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Thread: Promises of riches, leniency lure teens into smuggling drugs across border. Then real

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  1. #1
    Senior Member lorrie's Avatar
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    Promises of riches, leniency lure teens into smuggling drugs across border. Then real

    Promises of riches, leniency lure teens into smuggling drugs across border. Then reality sets in.



    July 15, 2018

    They made a lot of promises at first.

    They promised to pay the 16-year-old $1,000 for his first drug smuggling trip across the border. It was the kind of money that could help the teen’s single mom in Tijuana.

    They promised that he wouldn’t get caught. As a student who crosses the border daily to go to high school in the U.S., he was virtually invisible.

    They promised they would protect him if he got into trouble.

    “But they weren’t protecting me,” the teen ultimately learned. “They were protecting their drugs.”

    As he tells his story in Spanish in a video, his face in shadow so as to protect his identity, he begins to cry.

    It’s not the acknowledgment that his own life has been tainted forever by his youthful mistake that makes him break down, but the shame that his mistake has affected his entire family.

    “My family cannot get SENTRI. My mom is in debt with the government,” he says. “My dreams went completely south. I didn’t have plans to be here.”

    The teen, along with the federal agents who produced the video, hope other students will learn from his mistake. The video is part of a presentation that authorities are working to revive in San Diego schools along the border to dissuade teens from falling prey to the lies of traffickers who try to recruit them as drug mules.

    But hundreds of teens arrested at California border crossings over the past few years have already learned the hard way.

    In fiscal 2017, Customs and Border Protection arrested 84 juveniles smuggling narcotics. That amount looks to stay on track this year, with 41 cases in the first six months.

    San Diego saw a large bump in teenage smugglers about 10 years ago, and back then it was largely marijuana shifting to methamphetamine.

    The stakes have risen these days with fentanyl — a drug so potent that absorption through skin can kill. That hasn’t stopped traffickers from strapping it to the bodies of willing, naive teenagers.

    “These cartels are like a business. So they are using every method they have. In this case they are just using kids because they can recruit them easily,” said Dave Shaw, special agent in charge of U.S. Homeland Security Investigations in San Diego. “Then they just throw as many (juveniles) as they can at the border, hoping some just slide by.”
    And many likely have.

    In one case, a student at Castle Park High School in Chula Vista told authorities that he’d smuggled drugs more than 20 times, sometimes twice in one day, being paid about $400 a trip. He was finally arrested last July at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry pedestrian crossing, with more than a kilogram of methamphetamine strapped to his legs, according to court records. The teen also told investigators that he had several friends who also smuggled drugs.


    A teenager is caught with fentanyl strapped to his torso during a smuggling attempt at the San Ysidro Port of Entry pedestrian lanes in March. (CBP)

    The kids most often being recruited for such work are frequent border crossers — typically Mexican citizens with border crossing cards who attend school in the U.S., often in districts near the border.

    What makes them say yes? Some are swayed by peer pressure, having been recruited by friends, while others might have grown up in the drug culture and follow in an older sibling’s footsteps. The teen in the video was recruited by his cousin’s boyfriend. For most though, it’s the reward that makes it worthwhile, the cash for prom night or new shoes or concert tickets.

    The prosecution of Phillip Junior Webb, 18, provides insight into how such a ring works.

    Two juveniles who were arrested with meth strapped to their thighs in September told authorities that they were among many kids recruited by Webb, a fellow student at Castle Park who lived in Tijuana, according to the complaint. They said he offered them each $500 to cross drugs, and that they had done so successfully on prior occasions. In many cases, records showed Webb had crossed the border within minutes of each of them, the complaint said.

    Another student arrested with meth at the border a few weeks later had a similar story, that he’d been recruited by Webb for $300 to $400, with payment at least once being exchanged in the high school bathroom. The teen said he’d tried to get out of it at one point, but Webb encouraged him to continue.

    Then in October, a teen was arrested at San Ysidro with more than 2 pounds of fentanyl strapped to his lower back. He said a female friend from Chula Vista High School had asked him to do it for a friend. A few days after the request, he got a Facebook message from someone named “Anthony.” The teen said he’d changed his mind but Anthony threatened him to go through with it, saying he knew where the teen lived, according to the complaint.

    Investigators found a connection between the female friend and Webb, and also noted that Webb crossed at the same port of entry minutes apart from the teen, the complaint states.

    Webb, who later transferred to MAAC Community Charter School in Chula Vista, was arrested in May when CBP officers found two unauthorized immigrants in the trunk of his Nissan Maxima at San Ysidro, according to the complaint.

    In another recent case, a 27-year-old San Diego man, Alejandro Barba, was arrested in May after investigators observed a teen hand off what appeared to be drugs in the San Ysidro High School parking lot, prosecutors said. A traffic stop revealed 11 pounds of meth in the car. The teen admitted that he’d gotten the drugs from another student who had smuggled them through the border, according to the complaint.

    The most common drugs seized from teen couriers are meth, heroin and cocaine. But fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that is up to 100 times as potent as heroin, has started to make appearances at the border.

    Consider the blitzkrieg approach traffickers took during the last week of March.

    On a Tuesday evening, a 16-year-old U.S. citizen walked through the San Ysidro Pedestrian West border crossing and was stopped when a CBP officer noticed a lump on his back. A pat down revealed two packages of fentanyl – 5 pounds total – strapped to his body.

    A couple days later, a 17-year-old girl crossing at San Ysidro’s SENTRI lanes in a Volkswagen Beetle at midday was arrested after a dog alert revealed eight packages of fentanyl and seven packages of cocaine hidden in a rear quarter panel.

    The next evening, a 17-year-old from Mexico was stopped at the San Ysidro Pedestrian East border with two packages of fentanyl – 4 pounds total – strapped to his body.

    And the following night, two more teens, ages 15 and 17, came through the West Pedestrian crossing as fentanyl mules with similar sized packages.

    The combined street value of the loads was $1.34 million, according to CBP.

    Authorities say traffickers will often send teen mules through in groups, perhaps to deflect attention off some if others are caught. Sometimes guides also cross with the teens to keep a close eye on the product and make sure no one chickens out.

    Consequences


    Cases against teens 17 and younger are prosecuted by the District Attorney’s Office. Penalties can vary depending on the circumstances and the individual involved, but can include fines, weeks or months in Juvenile Hall — which the parents pay for — and rehabilitation programs.

    Then there are the longer-lasting consequences that might be less obvious — but potentially more devastating — including the loss of their driver’s license, border crossing card, SENTRI pass, their parents’ SENTRI passes, as well as opportunities to obtain college loans, serve in the military or become a naturalized U.S. citizen.

    “You have all these things to lose, but more significantly you’re going to impact your family,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Sherri Hobson, who prosecutes drug smuggling cases.

    For those 18 and over — many of whom are recruited in Tijuana nightclubs — it can mean a few years in prison and a felony on their record. Those cases are typically prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Sentences for first-time offenders can vary depending on the type and amount of drug. A recent case against a man caught with 38 pounds of cocaine in his vehicle ended with a prison sentence of just over three years, for example.

    Some young adults caught as drug mules in the past avoided prison time under a diversion program that was focused more on rehabilitation rather than punishment. Under the program, eligible defendants pleaded guilty to a felony but as long as they succeeded in school or work and completed other requirements, the felony would not be entered on their record.

    Samantha, 23, remains grateful she was given the opportunity for what she calls “a new life.”

    The Pennsylvania woman was deep in her heroin addiction in 2013 when she was arrested at the border with 100 grams of cocaine hidden in her vagina.

    She was so high she could barely walk and had followed the instructions of her drug dealer, she said.

    After successfully completing the diversion program, she continues to work as a sales rep for a skin care company and is free from her addiction, she said.

    Prosecutors this year stopped offering the diversion program for drug offenses.

    “Narcotics, especially hard narcotics, are a significant threat and not appropriate for diversion,” said Executive Assistant U.S. Attorney Linda Frakes.

    Samantha offered this warning to any youth considering a smuggling offer: “It’s not worth it. I don’t care if you’re offered $2,000 or $4,000. It’s not worth it.”

    Nancee Schwartz, a defense attorney who started the diversion program, said diversion was incredibly successful with drug cases.

    “What we see at the end of the year is these clients are now working, going to school. They have alternative means to make money. That’s the goal,” she said.

    “It’s intended to provide accountability and resources that would change a life. That’s what we saw, and that’s the real tragedy of not continuing a diversion program.”

    Outreach


    When authorities noticed an uptick in teen smuggling around 2007 and 2008, law enforcement agencies got together and began putting on presentations at San Diego and Chula Vista high schools near the border to give them a glimpse of reality.

    The presentation included graphic, bloody photos of victims of drug violence, a reminder of the brutality teens expose themselves to the deeper they get into the narco world.

    The teen in the video said he tried to get out but couldn’t — until he was arrested. Even now he said he worries his past will catch up with him. The traffickers made a copy of his ID before the first smuggling trip.

    After several presentations, teen smuggling arrests at the California border dropped, and officials credit much of the success to the outreach program.

    Since 2009, CBP, HSI, prosecutors and San Diego police have visited more than 60 schools in the county under “Project Crossing Guard.”

    The outreach has tapered off in recent years but is being revamped as arrests continue to climb and fentanyl continues to pose such a serious threat.

    Recently, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Drug Enforcement Administration and District Attorney’s Office went to MAAC to try to get through to kids before school let out for summer.

    The presentation included a new element — emotional testimony from parents who have lost children to drug overdoses.

    Hobson, the federal prosecutor, said it forces teens to confront the question: “Who did you kill today smuggling drugs?”

    Authorities are hoping to put on several more presentations in the coming school year.

    “Schools need to wake up and embrace what’s going on,” Hobson said of the outreach effort.

    http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/...706-story.html


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  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    The kids most often being recruited for such work are frequent border crossers — typically Mexican citizens with border crossing cards who attend school in the U.S., often in districts near the border.
    Why are Mexican teenagers allowed to attend schools in the US?
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
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    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    If they have NO Student Visa or authorization to be in this country...NO SCHOOL.

    DO NOT LET THEM ENROLL IN FALL CLASSES!

    GET THEM OFF OUR SOIL.
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Judy View Post
    Why are Mexican teenagers allowed to attend schools in the US?
    Yes! Closing the border to them would protect them from this type of exploitation! Build the wall!

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    Senior Member stoptheinvaders's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jtdc View Post
    Yes! Closing the border to them would protect them from this type of exploitation! Build the wall!
    Apparently building the Wall would not help this problem. It appears they are using their SENTRI to waltz through every day, attend school and go back to Mexico every night.

    Learn something new every day, and the more we learn, the worse it gets.

    What law allows that? and who passed it?
    You've got to Stand for Something or You'll Fall for Anything

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    Senior Member lorrie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Judy View Post
    Why are Mexican teenagers allowed to attend schools in the US?



    I was thinking the same thing!


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  7. #7
    MW
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    Quote Originally Posted by Judy View Post
    Why are Mexican teenagers allowed to attend schools in the US?
    These are anchor babies. Children born to illegal aliens. They have a U.S. Passport and U.S. birth certificate. Some deported illegal alien families with U.S. born children remain near the border so they can take advantage of their child's right to an American education. This is just one of the many problems with birthright citizenship.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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    Senior Member stoptheinvaders's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MW View Post
    These are anchor babies. Children born to illegal aliens. They have a U.S. Passport and U.S. birth certificate. Some deported illegal alien families with U.S. born children remain near the border so they can take advantage of their child's right to an American education. This is just one of the many problems with birthright citizenship.
    What happened to a child going to school in the district they lived in. Back in the day, we could not even send our children out of the school district, much less to a different county, state, or country? Has that changed?
    You've got to Stand for Something or You'll Fall for Anything

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    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MW View Post
    These are anchor babies. Children born to illegal aliens. They have a U.S. Passport and U.S. birth certificate. Some deported illegal alien families with U.S. born children remain near the border so they can take advantage of their child's right to an American education. This is just one of the many problems with birthright citizenship.
    Why would a deported illegal alien be issued a SENTRI card?
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
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    MW
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    Quote Originally Posted by Judy View Post
    Why would a deported illegal alien be issued a SENTRI card?
    Huh?? I didn't say anything about that.

    I said these children are U.S. born citizens with passports and U.S. birth certificates. I didn't say anything about deported illegal aliens being issued SENTRI cards. There are actually buses provided to transport these American citizen children from the port of entry to their schools. The previously deported parents bring the children to the port of entry. The parents do not cross the border. After the officer at the port of entry checks the child's plastic covered birth certificate they are allowed to proceed to their school bus.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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