American Renaissance
Previous Story       Next Story       View Comments       Send This Page       Date Archives       Category Archives

Incursions of Border by Cops, Troops Rising

More news stories on Mexico and Latin America

Torrey Meeks, Washington Times, April 28, 2009

Unauthorized border crossings by Mexican authorities such as soldiers and police spiked more than threefold in 2008, according to an annual report the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency sought to keep secret.

Now that the report is public, the result of a lawsuit by a public-interest group, the agency is attempting to downplay its significance.

“BorderStat Violence, FY 2008 Year in Review” says that 147 foreign government incursions occurred in 2008, a 359 percent increase from the previous year. Only 216 incursions were tallied in the previous nine years.

“There are a lot of places out there where the border isn’t clearly marked,” said Lloyd Easterling, spokesman for CPB. He said even accidental aircraft crossings from Canada were considered incursions.

Mexican authorities may come a few feet into the United States and be spotted by CBP surveillance systems, Mr. Easterling said. “You may see people moving back and forth across the border. You know, they’re 50 or 100 feet inside, and they go right back out.”

Mr. Easterling said he had no proof of any Mexican military crossings.

“Our agents out there are seeing people dressed up and acting in a military-like fashion,” he said. “Whether they’re in any kind of official uniform or something they bought that may look like fatigues . . . I don’t know,” he said.

{snip}

Chris Farrell, director of research for Washington-based Judicial Watch, interprets the data differently, claiming it reflects a serious deterioration in border security just over the bridge from El Paso, Texas.

“On the Mexican side of the border, all hell is breaking loose. That’s why [Ciudad] Juarez is under military occupation right now,” Mr. Farrell said.

“To discount this report trivializes a very grave warning,” said Mr. Farrell, whose organization won the report’s release by filing a lawsuit to force CBP to honor a Freedom of Information Act request for a copy.

{snip}

Mr. Farrell said he doubts the increase in border incursions cited in the report can be attributed entirely to better surveillance technology.

Mexican drug cartels, he said, pay corrupt officials to create diversions along the border to open other areas for smugglers.

“Hypothetically, improved technology might lead to better reporting,” Mr. Farrell said. “There’s probably a percentage of truth in that, but it’s highly speculative.”

The CBP report also showed a jump in violence against U.S. border personnel, a trend that Mr. Easterling said is troubling.

Violence against CBP officers and agents is up 167 percent at ports of entry and 23 percent outside them, the report said.

{snip}

But in other sectors, such as San Diego, assaults on officers jumped 46 percent. Officers are now being equipped with body armor, helmets, shields and “war wagons” that have cages over the windows.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on April 30, 2009)

     Previous story       Next Story       Post a Comment     Send This Page      Search

Comments

1 — ranger wrote at 10:08 PM on April 30:

It’s going to be interesting to see how this border situation develops. After reading from several different sources who are quite familiar with every aspect of the drug trade in both Mexico and Columbia, it doesn’t look as if Mexico has even an outside chance of winning the drug war.

Moreover, the US isn’t going to be able to contain it either. In fact, as the Amren article the other day explained to us, the migration of the cartels are throughout the US right now and their numbers, influence and power are greatest in the Southwest.

As experts are pointing out right now, this country won’t even attempt to close the border when they believe there’s a chance a deadly virus could run rampant throughout the country, because it might hurt the economy, so they certainly won’t guard the border sufficiently to keep out drug gangs for the same reason.

Their greed mongering has caused a world economic collapse, and left us vulnerable to a possible plague, but they continue on with the same policies as if nothing has gone wrong. The big difference with the heavily armed drug gangs, however, is that they can be much more deadly than a pandemic.

This government has been dysfunctional now for about as long as I can remember, and it keeps getting worse.

The French have a saying which goes something like, “The older one gets, the worse things look.” But maybe that’s because the older one gets the wiser and smarter he gets, so he is able to see much, much more as time goes by.

2 — hugo wrote at 5:06 PM on May 1:

One more reason to build a fence. This is a cat and mouse game. The Mexicans keep testing our resolve and ability to keep out illegals and drugs. A fence will up the ante. It systematically limit the places that are logistically feesible to smuggle contraband. This inturn will make the fighting on the Mexican side more vicious in an attempt to control the access points.

3 — S.L. Cain wrote at 2:10 PM on May 2:

How many incursions by Mounties engaged in the illicit maple syrup trade? Remember, our stupid DHS secretary, that idiot nitwit Janet Napolitano, has assured us that our Canadian border is the really dangerous one.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 9:30 PM on May 2:

This new-fangled Dept of Homeland Security lingo is a bit confusing, with the “overseas contingency operation” and “man-made disasters” and such.
Wouldn’t a “foreign government incursion” be something similar to what happened to Russia in 1812 or Poland in 1939?

5 — Michael C. Scott wrote at 1:00 PM on May 5:

I predict someday a group of these Mexican “police” are going to end up dead when they try to “arrest” a US citizen on our side of the border, and only then the US government will take the matter seriously.

I also predict the grand jury will vote “no true bill”, as an attempted arrest by someone who has no legal arrest powers constitutes kidnapping.


Home      Top      Previous story       Next Story      Send This Page      Search