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    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    LAX employee arrested in alleged smuggling plot

    LAX employee arrested in alleged smuggling plot
    Federal officials say the man is seen on tape guiding Mexicana passengers out of the airport, avoiding immigration and customs inspectors. They believe he is part of a larger smuggling operation.
    By Anna Gorman, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    September 4, 2008

    A longtime elevator mechanic at Los Angeles International Airport has been charged with smuggling illegal immigrants into the United States by leading them out of the terminal before they were inspected by federal authorities.

    Roberto Amaya Canchola, 53, was arrested at the airport Aug. 23 after a sting operation involving federal immigration agents. Authorities believe the North Hills resident smuggled in at least 15 illegal immigrants, including two with criminal records who had previously been deported. They all arrived on Mexicana flights from Guanajuato, Mexico, officials said.


    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the U.S. attorney's office are still investigating the allegations. Agents believe that Canchola was only one player in a larger smuggling organization and that he probably was used for his airport access.

    "We don't know at this time how big it is," said Louis Rodi, assistant special agent in charge of immigration and customs investigations at the airport. "We believe he is not the biggest player. . . . We are targeting the larger organization."

    Canchola's attorney, Paul Horgan, declined to comment on the accusations.


    Rodi said the allegations show that there may be holes in security because of ongoing construction at the Tom Bradley International Terminal.

    Canchola "knew security and he knew where the holes were on any given day," Rodi said.

    But airport officials said it is highly unlikely that gaps in security are occurring due to the construction. Canchola, a city employee for 23 years, had been cleared by both the airport and U.S. Customs and Border Protection to access the restricted area, said Nancy Castles, public relations director for Los Angeles World Airports.

    Canchola has been working at the airport since 1989. He left in 2007 to work for the L.A. Department of Building and Safety, but returned to LAX in April 2008, undergoing new background checks at that time, Castles said. His annual salary as an elevator mechanic is nearly $81,000.

    "His badge allowed him access to that area," Castles said. "It's what he allegedly did once he was there," that led to the federal charges.

    Castles said the airport relies on a system of employment and criminal background checks to screen potential employees. More than 45,000 employees have airport badges.

    The arrest was the first time airport officials could recall a city employee being accused of smuggling at the airport, Castles said.

    Canchola was released on $100,000 bond and is scheduled to return to court Sept. 15. He faces a maximum of 10 years in federal prison if convicted, according to the U.S. attorney's office.

    Immigration agents said they didn't know how long the alleged smuggling had been going on.

    "I wouldn't rule out the possibility that additional aliens were brought into the country by this individual," said U.S. attorney's office spokesman Thom Mrozek.

    Federal authorities caught Canchola on surveillance video July 19 and 26 guiding passengers through an exit to a taxi waiting at the curb, according to an affidavit filed in federal court. The six passengers, all without luggage, were believed to have arrived on Mexicana Flight 112 from Guanajuato, Mexico, but never went through immigration and customs inspection, according to the affidavit.

    On Aug. 9, immigration agents observed Canchola guiding four adults and one infant, who had arrived from Mexico, onto an elevator on one floor and off of a different elevator on another floor, court papers said. He allegedly accessed certain floors by using a special key or identification card, court papers said.

    The passengers signaled to Canchola by putting their hands over their hearts, "like they were saying the Pledge of Allegiance," Rodi said.

    Canchola then allegedly led the passengers outside.

    "These are people with money," he said. "They didn't look like people who were coming to pick strawberries."

    One of the women held a job in Los Angeles as a computer analyst, he said.

    The passengers were taken to downtown Los Angeles, where relatives allegedly paid other people involved in the smuggling operation, Rodi said. He said each immigrant may have paid about $4,500.

    Rodi said he doesn't know how much Canchola may have been paid, but recent deposits show he may have received about $500 per immigrant.

    To board the flight, the passengers had presented passports and permission to travel into the U.S., but discrepancies in the information were later discovered, court papers said.

    The two immigrants with criminal records were arrested and charged in federal court.

    Canchola was arrested after he allegedly repeated the process Aug. 23. Airport police confiscated and deactivated his badge at the time of his arrest.

    anna.gorman@latimes.com
    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me ... 0563.story
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    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
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    Criminal Illegal Aliens Smuggled Through Airport
    Thu, 09/04/2008 - 11:59 — Judicial Watch Blog

    Proving once again that the nation’s airports are vulnerable to serious security breaches, a longtime public employee at one of the world’s busiest airports has been charged with smuggling foreigners—including previously deported aliens with criminal records—into the country by helping them out of the terminal before mandatory customs inspections.

    The veteran city worker, an elevator mechanic, has for decades been cleared to access restricted areas at Los Angeles International Airport and federal authorities believe he was a small part of a large scale illegal immigrant smuggling operation at the massive facility which annually handles 62 million passengers.

    Officials admit they have no clue how long the smuggling ring has operated but say the city mechanic (Roberto Canchola) sneaked in at least 15 illegal immigrants in the last few months, including two criminals who had been deported, as they arrived on Mexicana flights from Mexico.

    Upon arrival, the passengers would signal to Canchola by putting their hands over the hearts like they were saying the Pledge of Allegiance. He then escorted them out of the airport through restricted back areas to avoid U.S. Customs and Border Protection checkpoints mandatory for all international passengers. The smuggled aliens were then taken to downtown Los Angeles where relatives paid up to $4,500 for each person.

    Now the 23-year city employee, whose annual taxpayer-financed salary is $81,000, faces a decade in prison. Unfortunately, this is hardly the first time that a serious lapse puts the nation at risk since the devastating 2001 terrorist attacks supposedly strengthened security at all of the country’s transportation facilities.

    In the last few years alone unbelievable breaches have occurred at airports across the nation. At Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport and Georgia’s Atlanta International Airport, illegal immigrants used fake security badges to work in highly restricted security areas. At Florida’s Orlando Airport a pair of baggage handlers smuggled guns and drugs onto a commercial flight more than once and Customs and Border Protection officers at two separate east coast airports helped drug smugglers and illegal immigrants enter the country for cash.
    http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2008/ ... gh-airport
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