Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Mexifornia
    Posts
    2,174

    Secure Borders? Try Fenced In (MUST READ)

    This is an eye-opener! Please read ENTIRE article...it will make you sick!

    Secure Borders? Try Fenced In
    With $860 million spending sprees, high-tech surveillance towers that don't work and Operation Streamline show trials, it's still the same old catch-and-release game

    By MARC COOPER
    Wednesday, June 11, 2008 - 4:40 pm

    Sasabe, Arizona — Under a cloudless desert sky in the bright sunlight of midmorning, we spotted the young Mexican man crouched in the scrub. He flagged us down, right on the main highway barely a mile north of the border.

    I was riding with a couple of other reporters and two members of the Samaritans, a church-based group from Tucson, whose volunteer mission is to aid migrants stranded in the no man’s land of the Arizona-Sonoran desert. We were in the deadliest section of the border. Of the estimated 500 people who died trying to walk into America last year, about half perished here in Arizona. And more than three dozen right in the 30-mile stretch the Samaritans were patrolling that morning.

    The dark-haired man furtively motioning to us no doubt spotted the Samaritans emblem on the side of our car. And when we pulled over to his side of the road, he silently and quickly led us through the greasewood and shrubs about 50 yards from where we started. There, resting on the rocks under a scrawny tree, were nine more of his weathered, tired fellow trekkers, including two young women — one of them pregnant.

    [b]“We were abandoned by our coyote,â€

  2. #2
    Senior Member Richard's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Boston
    Posts
    5,262
    None of this makes any difference, says Cornelius, a world-class demographer who meticulously tracks migration patterns.


    Toughened border enforcement doesn't keep undocumented migrants out of the United States. All it does is raise the prices charged by the smugglers.

    Hope's trail: Walking to the USA
    Emilio Flores

    (Click to enlarge)


    Rest stop: The Samaritans' Mary Goethals, center, gives comfort and aid to two migrants; the woman at right is four months' pregnant.


    Not only do 45 percent of illegal aliens living here enter legally and simply overstay their visas, but those who jump the border on foot are not deterred by more punitive measures. Cornelius cites a study he conducted of a so-called "active sender community" in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. More than 90 percent of those surveyed said they considered crossing the border very dangerous, and 24 percent claimed to know someone who had died trying. But no significant number said that knowledge would keep them from trying to cross.


    The success rate of those trying to get across was 98 percent in 1995, says Cornelius. And in 2005 to 2007, it was still 98 percent.


    On any afternoon of the week, in the cavernous special-hearings chamber of the federal court in Tucson, it's possible to witness one of the more absurd, and pointless, immigration-enforcement efforts of the Bush administration. With so many migrants pushing across the border nightly, the prevailing policy has been to catch and release first-time offenders.


    Even those who have been apprehended a half-dozen times or more are generally fingerprinted and photographed at a Border Patrol station and then, a mere few hours later, after signing a "voluntary departure" agreement, dumped back across the Mexican border.


    Now a pilot program, started two years ago in Texas, with the aim of prosecuting and jailing those nabbed at the border, is being tried in Arizona. The federal government calls it Operation Streamline. Defense attorneys and policy critics call it an outrageous travesty of American justice.


    Just after lunchtime on a recent Thursday, 42 dark-skinned men almost all Mexicans, a few of them Central Americans; some middle-aged but most of them in their 20s or younger are ushered en masse into the Tucson courtroom.


    Bound in shackles and chains, unshowered and hair uncombed, dressed in the same dark clothes in which they were apprehended and under the armed guard of two green-uniformed Border Patrol agents, they are all seated on the courtroom"s left side. The headphones they are offered so that they can hear the simultaneous translation give the whole spectacle a touch-of-Nuremberg feel.


    The defendants shout out "¡Presente!" as their names are called by a clerk. After the roll call is taken, defense attorneys — most of them court-appointed and a sprinkle of federal defenders immediately stand to correct the misspellings of several names.


    "Do all of you understand your petty offense carries a maximum penalty of 180 days?" asks the judge, who does little to hide his absolute boredom with the whole affair.


    "¡Si!" say the seated defendants in unison. "You all understand that you have the right to plead innocent and the right to a trial?" asks the judge." "¡Si!" "There's a right to call witnesses. "¡Si!" "You understand you have the right to remain silent?""¡Si!"


    And then comes the core of what is, indeed, a streamlined exercise in jurisprudence, if not justice itself. "Have you all decided to waive your right to a trial?" the judge asks, with no suspense in his voice.


    "¡Si" answers the handcuffed mass. Has anyone forced you or coerced you to enter your plea?" "No!" the defendants shout back.


    Next, each defendant is called upon to stand, and each one pleads culpable guilty to the charge of illegal entry into the U.S. In groups of five and six, they are then summoned forward by the judge for sentencing. A few defendants with prior criminal records in the U.*S. are sentenced to a couple of weeks or longer in jail. But nobody else and this is where the real charade begins.


    For each group, the judge asks the federal prosecutors for their recommendation. And the prosecutors routinely ask for a minimum of 10 days in jail. The judge, however, is barely listening. His mind is already made up. As soon as the prosecutors finish speaking, the judge taps his gavel and simply says, Time served.


    In most cases, the migrants have been held for 48 hours. Now they are set free. Or, more precisely, they are loaded onto a government-chartered bus and driven for an hour to the border, across which they are booted. In any case, it's no additional jail time. It's catch, hold in a bucket, and then release.


    The goal of this program isn't really to stop illegal immigration, says one disgusted Arizona judge who hears these Operation Streamline cases. "It's just about moving the flow to our east or our west. People come here to eat, and they are going to keep coming here. Our government says it's building a virtual fence. The problem is, Mexico isn't sending in virtual Mexicans.


    Currently, the federal authorities in Tucson are prosecuting 50 migrants a day. Though the system can't handle even that amount, and though virtually no one goes to jail, the goal is to get to 100 prosecutions per day by the end of the year. And the Department of Homeland Security says it wants sentences of 30 days as an effective deterrent.


    "The courts don't have the capacity, there aren't enough beds and there isn't enough money," says UCSD's Cornelius. To make this happen, you'd need to build a virtual gulag of concentration camps in the Southwest.


    There hardly seems any threat of that scenario, as the mere 50 prosecutions a day have all but broken the court system in Tucson already. There aren't enough holding cells. The probation office has had to vacate the courthouse to make room for additional detainees.


    The U.*S. Marshals Service doesn't have enough agents to guard them and is paying a private contractor at least $18,000 a week to help out. And even the Department of Justice doesn't have enough federal prosecutors for the extra load. The five prosecutors whose pleas for jail time get dismissed every afternoon in the Tucson court are on-loan U.S. Border Patrol attorneys with no real trial experience. The federal defender provides two defense lawyers per session. But the court has to hire as many as 14 private attorneys a day to go through every motion.


    © Copyright 2008 LA Weekly, LP
    LA Weekly • 3861 Sepulveda Blvd • Culver City CA 90230
    I support enforcement and see its lack as bad for the 3rd World as well. Remittances are now mostly spent on consumption not production assets. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Senior Member Richard's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Boston
    Posts
    5,262
    SECURE BORDERS? TRY FENCED IN
    BY MARC COOPER


    Wednesday, June 11, 2008 - 4:40 pm


    Continued from page 2


    I am the most impotent person in this whole system,” says Tucson's First Assistant Federal Defender, Heather Williams. In her modest offices a few blocks from the courthouse, she offers an Inconvenient Truth class PowerPoint on the baffling complexities of federal immigration prosecution policy. But she uses a game-show analogy to describe the rather stark simplicity of Operation Streamline.


    Think of it as Deal or No Deal, Williams says. Twenty-four hours after their arrest, a federal defender gets a total of 20 minutes per client. This isn't justice.


    It's rubber-stamping. Most of these people have walked two or three days through the desert. Some are dehydrated.


    They haven't slept, they're in a borderline mental condition, there's no bail, and you're sitting at a table with them where they have 20 minutes to make a decision that will affect the rest of their lives.
    Emilio Flores


    Gimme shelter: A Guatemalan family at one of the "hospedajes" in the Mexican border town of Altar "How would you feel, Williams continues, if you went to Mexico, got arrested, didn't speak the language and had only 20 minutes to talk to an attorney you don't know and who tells you to plead guilty?


    One Border Patrol spokesman defended the program to local reporters but also seemed to unwittingly buttress the arguments made by the disgusted judge who claimed that Operation Streamline is ineffective in stopping the migrant flow. The biggest bang for our buck is deterrence, said Supervisory Border Patrol Agent Jesus Rodriguez. It's sending a message that if you get caught, you're going to get prosecuted; so you're not going to try it.


    But Rodriguez then added: "Some of these folks are no longer coming back into this area. They're going out to other sectors. In other words, the flow as usual is only being diverted elsewhere.

    While the Bush administration and its Department of Homeland Security continue to pressure Arizona to accelerate its enforcement crackdowns, the state itself might be having second thoughts. There's some speculation that Operation Streamline instead of being expanded might be quietly rolled back in the next few months. At the same time, legislators are now searching for politically palatable ways to undo the mess created by a recent state law that imposes the use of a computerized worker-verification system and exposes employers to the loss of their business licenses if they hire an illegal alien.


    A rash of labor shortages, costing potentially astronomic sums, has ripped through the state as more and more Mexican migrants once they are safely across the Arizona border simply move on to less hostile employment environments, in California, New Mexico or just about anywhere else in the country. Some estimate that the new law may eventually affect as much as 8 percent of the labor force of Arizona, a state where unemployment rarely hits half that number.


    Likewise, in mid-May, as was first reported by our sister paper the Phoenix New Times, Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano finally got fed up with the anti-immigrant antics of the notorious rogue sheriff of Maricopa County, Joe Arpaio. The self-proclaimed meanest sheriff in the world had deployed a whopping 160 members of his Phoenix-area force to a so-called border unit. And after some cross-training with federal immigration agents, Arpaio's deputies were swarming through Latino neighborhoods of greater Phoenix, rousting those they could on minor infractions and questioning their immigration status.


    In an executive order signed on May 12, Napolitano shifted elsewhere much of the funding used by Arpaio’s immigration unit. While she denied she had targeted Arpaio, the sheriff reacted angrily to the funding cutoff.

    Arpaio's raids had sparked a war of words, not only with local immigration advocates and with Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon, but also with some local police officials who roundly and publicly criticized Arpaio's operations. Foremost among Arpaio's law-enforcement critics has been George Gascon, former assistant chief of the LAPD and now chief of police in Mesa, a large Phoenix suburb in Maricopa County. One of the most enlightened police officials in the U.S., Gascon as a critic of Arpaio has become a lightning rod for Minutemen-like xenophobic groups.


    "I'm extremely concerned about the area of civil rights, Gascon told L.A. Weekly. As this [anti-immigrant] train moves forward, I just don't hear enough anger, enough of an outcry that people are basically being arrested on the basis of race, a basic violation of the 14th Amendment.


    We're taking a whole generation of police officers, the Cuban-born Gascon says, “and we're culturizing them into an entire culture in conflict with the Constitution. My fears are that here in Arizona, as we engage in an era of employer sanctions and police roundups, people who need to work are going to be ushered into criminal activity. It's just not realistic to think people coming from Latin America are going to self-deport. That's just incredibly stupid.


    For the past handful of years, it's been a simple, if quite bumpy, drive down a 60-mile rutted dirt road leading south from the border post of Sasabe to the Sonoran town of Altar a central launching pad for Mexican migrants heading to the U.S. It's in Altar that they make their connections with their coyotes, or polleros, and are fed assembly-line style into the vast smuggling pipelines that discharge in the car washes of El Monte and the poultry plants of the Carolinas.


    And it's no accident that the new piece of border fence we visited was constructed smack-dab at Sasabe, the dusty border town where that road connects to Altar. A year or two ago, before the heightened enforcement push in the Tucson sector of the border, as many as 2,000 migrants, packed into vans carrying 20 or more, poured into the U.S. from Altar each and every day and then fanned out into the deserts and cities beyond.


    Now, that ride isn't so simple. Not because of the American border fence, but because of the spreading grip of drug cartels along the Mexican borderlands. For the first time in five years, I was warned specifically not to travel that direct road to Altar but rather to take a much longer, more circuitous route into the nondescript town that some grimly call “the gateway to the American Dream.


    Page 3 of 4


    © Copyright 2008 LA Weekly, LP
    LA Weekly • 3861 Sepulveda Blvd • Culver City CA 90230
    I support enforcement and see its lack as bad for the 3rd World as well. Remittances are now mostly spent on consumption not production assets. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  4. #4
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Mexifornia
    Posts
    2,174
    PAGE 2
    Secure Borders? Try Fenced In
    By MARC COOPER
    Wednesday, June 11, 2008 - 4:40 pm
    Continued from page 1

    “None of this makes any difference,â€

  5. #5
    Senior Member Richard's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Boston
    Posts
    5,262
    Wednesday, June 11, 2008 - 4:40 pm
    Continued from page 3


    The narcos now firmly control the old dirt road that is the most direct route from Altar to Arizona. And it's not just here, south of Tucson. In the first three months of this year, more than 200 people were killed in drug-related massacres in Juarez, just across from El Paso. On April 27, 17 people were shot dead in a wild drug-war shootout on a main thoroughfare in Tijuana. The mounting chaos only drives more immigrants into the U.S.


    The narcos are now charging $50 a head for the migrants going up that road, says Enrique Zelaya, a staff member at the Catholic-run shelter for migrants in Altar.


    "Last year, they burned 30 vans along that road, and they kidnapped 150 migrants," he adds. But not even this deters the migrant flow. The van drivers who make the run up the road, and were parked in a line along Altar's colonial plaza, all confirmed that they have raised the fare to the border from $10 to $60 a head over the past year.


    Just off the plaza, I make the rounds of the tenement-like flophouses that charge five or 10 dollars a night to stack migrants on plywood bunk beds, or simply stow them on the floor. There is no question that the numbers are down from a couple of years ago. Where there might have been a hundred people or so crowded into one of these human warehouses, there are now maybe 30 or 40.


    Nobody knows why. It might be that the bursting of the housing bubble in the U.S. means that fewer construction jobs are available. Or that migrant routes are shifting back toward Yuma, and even back into California, especially around Mexicali.


    More people are trudging through the mountains to the east in New Mexico, I'm told.


    What we do know, what I can see for myself, is that there's a greater percentage of women and children than ever before among the migrants jammed into the dank rooms of the flophouses, the ill-named guesthouses that dot the streets of Altar.


    When I get back to Arizona and meet with him in Tucson, Wayne Cornelius offers a straight forward explanation. Border enforcement has failed to keep people out of the country, he says. But it has been quite successful in keeping them in.


    As it has become more perilous to cross the border, more and more migrants who used to cycle in and out of the U.S. now stay here. The increased numbers of women and children I saw in the Altar holding pens were coming to join their husbands and fathers, who were bunkered in the U.S.


    So great is the push to migrate north from Mexico and Central America an hours wages in California are worth a day of labor in Veracruz that, Cornelius predicts, a U.S. policy based completely on erroneous assumptions will continue to fail.


    As more enforcement pressure is being placed on land borders, Cornelius says, we are seeing a deflection toward maritime borders, especially in California. More than 20 smugglers boats have been found in Southern California since August 2007.


    I've been predicting this for a long time. And now it's happening. Our government is building a border fence, but we're already into the era of maritime people smuggling.


    Page 4 of 4


    © Copyright 2008 LA Weekly, LP
    LA Weekly • 3861 Sepulveda Blvd • Culver City CA 90230
    I support enforcement and see its lack as bad for the 3rd World as well. Remittances are now mostly spent on consumption not production assets. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  6. #6
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Mexifornia
    Posts
    9,455
    [quote]Currently, the federal authorities in Tucson are prosecuting 50 migrants a day. Though the system can’t handle even that amount, and though virtually no one goes to jail, the goal is to get to 100 prosecutions per day by the end of the year. And the Department of Homeland Security says it wants sentences of 30 days as an effective deterrent.

    “The courts don’t have the capacity, there aren’t enough beds and there isn’t enough money,â€
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  7. #7
    MW
    MW is offline
    Senior Member MW's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    25,717
    Build Duncan Hunter's double-layered fence with high-speed BP road between layers, stadium lighting, and sensors across the entire border now!

    No single fencing or "virtual" fencing is going to work! Quality fencing will work to slow illegal traffic, however, it has to be constructed correctly.

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

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts athttps://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  8. #8
    Senior Member lccat's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    2,584
    Quote Originally Posted by MW
    Build Duncan Hunter's double-layered fence with high-speed BP road between layers, stadium lighting, and sensors across the entire border now!

    No single fencing or "virtual" fencing is going to work! Quality fencing will work to slow illegal traffic, however, it has to be constructed correctly.
    We also have 30,000 troops defending South Korea's National Borders that would be better utilized defending the United States National Borders! Then maybe members of the United States Military would be safe leaving their Children in the United States while they are out of the country defending OUR Nation without their Children being murdered by ILLEGALS and their Anchor Babies!

  9. #9
    Senior Member lccat's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    2,584
    It seems that all of the comments on the source article are PRO-ILLEGAL and PRO-OPEN BORDERS!

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •