberg said. The majority of the others arrested were from Central American countries such as Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

Rosberg did not have specific information about arrests made by agents from the local border patrol station in Marysville.

The Saturday arrests highlight a trend of human smuggling into Michigan that begins in Toronto, Rosberg said.

“In general terms, what we’ve seen is a pattern for crossings in this area (that begins) in Toronto. It’s a ‘decision point.’ From there, they go here or Buffalo or Vermont,” he said.

March 26, 2008

U.S. Border Patrol Cracking Under Pressure To Find New Recruits

Filed under: Uncategorized, Border Patrol, U.S. Security, World News, Mexico, United States News — Administrator @ 10:59 am

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,341532,00.html

A mandate to hire 6,000 new border agents by the end of 2008 has lowered qualification tests, concentrated four months of training into 10 weeks and is raising concerns that recruits won’t get the proper training they need to protect the borders.

Richard Pierce, executive vice president of the National Border Patrol Council, a union that represents 11,000 rank-and-file agents, said the guidelines don’t allow time for proper training of new agents.

“The field training program is largely computer-based … it’s not the hands-on approach this job requires,” Pierce said. “When they get in field, they don’t have the basic information required.”

In May 2006, President Bush outlined a plan to increase the border protection force by 50 percent, from 12,000 agents to 18,000. In an effort to speed up the training process, the Border Patrol academy has condensed 88 days of basic training into 55, which would get boots on the ground at a much greater pace.

By October 1, half of all Border Patrol agents will have less than two years of experience, says Pierce. “So essentially, what we have is trainee agents teaching trainees out in the field.”

Pierce said that along with the youth factor, the agency could be taking on an aging force as well. “The Border Patrol has raised its entry-level age from 37 to 40,” he says, which would make for a retirement age of close to 60 for agents in the field. “This is not a job for a 60-year old, I can assure you,” he says.

According to the Border Patrol’s website, the academy no longer requires a high school diploma or GED for entrance, and passing test grades have been lowered from 85 percent to 70.

Background checks are another concern. Pierce said the Border Patrol is farming the work out to private contractors and no longer using the FBI, which is more thorough but also more time-consuming.

“The Border Patrol is using contract employees right now to do background investigations, where it used to use FBI agents,” Pierce said. “The contract program isn’t even finished before the employee is hired. We have employees in the academy who have not completed background checks.”

Deputy Chief of Border Patrol Ronald Colburn disagrees. “We’re doing a great job of both quality training of the personnel that we deploy and of checking on their backgrounds,” he argues. “That said, does one or can one slip through the cracks, as they say? Yes.”

Colburn concedes the plan presents some problems, such as an increased youth force. “When I surveyed the field … and talked to the top leadership, what concerned them most, it really was the youthfulness and the inexperience that we were deploying into the field.”

But he said that the increased number of agents will ultimately mean safer and better protected borders.

Not so, said Pierce. As pressure on the border continues and as worries mount that some new recruits aren’t suited for the job, Pierce is clear in his appraisal: “The Border Patrol is going to pay a price for this in the long run.”

March 24, 2008

Teen Driver With Undocumented Immigrants Causes Blaze

Filed under: Uncategorized, Environment, Border Patrol, Texas, United States News — Administrator @ 2:20 pm

SOURCE:http://caller.com/news/2008/mar/20/teen-driver-undocumented-immigrants-causes-blaze/

— A Nueces County sheriff’s chase about midnight early Thursday morning ended with about a dozen undocumented immigrants scrambling through a fiery field while the driver and two occupants were caught, police said.

A deputy on patrol trailed a white 2004 Dodge 4-door pickup for about five miles from the western part of the county after the driver ran a red light at State Highway 286 and Farm-to-Market Road 43.

“He was alerted earlier in the evening by radio that a vehicle of that same description could be carrying undocumented aliens,” said Capt. Stan Repka, public affairs officer for the sheriff’s department.

The deputy tried to use emergency lights to stop the driver at the intersection of 286 and Saratoga Boulevard, but the driver fled west on Saratoga for about a mile before turning into a brushy field in the 500 block.

“The exhaust or catalytic converter on the car caught the brush on fire, and then the brush fire caught the car on fire,” said Battalion Chief Wayne Prall, with Corpus Christi Fire Department. It took four engine companies with about 18 firefighters about an hour to simmer the blaze that damaged about one acre, he said.

The driver, Jose Antonio Pineda-Torres, 18, of Mexico, and two undocumented male immigrants were arrested. A precinct one constable helped catch the two occupants after responding to the deputy’s request for backup.

Pineda-Torres was arrested for evading and resisting arrest and was taken to Nueces County Jail, Repka said. The two occupants, both citizens of Mexico, were turned over to U.S. Border Patrol.

Border patrol would not release the men’s names, ages or state of residence, said Oscar Saldaña, spokesman for the Rio Grande Valley sector.

“If they have no criminal history they will be granted an option of voluntary return to Mexico,” Saldaña said. “As for the driver, he could be detained for the district attorney to charge and prosecute or if found criminal for transporting illegals could be turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

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.

Next Page »

Powered by WordPress