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To: aladin who wrote (110026)4/18/2005 4:08:28 PM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793738
 
But we already have reports of ACLU 'observers' warning illegals of the presence of the Minutemen

John, LB said that he was reduced to worldnetdaily to find that story, which said the ACLU was warning the illegals. So I checked for other sources, couldn't find anything reliable, and that's why I posted what the ACLU had to say. I don't believe anything that I only find at worldnetdaily, either. Maybe it's true, or maybe, with all those folks there, the fellow who reported the incident got the ACLU mixed up with some other participants. Or maybe he had an agenda. Dunno.



To: aladin who wrote (110026)4/18/2005 9:58:49 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793738
 
Minuteman Founder Leaving Mexico Border Area Early, but Other Volunteers to Remain

ap.tbo.com

By Arthur H. Rotstein Associated Press Writer
Published: Apr 18, 2005





TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - The chief organizer of the Minuteman Project, which attracted hundreds of volunteers to watch for illegal immigrants and smugglers along the Mexican border, said Monday he's leaving his post early.

Jim Gilchrist said the watch project has been a success and will continue through the end of the month as planned, but under a different name.

"The operation is continuing, but it's not under the Minuteman Project," Gilchrist said. "There's nothing for us to do here. We're bored to death. But people are staying here."

Gilchrist said he'll leave Arizona probably on Wednesday. He plans to appear before the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus next week in Washington, along with watch co-organizer Chris Simcox, then return only briefly to Arizona.

Volunteers now in Arizona or coming through April 30 will fall under the auspices of Civil Homeland Defense, another illegal immigrant monitoring group that Simcox has operated in Arizona for years, Gilchrist said.

The civilian volunteers, some of whom are armed, arrived on April 1 and began spreading out a few days later along a 23-mile stretch of desert between the border communities of Naco and Douglas. They alert authorities when they see someone cross the border illegally, but are not allowed to detain anyone.

Organizers said more than 700 volunteers have completed the training session and spent at least one eight-hour shift in the field, according to the project's Web site. It's uncertain how many are staying for the duration.

Law enforcement officials have said they feared the project will lead to vigilante violence, an accidental confrontation between armed volunteers and authorities, or a dangerous encounter with the violent smugglers who use the area. No problems have been reported thus far.

Border Patrol spokesman Andy Adame expressed surprise at Monday's announcement. "Gilchrist said it (the project) was going to run for a month. He takes off halfway through and declares victory? Sounds kind of strange," Adame said.

Gilchrist said the Minuteman Project "did in 10 days what all the lobbyists could not do in 10 years" in reducing the flow of illegal immigrants through part of Cochise County, one of Arizona's busiest illegal immigration corridors.

He said that for the first 15 days of April, Border Patrol agents in the Naco area apprehended fewer than 2,500 people. Apprehensions in the area totaled 7,672 for the same period last year.

---

On the Net:

Minuteman Project: minutemanproject.com

Civil Homeland Defense: civilhomelanddefense.us

AP-ES-04-18-05 2120EDT