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  1. #1
    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    Jail Politicians Not Border Patrol Agents

    Jail Politicians Not Border Patrol Agents!

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Tuesday, February 6, 2006

    CONTACT: Americans for Legal Immigration PAC
    WilliamG@alipac.us
    Tel: (919) 787-6009 Toll Free: (866) 329-3999


    Americans for Legal Immigration PAC (ALIPAC) has called on activists from all fifty states, to call on Congress to pardon border agents Compean and Ramos and to launch Congressional investigations to determine why the Bush administration is acting more on behalf of human and drug smuggling cartels than the American public.

    Border Patrol agent Ramos was severely assaulted in prison by illegal alien gang members on Saturday night, after America's Most Wanted aired a story about him. Agents Ramos and Compean were sent to prison for poor record keeping, after shooting a known illegal alien drug smuggler in the buttocks.

    "We need these Border Patrol agents out of prison immediately," said William Gheen of ALIPAC. "Now is the time for America to start investigating which politicians and CEOs need to go to prison for subverting our existing immigration laws, depriving the public of government by the people, and facilitating the costly invasion of America."

    According to statistics published by the office of Congressman Steve King (R-IA), between 12-25 Americans are killed per day by the criminal acts of illegal aliens in America. That estimate suggests that more than 4,000 Americans are killed each year due to the Executive Branch's failure to enforce the existing laws passed by Congress. In addition to those murders, thousands of Americans also suffer assaults, rapes, and thefts at the hands of illegal aliens, which have little or no fear of neither apprehension nor immigration enforcement.

    "We do not need immigration reform," said William Gheen. "We need comprehensive immigration enforcement. There is massive loss of life, liberty, and property due to this invasion. The casualties at home are higher than in Iraq!"

    ALIPAC Activists recently celebrated a raid on the Smithfield Foods Inc. plant in Tarheel, NC after months of activist pressure campaigns calling for the raid.

    ALIPAC Activists attention will now focus on calling for Congressional investigations into the Bush administration for failure to enforce the existing laws of the United States of America, which were duly passed by the Representatives of the American citizenry. The failure to enforce existing laws has thus deprived American citizens of Representation and a functioning Republic for which the flag stands.

    Many of the recent actions by the Executive Branch involving immigration issues benefit large corporations and drug and human importing, organized crime syndicates, while causing massive harm to American citizens.

    It is time for official investigations from Congress! It is time to jail politicians, not Border Patrol agents!

    ###



    Paid for by
    AMERICANS FOR LEGAL IMMIGRATION PAC
    Post Office Box 30966, Raleigh, NC 27622-0966
    Tel: (919) 787-6009 Toll Free: (866) 329-3999
    FEC ID: C00405878
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    Added to the homepage with a link to your comments here.

    http://www.alipac.us/modules.php?name=N ... e&sid=1914

    Please post your comments for the public to read below.
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  3. #3
    Senior Member Beckyal's Avatar
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    Jail politicans not border patrol agents

    Judges and politicans are supporting illegals which is against the law. Those that are encouraging the illegals to enter our country need to go to jail with the illegals instead of the border patrol agents trying to do their job.

  4. #4
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    It is time for official investigations from Congress! It is time to jail politicians, not Border Patrol agents!


    ABSOLUTELY!!!!

  5. #5
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    I don't know why the federal government wants to handcuff the Boarder Patrol and the National Guard. We must allow them to use force, when necessary or we will have no real security.

    You might as well stake out some sheep to watch the border, if you don't allow agents to use judgement and go unpunished for enforceing the laws.

    Dixie
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  6. #6
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    And Bush's new budget proposal he asks for more border patrol agents? Yeah, right!
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  7. #7
    Senior Member jp_48504's Avatar
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    Now the Government is admitting they lied.

    Government admits lying about jailed border agents
    Inspector confronted on Capitol Hill, says promised 'proof' does not exist

    http://www.alipac.us/modules.php?name=F ... c&p=291372
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  8. #8
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pissedoffpatriot
    Based on the fact the Government fails to enforce immigration laws someone should round up everyone who has had a relative killed by an illegal immigrant and initiate a class action lawsuit against the government for failure to enforce its own laws as well as for criminal culpability in every one of these deaths. Since the ONLY LAW the government believes in is thier right to absolute power and control this is where we must hit them. A hundred billion dollar lawsuit as well as filing criminal complainsts against those specifically responsible is one sure way to send a signal that we the people are tired of the same old bull Mod Edit form the same old criminal members of government. Just look at the Social Security issue- they are saying it is in danger yet they are giving away the store AND they don't care as they have seperate Government pensions unrelated to S.S.!!!!! If we don't wake up and take action then we are going down the tubes as fast as our politicians can send us!!
    Welcome to ALIPAC POP.

    Dixie
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  9. #9
    Senior Member jp_48504's Avatar
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    Imprisoned border agent did report shooting
    DHS memo shows Compean spoke to supervisor immediately after incident
    Posted: February 7, 2007
    1:00 a.m. Eastern

    By Jerome R. Corsi
    © 2007 WorldNetDaily.com

    WND has obtained a Department of Homeland Security memo indicating Border Patrol agent Jose Compean made a complete, in-person verbal report to his supervisor at the scene immediately following the shooting incident for which he and colleague Ignacio Ramos are now in prison.

    The May 15, 2005, report filed by DHS Special Agent Christopher Sanchez documents a conversation between Compean and his supervisor that explains the decision by all nine Border Patrol agents and supervisors on the scene not to file written reports.

    As reported by WND yesterday, a DHS memo filed by Sanchez April 12, 2005, shows seven agents and two supervisors were present at the Feb. 17, 2005 incident also decided not to file written reports.

    The April 12, 2005, DHS memo stated that all the agents present at the incident were equally guilty for not filing a written report.

    (Story continues below)

    These memos directly contradict the repeated statements of the prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton, that agents Ramos and Compean filed false reports about the incident.

    As far as WND can determine, no written reports were filed by any of the Border Patrol agents or supervisors on the field.

    Moreover, the record of the May 15, 2005, memo indicates Compean was truthful in reporting verbally to the most senior supervisor present at the incident.

    Sanchez's memo of May 15, 2005, is a transcript of a hearing held by Compean with El Paso Border Patrol Sector Chief Louis Barker. The hearing was held at Compean's request in order to protest his proposed indefinite suspension resulting from his March 18, 2005, arrest on criminal charges.

    The first part of the hearing was held April 7, 2005, before Compean's April 13, 2005, indictment. The second recording from the hearing is dated April 28, 2005.

    At the administrative hearing, Compean was accompanied by union representative Robert Russell, a vice president of Local 1929, the El Paso branch of the National Border Patrol Council.

    In the opening statement transcribed from the April 7, 2005, audio cassette, Russell makes Barker aware that Compean had made a complete report on the scene to Jonathan Richards, the more senior of the two supervisors present at the incident.

    Russell's testimony references a wound Compean suffered on his hand, a gash between the thumb and index finger, which he suffered when scuffling in the ditch with the drug smuggler, Osbaldo Aldrete-Davila, who had abandoned his vehicle and was attempting to escape back to Mexico on foot. Russell points to this wound as evidence of aggravated assault committed on Compean by the drug smuggler.

    Here is Russell's recorded testimony:

    Well, I mean, the base … the basis of this is basically … ummm … Mr. Compean … an assault took place that day against one of our agents, and he did defend himself, and the part of the assault is never mentioned in the complaint or anywhere by OIG (Office of Inspector General) that they know clearly how this did take place.

    A few sentences later, Russell again references that what transpired at the scene was observed by the agents and supervisors in the field and subsequently fully known to the Border Patrol management at the station in Fabens, Texas.

    Russell indicates that management at Fabens themselves chose not to make a report about Compean's injury. Here is his testimony:

    Even management at the station in Fabens was fully aware of what had transpired and for whatever reason nothing was ever generated … and once all this comes forward, I mean, it's my belief even his attorneys' belief that even once that does come forward and all that information is presented that the charges will possibly be dropped … or dismissed … or he will be found not guilty … based on that … what did transpire.

    Directly contradicting prosecutor Sutton's assertion that agents Ramos and Compean filed false reports, the April 2005 administrative hearing reveals Compean was forthcoming concerning the events of the incident.

    In the second cassette, Russell makes clear that the reluctance to do more formal reporting after the incident came from supervisor Richards.

    But the fact of the matter is an assault did take place. Umm … Mr. Richards did know about it.

    Umm … whether Mr. Compean … Mr. Compean said yes sir to this or whether he was assaulted or not … doesn't negate Mr. Richards responsibility to take some action from the facts that were presented to him as to what happened out there.

    He was on the scene. He was told by another agent exactly what had happened and it pretty much apparently stopped at that point.

    Russell argues Richards did not want to go through the trouble of filing written paperwork. So rather than press the hand injury, which Compean felt was minor, Compean gave in to Richards' pressure to forget about the hand injury, obviating the only issue the supervisor felt might be needed to document in writing.

    Station Chief Barker asked Compean why he didn't report the shooting. Compean admitted that possibly a written report should have been filed, but he and the other Border Patrol on the scene considered the incident inconsequential.

    Compean testified:

    As …As I stated to … umm … to this earlier … I didn't … I just … I know it was wrong for us not to reported it and I … if I would have thought that he had been hit or anything like that had happened I would have … I didn't … I just … I knew we were going to get in trouble because the way … the way it's been at the station the last two … three years … uhh … I mean everything always comes down to the alien. The agents are as soon as anything comes up … it is always … always the agent's fault. The agents have always been cleared but, with management, it's always been the agent's fault. We're the ones that get in trouble.

    Compean continued to note that Aldrete-Davila escaped, and none of the agents in the field thought he had been hit. All the agents and supervisors in the field knew there had been a shooting and none of the agents or supervisors filed any written reports. There was no "cover-up" of anything that happened that day in the field, the documentation indicates. The only defect was failure by all to file a written report, including the two supervisors present.

    Compean emphasized that the failure to report the incident was considered minor given the outcome:

    He (Aldrete-Davila) was already gone back south. I … really didn't … didn't think he had been hit. The way I saw him walking back south he looked … he looked fine to us and we just didn't … nothing was ever said as … as to don't say anything keep your mouth shut nothing like that was ever … was ever brought up either. We just … we just didn't bring it up.

    Compean's testimony emphasized supervisor Richards pressured him not to file a written report:

    When we got back to the station it was the same thing he asked me and the way … the way I … the way he … he asked me ... he made it seemed like he wanted me to say no and that's why I said it.

    By denying he had been injured, Compean made it possible for Richards to avoid the trouble of filing a written report on the incident.

    The issue about filing a written report, according to Compean's testimony, turned on his willingness not to mention the assault. The decision not to file a written report did not turn on wanting to hide the fact that shooting had taken place.

    Moreover, Richards was well aware Compean had been injured in a scuffling match with Aldrete-Davila on the levee, when he wrestled the drug smuggler down. Compean did not even realize his hand had been cut until Richards pointed it out to him at the levee.

    The Customs and Border Patrol manual mentions that the penalty for failure to report the discharge of a firearm or use of a weapon as required by the applicable firearms policy is a written reprimand, or at most a five-day suspension for the first offense. The manual makes no mention of the possibility of criminal punishment for failure to report the discharge of a weapon.

    In a last, more belligerent section of the hearing, Barker charges, "There was a shooting where somebody was shot and NOTHING WAS SAID!" The capital letters were in the original transcript, probably reflecting Barker's emphasis.

    Russell responds, according to the transcript: "That was an administrative violation on his part by not reporting it to the agency, yes, but on the same part the agency failed to act when it knew that an agent had been assaulted."

    Then, Russell himself shouts out, "EMPLOYEES SAW IT," pointing out seven Border Patrol agents besides Ramos and Compean, including two supervisors, were at the scene.

    According to the transcript, the pressure on Compean not to file a written report came from Richards, the senior supervisor on the field.

    Richards was applying pressure on Compean not to report the assault, because that would have demanded paperwork.

    Moreover, according to the hearing transcript, there is no record Richards ever mentioned to Compean the need to file a written report on the shooting

    http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=54133
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