What about the Mexicans fireing at the border patrol? Message 22621988
MEXICAN GOVERNMENT GIVES INSTRUCTIONS, AND MONEY TO ILLEGALS AS THEY ENTER THE US Randy L. Harrington July 7, 2006 PHOENIX—Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio says that his deputies have not made one illegal alien arrest in two weeks. The Mexican Consulate is briefing illegal aliens, and providing them with US cash, and intelligence data designed to defeat Sheriff Arpaio's efforts to combat illegal immigration.
Salvadore Enriquez is an illegal alien who arrived in Chandler, Arizona two weeks ago. He has been working steadily from a street corner in Chandler doing day labor jobs.
Enriquez said that in early June he was preparing to cross the US-Mexico border at San Luis, Mexico south of Yuma, when he was stopped by an official from the Mexican Consulate who wanted him to go to a meeting that would show him how to enter the United States, and avoid capture.
Enriquez went to a meeting at a freestanding building in San Luis. There he met Ramon Hererra Cisneros who identified himself as an officer with the Mexican Consulate. Cisneros provided the almost 100 meeting attendees with food, and refreshments.
Cisneros then proceeded to show meeting attendees large maps of the US-Mexico Border, and the Maricopa County desert. For an hour he showed meeting participants where Maricopa County Sheriffs Deputies were making arrests. He provided them with times that the deputies change shifts, and when the Sheriff's office resources were the most vulnerable.
He then provided Enriquez with 10 pages of written instructions on how to get to the Mexican city of Aqua Prieta on the US-Mexican Border with Douglas, Arizona. Cisneros told meeting attendees that they would be safe in the deserts between Douglas, and Queen Creek, Arizona, because Maricopa County Sheriff's had “no authority in these areas.” The written instructions provided Enriquez with information on how to get to Norton's Corner in Queen Creek. Once at Norton's Corner, illegal aliens were given instructions on how to use the free prepaid telephone calling cards provided to them, to call a local shuttle service. The shuttle service would bring them to Chandler, Mesa, or Tempe, Arizona using “safer” streets instead of highways, and freeways.
Before the meeting ended each meeting attendee was given a bag that had an envelope which contained $250 in US currency. 2 gallons of water. Canned food. And a prepaid telephone calling card.
The written instructions also provided “Contact Numbers” for illegal aliens to call if they got in trouble in the United States. One of the telephone numbers was the office of US Senator John McCain in Phoenix. The instructions in Spanish said “that if you have any problems you should call Senator McCain's office who has agreed to help Mexican nationals in the United States.”
Enriquez said that when he arrived at Norton's Corner in Queen Creek there were many illegal aliens from his home waiting to be picked up by the shuttle service. The shuttle van that picked him up—that generally holds 15 passengers—held almost 32 passengers. Passengers were charged $38 for the trip from Queen Creek to Chandler, Mesa, and Tempe, Arizona.
Anthony Alvarez Martines tells a similar story, except when he was going to cross the border from San Luis into Yuma, Arizona it was an American Border Patrol Officer that provided him with the meeting notice. The Border Patrol Officer gave him written directions on how to get to the meeting being held by the Mexican Consulate in San Luis.
After the Mexican Consulate briefed Martines, he was given written instructions to get to the Agua Prieta border crossing just south of Douglas, Arizona. He also received a bag that held $250 in US cash, a gallon of water, canned food, and a prepaid telephone calling card. He also received written instructions to Queen Creek where he called a shuttle that brought him to Mesa, Arizona for $40.
Fausto Marquez, an illegal alien in Chandler tells a similar story. He was also told by the Mexican Consulate representative in San Luis, as well as Agua Prieta that Maricopa County Sheriffs deputies had no authority over the desert between Douglas, and Queen Creek. He was told that Maricopa County Sheriffs deputies don't have authority in Chandler, Arizona, which is a “safe zone” in Arizona.
Roberto Gutierrez, an illegal alien in the United States for the fifth time confirms the story. Gutierrez is smarter than the average illegal alien. He claims to have attended and graduated from the University in Mexico City with a degree in law. He said that he was a federal police officer in Jalisco until he, and his brother were caught stealing guns from the Mexican Army, and selling them on the streets in San Diego, California.
After Gutierrez got out of jail in Mexico he started coming to the United States. He says that he comes here, because even if he is arrested US authorities can't find his Mexican criminal record.
Gutierrez says that while he was a federal policeman in Mexico he worked with US law enforcement in cross border investigations, and operations. He is familiar with Mexican, and United States law enforcement procedures.
He claims that when he attended the Mexican Consulate meeting in San Luis that Cisneros was referring to a stack of documents that bore the badge, and name of the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office. Cisnero's made many references to Maricopa County Sheriff's personnel shift changes, as well as how many cars, SUV's, and other vehicles that patrolled the desert between Yuma and Phoenix.
Joaquin Sanchez Morales received written, and verbal instructions in San Luis from a representative of the “Government of Mexico” on how to avoid being caught. He was told that Maricopa County Sheriff's personnel had no authority over the deserts between Douglas, and Queen Creek.
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