Reprinted from NewsMax.com

Illegal Alien Gangs Battle on Fla. Beaches
James H. Walsh
Friday, May 4, 2007
On the Gulf Coast of Florida, just south of the metropolitan Tampa Bay area, lies once-sleepy Manatee County, which today is experiencing gang warfare waged on its beaches by illegal aliens.

In the past four years, Coquina Beach, a county park extending along the Gulf of Mexico for roughly three city blocks has become a gathering center for Hispanics. One such gathering turned ugly fast. On Easter Sunday, 2007, as in previous years, music began blaring, and "low-rider" cars and other personalized vehicles began cruising the unpaved parking lots that parallel the beach.

Throngs gathered until they packed the beach area.

Local officials estimated the crowd at 10,000 to 15,000 people. Off and on during the day, law enforcement officials, including officers on horseback, admonished the revelers to tone down the music, which carried for miles across the Bay to residential neighborhoods.

As the temperature rose, so did instances of alcohol and drug abuse. About 4:30 p.m. shots rang out, and even with heavy police presence, gang violence erupted.

Three critically wounded Hispanic gang members from a neighboring county were airlifted to the St. Petersburg Trauma Center. No arrests were made. Law enforcement officials estimated that 15 local Hispanic gangs were present along with more from neighboring counties. Manatee County, established in1855, remained for more than a century an agricultural and commercial fishing area known for its trailer parks – the most and the largest in the state. With a spring training center for a major-league baseball team, it generally attracted blue-collar tourists.

Lacking the social standing of its southern neighbor, Sarasota County, Manatee had neither the size nor the name recognition of its northern neighbors, St. Petersburg and Tampa. Manatee County was a nondescript stoplight or two on the Tamiami Trail connecting Tampa and Miami.

After World War II, Manatee County began to grow as farm production increased and soldiers who had served in Florida retired there. In 1970 the U.S. Census Bureau estimated that 97,115 people resided in Manatee County. By 2000, the population had risen to 264,000 people, and by 2005, the estimate was 306, 779 (a 16.2 percent increase in five years).


Among the newcomers were illegal aliens, whose numbers, uncounted in 1970, were estimated at 36,000 in 2005 — the vast majority being Hispanic workers filling menial labor jobs. Since an accurate count of illegal aliens in the United States has yet to be made, estimates are all we have to go on, but in 2007 the number of Hispanics in Manatee County may be upwards of 40,000, with some 80 percent of them having crossed the U.S. border illegally.


Supporting this estimated number are the numbers of Hispanics in Manatee County's criminal justice system, in the juvenile justice system, in the social services programs, and in the public school system.


Because it is politically incorrect to question the citizenship of those unable to speak, read, or write English, precise numbers and costs to the county for services, such as providing interpreters, remains a "guestimate." In the criminal justice system, however, the five most wanted criminal fugitives in the past five years have been Hispanic; and according to the "Most Wanted" posters, they have all been illegal aliens. To avoid prosecution many fugitives return to their native land or simply use aliases. With no fingerprint record (unless previously arrested), these criminals assume multiple identities.

Such facts remain unreported by the news media demonstrating a definite bias of left-leaning reporters and editors. Elected officials treated the Easter 2007 shootings as an aberration; merely the juvenile acting out of a foreign culture. City and county law enforcement officials, in an effort to be politically correct and in a hope that gang violence will mysteriously go away, choose to deal with gang warfare by means of a program called Crime Prevention through Environmental Design (CPED).

A multi-phased effort, CPED will cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars. Phase I will realign Coquina Beach parking to stop "low-rider" cruising by means of barricades placed every 500 feet or so and the addition of more parking places to relieve gang tensions. Phase I will cost Manatee County $650,000 — tax dollars that could be spent on deporting illegal alien criminals.


CPED Phases II and III will devour $5 million in county tax monies to enhance the beach trolley system, spruce up beach amenities, and add more playgrounds. One politician was concerned that these efforts were overacting. She opined that we must view the gang-bangers as just kids venting a little steam and no big deal (despite the critical injuries).

With Cinco de Mayo upon us, Manatee politicians are worried that they will not have enough safety plans in place. None of these measures will be in effect by May 5, so more police will be present. In step with state and federal legislators, Manatee County and municipal officials choose to ignore the root problem — illegal immigration — by failing to report violations of federal immigration laws. The fear of political incorrectness blinds elected officials. This is the fault of the voters who have only to demand enforcement of U.S. immigration laws and proceed to unseat those politicians who are weak on enforcement.


The Hispanic gangs in the United States have proliferated in the last six years to where they compete with and usually best other ethnic gangs. If a gang member is wounded, he gets the best medical care free, paid for by local taxpayers. Illegal aliens already have socialized medicine. Just ask the three gang members wounded at Coquina Beach. An April 27, 2007, NewsMax article reports that the Republican-dominated Florida legislature appears to be ready to provide more health care for illegal alien children and children of illegal aliens. Such legislation would ignore the full medical services that these children now receive at no cost; it merely shows how inept these officials are – catering to the immigration special interest groups.


The Hispanic gangs are not dumb. They are sophisticated criminals who deal in all phases of illegal activity with the aplomb of old-line mafia dons. Their street smarts are international, as are their criminal enterprises. Gang leaders know that they have a shield – they are protected by the political correctness and moral weakness of politicians.

Immigrant advocates who support unbridled immigration play right into the gang tactics and strengthen their recruitment and expansion.


Immigration-related cases clog the federal courts in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas; and, if immigration laws were enforced, such cases would clog the courts in Florida, Louisiana, Georgia, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, and metropolitan Washington, D.C. A recent Associated Press story stated that "an estimated more than 1 million people sneak across the southwestern U.S. border . . . every year." Some officials along the border estimate the number is 4,000 per day or 1.46 million per year or 10.2 million illegal entries since 2000.

It is time for U.S. voters to say enough is enough, because the news media, unprincipled politicians, and immigrant advocates are wrong when they support open borders. Today more than 30 million illegal aliens reside in the United States (40,000 of them in Manatee County). Meanwhile the powerful immigrant lobby demands ever more benefits for illegal aliens (including criminal aliens) — as if new trolleys and playgrounds at Coquina Beach will thwart gang warfare


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