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Politics : ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION THE FIGHT TO KEEP OUR DEMOCRACY -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (128)4/11/2003 7:59:30 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 3197
 
U.S. attorney orders crackdown on smugglers ferrying immigrants

By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN, Associated Press Writer - 04/11/03

TUCSON, Ariz. — The federal prosecutor in Arizona announced a crackdown Thursday on smugglers who bring illegal immigrants into Arizona's deserts, where they frequently die.

U.S. Attorney Paul Charlton said federal, state, tribal and local law enforcement officials and prosecutors will try to dismantle smuggling operations by prosecuting smugglers for related crimes and employers who recruit illegal immigrants who later die in the desert.

‘‘Last year, smugglers led aliens into the Arizona desert, where over 100 of them died horrible and painful deaths,'' Charlton said after a news conference kicking off a six-month initiative, called Operation Desert Risk. ‘‘Smugglers raped, killed, robbed and murdered countless others.''

According to Border Patrol statistics, there were 85 heat-related deaths in Arizona, 75 of them in the deserts between Tucson and Yuma, among 145 total illegal immigrant deaths recorded in fiscal 2002.

Charlton said the task force aims ‘‘to reduce the number of deaths in our Arizona deserts, to better secure our borders and to reduce collateral crime associated with smuggling operations.''

‘‘This is a very serious problem,'' said Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who hopes the task force will provide his office with new information to help solve nine execution-style murders over several months. ‘‘Coordination is important, exchange of information is important,'' Arpaio said. ‘‘We still have the big problem — the drugs are still coming through, illegals are still coming through.''

Charlton said Mexican law enforcement help will be a critical part of a successful operation.

Oscar Lujan, acting attache for the new Department of Homeland Security-Immigration at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City, praised Mexico's efforts. ‘‘They're taking a very aggressive and assertive position on alien-smuggling,'' Lujan said.

The Border Patrol's Tucson sector chief, David Aguilar, said the task force will dovetail perfectly with his agency's efforts. ‘‘It enhances the broad spectrum of enforcement capacities in the west desert area,'' he said.

The task force's message, Charlton said, is simple: For the next six months the agencies will work together to focus on immigrant-smuggling and on related crimes — such as rape, robbery, murder, vehicle thefts and environmental impact and degradation to lands and natural resources.

‘‘Operation Desert Risk is not a request to have state and local law enforcement agencies become involved in immigration law enforcement,'' Charlton said. ‘‘It is instead an invitation for all law enforcement agencies to work together to affect and lower these collateral crimes as well as improve border security and lower the number of desert deaths.''

The agencies will work to dismantle and disrupt smuggling operations by sending smugglers to prison, he said.

His message to those who would be led through the deserts by the smugglers: ‘‘Stay home, and stay safe.''

Officials also will be targeting employers ‘‘who recruit coyotes to bring individuals into the desert, where they there die,'' he said.

helenair.com



To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (128)4/28/2003 9:26:00 AM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 3197
 
Immigration-reform experts say many times, when the former Immigration and Naturalization Service attempted to enforce immigration laws in the nation's interior, business and farming interests, as well as lawmakers, would protest to the point of forcing the operations to a halt......

worldnetdaily.com



To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (128)5/8/2003 6:36:44 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3197
 
U.S. liable for border-crosser deaths?

Families of 14 Mexican illegals seek $42 million

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: May 8, 2003
4:00 p.m. Eastern

© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

The families of 14 illegal Mexican immigrants who died of dehydration while crossing the hot Arizona desert have filed a $42 million lawsuit against the U.S. Department of the Interior, claiming it failed to help them survive.

The lawsuit, filed April 30 in U.S. District Court in Tucson, claims federal border policy forced the immigrants to enter the country through the treacherous area southwest of Tucson known to have little water. Border Patrol agents found the immigrants on May 23, 2001 in the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge.

The 14 are among hundreds of undocumented immigrants that have succumbed to the 100-degree temperatures in the desert region since October 2001, according to Border Patrol statistics.

The lawsuit also alleges the department could have prevented the deaths if it hadn't blocked the humanitarian-aid measures of a group called Humane Borders. Two months prior, the human rights organization was refused permission to place a water station "in the exact area" where the crossers died, according to the suit.

Environmental concern reportedly trumped that over the Mexicans.

Robin Hoover, pastor of First Christian Church and president of Humane Borders, told the Associated Press and Arizona Star the application for the water station was denied over concerns for the endangered Sonoran pronghorn antelope.

"They've got all kinds of critters. They also seem to have some human beings running around out there," James Metcalf, one of three attorneys who filed the lawsuit, told the Arizona Star. "These folks are still human beings who die at alarming frequencies, and they're aware of that," he said.

The day after the 14 bodies were recovered, according to the lawsuit, wildlife officials placed seven Humane Borders flags marking water stations migrants could use. Metcalf maintains this shows culpability on the part of the Interior.

"By allowing water stations in areas where it formerly prohibited them and by setting up emergency call boxes to save the lives of illegal entrants in the desert, the government has acknowledged people need help to make the journey, he told the Arizona Star. "The government doesn't assume responsibility unless they in fact have one."

Worse than the lack of compassion, asserts Hoover, is the escalating violence at the border, including the presence of citizen militias taking border security into their own hands.

"We're very concerned that the Border Patrol's attitude is becoming more militarized," Hoover told the Tucson Citizen. "We think the Border Patrol's job is truly a law enforcement style of public service and not military."

WorldNetDaily has reported the Mexican border increasingly resembles a war zone as drug and illegal-migrant smugglers pull out all the stops to defy U.S. agents. In 2000, the Juarez cartel, one of Mexico's biggest drug gangs, placed a bounty of $200,000 on U.S. lawmen.

Following the announcement, Border Patrol officers reported instances of "armed incursions" into U.S. territory by heavily armed Mexican army units. In March 2000, two Mexican army Humvees carrying about 16 soldiers, armed with automatic assault rifles, pistols and a submachine gun drove across the international boundary near Santa Teresa, New Mexico and shot at Border Patrol agents.

Then in March 2002, a Border Patrol officer encountered four heavily armed Mexican army soldiers on the U.S. side of the border near San Diego. The soldiers, armed with three submachine guns and one M-16 rifle, crossed the border near Tecate, Mexico, while on a counter-drug mission.

The shooting death of a park ranger in Arizona's Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument last August prompted calls for more security on the U.S. border. The 28-year-old ranger was killed as he and Border Patrol agents closed in on two gunmen suspected of having ties to Mexican drug lords.

"We have to put the military down here; we have to help these people," Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., the head of the House Immigration Reform Caucus, declared at the time.

Then there are security concerns beyond smugglers.

WorldNetDaily reported last month a southern Texas sheriff put out a public warning that unidentified armed men dressed in military fatigues, carrying "professional backpacks" and walking together in a military cadence have been spotted on numerous occasions in his county near the border with Mexico.

Despite the risks, The Tucson Citizen reports some 3,000 migrants make it across the border successfully every day.

The lawsuit seeks about $3 million for each of the 14 who failed.

Wes Bramhall, president of Arizonans for Immigration Control, condemned the lawsuit.

"It's ridiculous," he told the Arizona Star. "These people knew what they were doing. They knew they were breaking the law."