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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    As Border Patrol shifts resources, migrants return to Califo

    http://www.mercurynews.com

    Posted on Sun, Aug. 06, 2006

    As Border Patrol shifts resources, migrants return to California

    ELLIOT SPAGAT
    Associated Press

    TECATE, Calif. - The number of immigrants illegally jumping the California-Mexico border appears to be increasing as enforcement gets tougher in Arizona, Border Patrol arrest statistics suggest.

    It's known as the water-balloon effect: Squeeze one spot and illegal immigration will bulge elsewhere along the 1,952-mile frontier.

    While overall arrests have fallen a modest 3 percent since October, they are up sharply in some places, including the San Diego area. Thanks to a surge in hiring new agents, the Border Patrol says it's ready for a shift in traffic. Skeptics aren't so sure.

    In the early 1990s, San Diego was overrun by border crossers. Hundreds at a time stormed the world's busiest border crossing, paralyzing motorists on Interstate 5. Migrants waltzed freely over to vendors who catered to them in nearby canyons.

    A crackdown launched in 1994 and modeled on a similar effort in El Paso, Texas, pushed many migrants away from the border's two largest cities and into Arizona's mountains and deserts. Total arrests ebbed and flowed over the last decade but changed little: 1.3 million in 1995 versus 1.2 million in 2005.

    Arrests in the Border Patrol's sector around Tucson, Ariz., are down 9 percent to 345,973 since October compared to the previous year, though it is still the busiest corridor. Meanwhile, arrests rose 19 percent to 175,324 between the two sectors that span all but a few miles of California's border with Mexico.

    The recent arrest spike in and around San Diego comes as the Border Patrol grows from 11,800 agents today to 18,000 by the end of 2008. That force will be supported by up to 6,000 National Guard troops.

    Border Patrol Chief David Aguilar said last month that San Diego is "very well prepared."

    Skeptics say that no matter how many agents there are or where they are positioned, the rush of border crossers would continue as long as jobs were easy to get.

    "You can put a million agents along the U.S.-Mexican border and that alone is not going to stop the pressure and flow of migrants," said David Shirk, director of the University of San Diego's Trans-Border Institute.

    The spike in traffic is invisible to most San Diego residents because migrants cross in rugged terrain east of the seaside city of 1.3 million people.

    The mountains and canyons are scorching in summer and freezing in winter. Unlike Arizona, tall trees and dense chaparral offer shade and hiding places. It is not an easy place to patrol.

    At midnight one muggy July night, Nicholas Coates and other Border Patrol agents converged on an area where sensors suggested a group of about 10 migrants was walking. He tracked fresh footprints and broken twigs on a dirt path, then wrestled thick brush.

    "They could be right here," he said around 2:30 a.m., shortly before giving up. "If they get in the brush, it's very hard to see them."

    As an early sun burned, he captured three migrants in another large group after a two-hour chase, mostly on foot and with an assist from a helicopter and other agents.

    The mountains surround California's Tecate, about 35 miles east of San Diego, which is home to little more than a small strip mall.

    Mexico's Tecate is a pleasant town of about 60,000 people with a shaded central square, a spa that draws American tourists and a hulking brewery that bears its name. It doesn't look like a pit stop for border crossers.

    A migrant shelter will grow from 20 beds to 200 when it moves to a new building in a few months, but the bus station is tiny and quiet, and there are few boarding houses. Unlike other border towns, few men with backpacks mill around.

    Border crossers hop off a bus or taxi somewhere outside the city on a short trip from Tijuana, a city of 1.2 million people whose airport and bus station teem with smugglers looking for business.

    Many migrants rest at Tijuana's red-light district hotels before the trek, which lasts at least two days. Drivers wait for them on the U.S. side to take them to a safe house.

    "People come here when they tried elsewhere and failed," said Daniel Rivera, 63, who works for smugglers looking for customers near the 'Aqui Te Espero' ('I'll Wait for You Here') cafe in Tijuana's red-light district.

    He said it costs $1,600 to be guided through the mountains near Tecate, typically in groups of four or five men, up from about $300 in the early 1990s. That inflation reflects how much harder it has become since the U.S. government tightened the noose in urban areas.

    Word that hundreds of migrants have died crossing Arizona's unforgiving deserts may also contribute to the shift to California, said Wayne Cornelius, a political scientist at the University of California, San Diego. His interviews this year with 724 people in the Mexican state of Yucatan found San Diego was by far the favored crossing area.

    Jose Reyes, 32, had enough of Arizona after he and 16 others were picked up by the Border Patrol three months ago. After crossing near Douglas, they walked five days and drank water from cattle tanks.

    "We turned ourselves in (to the Border Patrol); they were our salvation," said Reyes, who spoke at a Tijuana migrant shelter. He planned to attempt another crossing, this time near Tecate, on his way to a dishwasher job in San Francisco.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member AlturaCt's Avatar
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    This is why we need a barrier from the Gulf to the Pacific and plenty of boots on the ground/Border Patrol.
    [b]Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.
    - Arnold J. Toynbee

  3. #3
    Senior Member sippy's Avatar
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    "You can put a million agents along the U.S.-Mexican border and that alone is not going to stop the pressure and flow of migrants," said David Shirk, director of the University of San Diego's Trans-Border Institute.
    You're right, but build the fence along the entire border, not just the whipmy 370 miles worth.
    I'm sure then you'll see HUGE reductions in the flow if migrants.
    "Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same results is the definition of insanity. " Albert Einstein.

  4. #4
    Senior Member AlturaCt's Avatar
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    sippy - there is no doubt in my mind we can stop the flow or reduce 99% of it. It only takes the will to do so.

    "You can put a million agents along the U.S.-Mexican border and that alone is not going to stop the pressure and flow of migrants,
    I don't know anybody who is suggesting this as a lone measure.
    [b]Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.
    - Arnold J. Toynbee

  5. #5
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    Thats just great I live a few miles east of Tecate.
    Oh well I guess this means me and mountain dog will just be busier.
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  6. #6
    Senior Member CheyenneWoman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MountainDog
    Thats just great I live a few miles east of Tecate.
    Oh well I guess this means me and mountain dog will just be busier.
    Please, just be careful.

  7. #7
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    Well, I'm not surprised to hear CA is going to get more invasion as other places get more enforcement. So depressing. We already have most of the illegals. Ugh!
    Yes, you be very careful MD.
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  8. #8
    Senior Member Coto's Avatar
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    Re: As Border Patrol shifts resources, migrants return to Ca

    Quote Originally Posted by ELLIOT SPAGAT
    Migrants waltzed freely over to vendors who catered to them in nearby canyons.
    Who are these "vendors?" Employers of illegals? WalMart executives? Hillary Clinton's campaign staff? John McCain's cronies?

    What part of "We don't owe our jobs to India" are you unable to understand, Senator?

  9. #9
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    Cheyenne and Jean,
    Thank you for your concern, I will be carefull but I will be on watch as well.
    So far traffic has seemed to slow down some out here but that may be due to the high temps, now that it is cooling down it should increase.
    I'll keep you posted though and please don't worry about me, I'm an old mountain man from way back.
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  10. #10
    Senior Member sippy's Avatar
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    sippy - there is no doubt in my mind we can stop the flow or reduce 99% of it. It only takes the will to do so.

    Quote:
    "You can put a million agents along the U.S.-Mexican border and that alone is not going to stop the pressure and flow of migrants,


    I don't know anybody who is suggesting this as a lone measure.
    Altura, good point. I've never read anywhere suggesting this is a lone measure. Congressman Tancredo says it best in his book. "We could seal the border tomorrow if we wanted to, what we lack is the political will."
    "Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same results is the definition of insanity. " Albert Einstein.

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