Author: mopress

  • The Border as a Texas Sheriff Sees It

    Sheriff A. D’Wayne Jernigan
    Val Verde County, Texas
    Texas Border Sheriff’s Coalition

    Written Testimony on "Federal Strategies to End Border Violence"
    before the Senate Judiciary Committee;
    Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security and Citizenship; and
    Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology, and Homeland Security (March 1,  2006)

    Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittees, it is an honor and a privilege to be invited to appear before you to discuss strategies to combat Border Violence along the United States border and the Republic of Mexico.

    On April 18th, 2005, Sheriff Sigi Gonzales sent out letters to the 16 Texas Sheriff’s whose counties border the Republic of Mexico. The letter invited us to a meeting to discuss unique problems that we face along the border. This was done out of frustration in what we felt was the inadequacy of our federal government to protect our border in preventing a potential terrorist from entering our country. We felt that as citizens of this great country, our almost 2,000 miles of border was very porous, that many people whose intentions were unknown were coming into our country. If their intentions were to commit acts similar to or worse than what happened on September 11, 2001, then very little was being done to stop them. All of us expressed the same frustration since we had mentioned this many times to federal and state legislators. We felt that perhaps speaking as one voice we would be heard. We realize that we are a bi-partisan multi ethnic coalition of Law Enforcement professionals. The crisis that we face on our border is not a racial issue, or even one of politics. This crisis is a red white and blue national security crisis.

    On May 4th, 2005, we met in Laredo, Texas. As a result we formed the Texas Border Sheriff’s Coalition. The first and foremost priority of our coalition is protecting all residents of this country against a terrorist act without regard to race, sex, or ethnicity. We continue to believe that many persons have entered our country with intentions of harming us. We are sincere when we tell you that we are not blaming the agents of the United States Border Patrol but, rather, we criticize the policies that they have been shackled with.

    I want to make you aware that the Law Enforcement experience of the member sheriffs of this coalition total almost 460 years including 101 years of experience as sheriffs. The oldest serving sheriff of this coalition is El Paso County Sheriff Samaniego with 22 years. I have attached the list of member sheriffs of the coalition with their years of experience and have marked it as Attachment #1. I have served more than 29 of the 42 years of my Law Enforcement career on the Texas/Mexico border. We have seen the border become more violent and criminally active than at any point in our careers. Our officers rarely encounter the socio-economic illegal alien of the past, but routinely encounter criminal illegal aliens.

    I have been asked to briefly relate to you some of the problems that we have encountered along the border, specifically the violence along the border and incursions, among other matters. Most of the sheriffs that have encountered these problems are present to answer any questions you may have as they relate to their counties.

    The areas of Val Verde and Maverick Counties, specifically, continue to see many persons from countries other that Mexico entering the country and being let loose in our counties. I and Sheriff Tomas Herrera have been very concerned with these persons since it is not known how many potential special interest aliens were being released into our great country with what we term as a “notice to disappear”. We did not know what diseases, if any, these persons may have had. These persons, when released, would trek into town through day care centers and schools. After we complained of this practice, Border Patrol, changed their policy and began to transport them to bus stations. The most damaging part of the “catch and release policy” was the debilitating effect on agent moral. These illegal immigrants who were apprehended and then released would photograph themselves and send the pictures back to their respective countries to show that they had made it to America. I have attached one such photograph and marked it as Attachment #2. The photograph shows them holding their “permission” papers.

    All of us are concerned that the border with Mexico is being used as the open door to this country. Most of the illegal immigrants from countries of special interest that are apprehended are apprehended along the southwest border. I have attached these lists and have marked them as Attachment #3.

    Through intelligence information we have also learned that several murders in Laredo, Webb County, Texas, have been orchestrated by members of drug cartels operating in both countries. These drug cartel enforcers cross the Rio Grande River, commit their murders in the United States, then head back to Mexico, again, via the Rio Grande River. We have all seen in the media the reports of the murders in Nuevo Laredo, 24 so far in the first 36 days of 2006. These murders are connected to organizations in both Mexico and the United States. In February, a Task Force in Laredo Texas confiscated Improvised Explosive Devices as well as items used to make explosive devices. Border Patrol agents and deputy sheriffs have been shot at from Mexico on a routine basis. Just last month a sniper in Mexico shot at agents that were working along the banks of the river in the area of the cities of Rio Bravo/El Cenizo. This continued, sporadically, for three days. Agents reported seeing several individuals wearing military style uniforms on a hill on the Mexican side, one of them was using what was believed to be a high powered rifle with scope.

    The Rio Grande Valley, Cameron, Hidalgo, and Starr Counties, have continuous problems with pseudo-cops coming from Mexico to extort and kidnap citizens in these counties. This area is the fastest growing area in the nation. They have seen their share of terrorist activity as it relates to the migration of many members of ruthless gangs that come into this country for reasons other than legitimate employment. Sometime last year, a woman was taken off an airplane at the McAllen, Texas, airport. She had come in from Mexico, through the river, as her clothes were still wet, and had a passport from Africa. She was from a special interest country and had come in to Mexico using a passport from a friendly country to avoid detection. Who knows what her intentions were. Thanks to an officer at the airport she was taken off the plane.

    During this same time period, a high-ranking member of the Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, was apprehended in the Brooks County area, also in south Texas. He had entered the country illegally. This MS-13 member is believed to have been responsible for the killing of close to 30 persons, or more, in a bus explosion in his native country. It is my understanding that he had a lengthy criminal record in the United States. This person, as many others, find it very easy to come into our country through a very porous, wide-open, and unprotected border. Twenty seven members of the MS-13 were apprehended entering the United States in the Del Rio area of operations during the month of January, 2006.

    We have received information that the drug trafficking organizations immediately across our border are planning on killing as many police officers as possible on the United States side. This is being planned for the purpose of attempting to “scare us” away from the border. The recent activities of the drug trafficking organization operating in the Hudspeth, El Paso County areas have included threats against the families of Deputy Sheriff’s. In one incident subjects made threats to the wife of a Hudspeth County Sheriff

    ’s Sergeant at their home. The drug trafficking organizations have the money, equipment, and stamina to carry out their threats. They are determined to protect their illicit trade. It is my opinion that these drug trafficking organizations may form an alliance with Islamo Fascist terrorist organizations. The Department of Homeland Security recently issued Officer Alerts warning their agents of such potential threats. We, the local officers, learned about the warning through the news media.

    The cartels operating in Mexico and the United States have demonstrated that the weapons they posses can and will be used in protecting their caches. I have attached photographs showing some of the weapons that these cartels possess. The photos have been marked as Attachment #4. In Val Verde County a fragmentation hand grenade was discovered on one of the trails near the Rio Grande where drugs are frequently smuggled into the United States.

    Local, state, and federal officers have found many items along the banks of the Rio Grande River that indicate possible ties to terrorist organizations or members of military units of Mexico. Currency, clothing, are common finds. Recently, a jacket with patches was found in Jim Hogg County, Texas, by agents of U. S. Border Patrol. The patches on the jacket show an Arabic military badge with one depicting an airplane flying over a building and heading towards a tower, and another showing an image of a lion’s head with wings and a parachute emanating from the animal (lion). It is believed from an undisclosed document that Department of Homeland Security translators concluded that the patches read “defense center”, “minister of defense”, or “defense headquarters”. The bottom of one patch read “martyr”, “way to eternal life” or “way to immortality”.

    On January 28th, 2006, USBP Chief David Aguilar was asked by a reporter from KGNS television station in Laredo, Texas, what the outcome of the investigation of the jacket was. Chief Aguilar responded that the patches were not from Al Qaeda but from countries in which Al Qaeda was known to operate. He also stated that the investigation was turned over to the proper authorities who had already concluded their investigation. He knew nothing further.

    On February 2nd of this year, deputies in Zavala County discovered an 18” duffle bag approximately 8 miles North of Zapata by the highway right of way. This duffel bag had “Armada de Mexico” embroidered on the bag. Inside the bag were several items that are commonly used to maintain higher levels of physical exertion. Inside the bag, a bus ticket with an origin of Veracruz, Mexico was found. I have attached photographs of the duffle bag and marked it as Attachment #5.

    Employees of our offices have also seen incursions into this country of persons dressed in battle dress uniforms (BDUs), carrying what officers believe to be automatic weapons, very clean cut, and in very good physical condition. On March 3rd, 2005, several officers assigned to do surveillance by the Rio Grande River by the Zapata/Webb County line observed approximately 20-25 subjects dressed as indicated above. The subjects were walking on a gravel road, coming from riverbank, and marching in a cadence. The deputy observed these individuals through his borrowed night vision goggles. These individuals were carrying large duffle bags and walking two abreast. They were each armed with assault rifles.

    In the town site of Zapata, residents report subjects getting off boats wearing BDUs, backpacks, and carrying weapons. The residents describe them as soldiers.

    In Val Verde County, two illegal aliens were apprehended during a burglary near the Port of Entry. One of the aliens fled on foot and was apprehended by Deputies and Agents of the Border Patrol. The alien who was apprehended inside the residence was later identified as a career criminal with a twenty four page rap sheet. His criminal career included offenses in Florida and Texas. His clothing was still wet from his illegal entry that night. For over a year, groups of male subjects illegally crossed the river into the United States and burglarized remote ranch homes. These subjects took items from the homes that they burglarized, and would abandon the property at the next home that they burglarized. The only items that they routinely kept were firearms. During one burglary the subjects brought electric hair clippers with them and cut their hair in a distinctive pattern. When theses subjects would encounter law enforcement they conducted sophisticated escape and evasion tactics to break contact. In one incident the subjects traveled twenty miles a day on foot across harsh landscape. The last subject apprehended in that group had traveled over eighty miles on foot before his arrest. The subjects were always physically fit. It is my opinion that these subjects were trained for escape and evasion.

    The Texas Border Sheriff’s Coalition is very concerned about the unique problems along our border. The United States Border Patrol is doing the best that they can with the resources they have been provided. Immediate help is needed for them and for the protection of our country. We have implemented Operation Linebacker, a second line of defense in the protection of our country. The problems along the border are federal problems. Our governor, the Honorable Rick Perry, did not wait for a peace officer to get killed along the border to take action. He, just as we, is very much concerned. He has appropriated $6 million for us to start the operation. Just last month he announced an additional $3.8 million that he will grant our coalition. This much needed assistance provided by Governor Perry has already produced measurable results, but this assistance is only a stopgap measure. More help is necessary if we are to see an acceptable level of security exist on the border. The problems along the border will continue unless our federal government does something about it soon. Must we wait until an officer gets killed or until another terrorist act occurs?

    I have addressed many of the enforcement issues facing the border today in my written testimony, but another crisis faces us. The Judicial system on the border is strained to failure. In Val Verde County, the annual budget for jury trials will be exhausted in March, only half way through the fiscal year. An examination of the caseload of the United States District Court, Western District, demonstrates this crisis irrefutably. I have attached a report that demonstrates the ten year record of civil filings within the Western District of Texas. It is marked as Attachment 6. The number of filings of civil cases across the District has remained fairly level with only minor increases consistent with population growth. If you examine the criminal filings, Attachment 7, for the same period an alarming trend is evident. The two District Courts on the border have seen dramatic caseload increases with little or no population increase.

    Attachment 8 shows the caseload of the two United States Magistrates in Del Rio. As you can see each of their caseloads equals the caseload of the other Magistrates in the Western District combined. The other District Courts in the Western District have seen small increases in their caseloads. What is not reflected in these statistics is the number of criminal subjects who are apprehended with commercial quantities of drugs, but who fall under the quantity threshold arbitrarily established by the United States Attorney’s office. These subjects who have been apprehended by authorities are released without prosecution.

    Remember that only a percentage of all drug and alien traffickers are apprehended, and then, a portion of those apprehended are released without prosecution due to budgetary constraints. The criminals grow more educated by the system each time we handle them. We must restore Justice to the

    Border by immediately providing additional District Judges, Magistrates and Prosecuting Attorneys, as well as economic subsidies to effected State District Courts and Prosecuting Attorneys who have become incapacitated by the increasing crime on the border.

    I am convinced that by funding additional Deputy Sheriff’s on the border, our nation will accomplish a cost effective, and immediate solution to the burgeoning scourge of violence creeping North into our nation. Along most of the border, it is a Deputy Sheriff who receives the first call of suspicious activity and encounters subjects who may be crossing the border only for a new and better life in the North, or who may have far more sinister intentions. No matter how much more efficient we are made by the utilization of emerging technology, it is still necessary that a trained and experienced officer be available to respond to the identified threat.

    I want to express my most sincere appreciation for allowing us the opportunity to appear before you and thank you for the work you do for our country, the United States of America.

  • When a Thousand Guards Ain't Enough for Cochise County

    Sheriff Larry A. Dever of Cochise County, AZ says he has witnessed a tenfold increase in border patrol agents in his county (from 100 to 1,000) but the problems of violence have only increased in scale and volatility.

    Dever’s March 1 testimony before a US Senate subcommittee on border violence narrates a history that begins with times past when drug smugglers would just drop their stuff and run. Today, smuggling and human trafficking have become big business, and smugglers come armed for a fight.

    Dever tells stories of carjackings, of shots fired into a home of a narcotics agent, of ‘rape trees’ where human traffickers abuse their charges, and of powerful weapons that face border cops.

    As Dever looks to the future, he asks for local involvement in new federal powers, but we might ask, is there not another way?

    People living in border states have an opportunity to call out for decriminalization. Or they can experience their home territories subjected to an increasing spiral of violence and militarization.

    Read the testimony of Sheriff Dever under "Read More" and ask yourself: is it not time to take the profit out of border violence and start work on a future of peace?–gm

    Testimony of The Honorable Larry A. Dever to the Senate Judiciary Subcommittees on Immigration, Border Security, and Citizenship and Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security, March 1, 2006
    :

    1987. That was the year we first organized the Border Alliance Group narcotics task force in Cochise County to jointly combat the burgeoning cocaine smuggling business that had developed in the area. At that time there were no DEA agents in Cochise County, no FBI, only four Customs Office of Enforcement agents and maybe a total of 100 border patrol agents. Today, they are all there, along with over a thousand Border Patrol agents. And yet, as you have also heard, in spite of the tremendous increase in the law enforcement presence, or as some suggest, because of it, violence associated with narcotics and people smuggling activities has markedly increased.

    Twenty to twenty-five years ago, we would intercept smugglers right on the border fence. Most would simply abandon their cargo and flee on foot back south. It wasn’t unusual to have some just give up. Today, the expected response to an attempted interdiction is a fight. Smugglers are armed with high capacity assault weapons and with orders to protect their cargo at all costs. They operate under the watchful eye of scouts equipped with sophisticated observation and communications equipment. Failure to make safe delivery is not acceptable and many who do fail are executed. The stakes are extremely high.

    High speed chases on congested public highways and through populated residential areas are common. Most of the vehicles they are driving are stolen from the Phoenix and Tucson areas. Just recently two local residents were killed and several others seriously injured when a ruthless smuggler driving a stolen truck at reckless speeds crashed head on into a group of vehicles sitting at a stop light.

    The people smuggling culture is one marked by little if any value of life or respect for persons or property. This is reflected in their response to authority and their treatment of their human cargo. One study estimates that over 80% of people being smuggled into this country become the victims of criminal activity before they ever cross the border. And in many cases the atrocities continue even after they successfully enter. Smuggling routes are often marked with “rape trees”—women’s under garments hung on tree limbs where a raped occurred, warning everyone of the failure to cooperate with the coyotes who prey on them.

    Running gun battles with fleeing felons occur much too frequently placing law-enforcement officers and the public alike at great risk of serious consequences. Gang activity and its associated violence are on the rise as these groups become more competitive in the lucrative people smuggling trade. Just last week one of my deputies, the supervisor of the narcotics task force, was the victim of a drive-by shooting at his home. Thankfully, no one was injured.

    The law-enforcement effort and the communities we serve desperately need your attention to our situation along the border. You should be aware that in our area, almost ten percent of the illegal aliens that are apprehended have criminal records in this country. When we are unsuccessful in catching them there, these predators find their way to communities all over the nation where they threaten the safety and welfare of local populations.

    When planning strategies for improved enforcement efforts and providing adequate resources, it is important to remember that every federal initiative has a local consequence. It is critical that local authorities be involved in the early stages of the planning process to assure that these consequences are clearly understood and considered.

  • Cash Flow: $160 Million Seized from Southbound Smugglers

    In Marcy Forman’s March 1 testimony on border violence, the director of investigations for Immigration and Customs Enforcement told Senate subcommittess that ‘bulk cash’ was a prime cargo of southbound smugglers:

    "The smuggling of bulk currency out of the United States, and especially across the Southwest border, has become one of the preferred methods of moving illicit proceeds out of the country. As such, criminal organizations now seek to exploit vulnerabilities in border security. ICE is the lead agency responsible for the investigation of financial crimes occurring at our borders. This is a critical part of the overall strategy to dismantle and destroy these smuggling organizations by taking away their illegal profits. "Congress criminalized the act of smuggling large amounts of cash into or out of the U.S. in the USA PATRIOT Act one of the provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act, 31 U.S.C. 5332 – Bulk Cash Smuggling makes it a crime to conceal and smuggle over $10,000 in currency and monetary instruments into or out of the United States with the intent to evade in an attempt to violate U.S. currency-reporting requirements. ICE agents have utilized this authority since the statute was enacted to arrest over 330 individuals for bulk cash smuggling violations. In addition to these arrests, ICE and our partners at CBP have cumulatively seized over $160 million of the funds that were involved in these bulk cash smuggling violations.

    "ICE’s enforcement of the law against bulk cash smuggling does not end at our Nation’s borders. In August 2005, ICE partnered with CBP and the State Department to initiate a training program with our Mexican counterparts on ways to combat cash smuggling. As a result of this training and working with us on this joint financial initiative together, our Mexican counterparts have seized over $18 million in cash and $5 million in negotiable instruments that were involved in violations of Mexican currency- reporting requirements.

    "In addition to our efforts to combat bulk cash smuggling, ICE works aggressively to identify and investigate other financial methods that criminals use to move their illicit funds out of the United States — such as the use of unlicensed money- services businesses. These unlicensed businesses operate outside of the traditional banking system and governmental oversight and have been long recognized by law enforcement as vulnerable to abuse. The enhancements in 18 U.S.C. 1960, Prohibition of Unlicensed Money Transmitting Business, enacted through the USA PATRIOT Act, provide law enforcement with the authority to investigate unlicensed money remitters.

    "Since the passage of the PATRIOT Act, ICE investigations of unlicensed money- services businesses have resulted in over 171 arrests and the seizure of over $25 million in currency. Additionally, during fiscal year 2005, ICE investigations resulted in the seizure of nearly $1 billion in currency and assets from the criminals who exploit our borders."

  • Washington Disclaims Mexican Military Incursion, But Border Witnesses Wonder

    In March 1 Senate hearings on border violence, a top federal official discounted claims that a January border incident in Hudspeth County, Texas involved the Mexican military. But law enforcement witnesses on the ground encourage further investigation, and a union of border patrol agents hints that the federal position is not credible. "The evidence and intelligence gathered to date, however, do not support a conclusion that the Hudspeth incident, constituted an incursion onto U.S. soil by the Mexican military, intentional or otherwise," said Marcy M. Forman, director of investigations for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

    Forman’s testimony this week coincides with reports from the El Paso Times that state troopers who viewed a 45-minute video tape of the Jan. 23 incident also discounted claims of Mexican military involvement.

    Border sheriffs, however, are renewing the allegations according to El Paso Times reporters Louie Gilot and Jake Rollow: "But Hudspeth County Sheriff’s Deputy Esequiel Legarreta, who said he was first on the scene, said the tapes do not show the entire incident, and Hudspeth County Sheriff Arvin West said new evidence, such as the alleged military identification plate on one of the Humvees, should be considered."

    The federal disclaimer of Mexican military involvement also drew groans of disapproval from the federal union of border patrol agents, the National Border Patrol Council. A link from the NBPC website to a Congressional Quarterly news item about the disclaimer reads: "Border Patrol Chief’s Credibility Nosedives (Again)". In March 1 testimony, the NBPC president recounted a series of incidents in which official denials of Mexican military involvement contradicted eyewitness reports by border patrol agents.

    Texas Congressman Michael McCaul demanded investigations of the most recent incident and on Feb. 7 read a statement alleging a pattern of apparent collaboration between smugglers and Mexican military: "However, there are several reports of intentional violations of U.S. sovereignty by
    groups, often smuggling hundreds of pounds of drugs, which appear to be associated with members of the Mexican military or police forces. To date, law enforcement has maintained an extraordinarily high degree of control and restraint. This may not always be the situation, and it would not take much for one of these standoffs to turn violent and deadly."

    Rep. McCaul’s Feb. 7, 2006 statement:

    Hearing: "Armed and Dangerous: Confronting the Problem of Border Incursions"

    3 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2006
    Subcommittee on Investigations
    Michael McCaul (R-TX), Chairman

    Opening Statement

    Good Afternoon. I want to welcome the members of this subcommittee and of the full committee to this landmark hearing. I would also like to offer a special welcome to the members of the Texas Border Sheriff’s Coalition who are present here today. We appreciate the hard work you do everyday to make us more safe and secure. This marks the first official meeting of the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Investigations. I want to thank Chairman King for his vision in creating this committee and for the honor he has bestowed upon me to chair it. It is also an honor to serve with ranking members Bennie Thompson and Bob Ethridge.

    Today we will thoroughly examine the expanding crisis of violence on America’s border with Mexico, and more specifically we will investigate the increasing numbers of border incursions into America’s sovereign land. The incursions, which often result in violent crimes, are unacceptable and cannot be tolerated. We want to know who is involved, examine trends, and review coordination between federal, state and local law
    enforcement in deterring, responding to and investigating these crimes.

    The violence on the Southern border that our Border Patrol and local law enforcement encounter is increasing at an alarming rate. From 2004 to 2005, violent incidents against Border Patrol agents on the Southern border have increased 108%. Since October, there have been 92 incidents of rock assaults, 47 physical assaults, 15 vehicle assaults, and 19 firearm assaults on Border Patrol agents. Today, we will see graphic photos of injuries to the agents as a result of rock throwing assaults on the border.

    According to the Department of Homeland Security, there have been 231 reported incursions into the United States since 1996. There is little doubt that the majority of these incidences, mostly occurring on the southwest border, are accidental, but even these accidental crossings present an opportunity for serious injury and loss of life. In fact, there are incidents of U.S. officers accidentally crossing into Mexico during a pursuit.

    However, there are several reports of intentional violations of U.S. sovereignty by groups, often smuggling hundreds of pounds of drugs, which appear to be associated with members of the Mexican military or police forces. To date, law enforcement has
    maintained an extraordinarily high degree of control and restraint. This may not always be the situation, and it would not take much for one of these standoffs to turn violent and
    deadly.

    On January 26, 2006, I sent letters to Secretaries Rice and Chertoff asking for a full report of the incursions; the policies of the Departments of State and Homeland Security
    addressing Mexican incursions into the United States; and the procedures established by State and Homeland Security in responding to such incidents. I also sent a letter to the
    Mexican Ambassador to the United States, Carlos de Icaza, and I related my concerns about reports of the most recent incursion into the United States; and requested that he meet with me at his earliest convenience to discuss the details of this incident so we can learn what measures are being taken to prevent any future occurrences. Moreover, I asked the Ambassador to give his assurances that these incursions into United States territory are not condoned by the Government of Mexico.

    A few hours before this hearing, I had the opportunity to meet with the Mexican Ambassador to the United States. I want to thank him for meeting with me and discussing this very important issue of border security. While it is possible that large drug cartels are using military-like uniforms, vehicles and weapons – the bottom line is that these incidences threaten the safety of law enforcement agents, citizens and the security of our nation.

    Just two weeks ago on January 23rd, military-like humvees assisted 3 SUVs in entering the United States at Neely Crossing in Hudspeth County, Texas. As many of you know
    from recent press reports, this illegal activity was intercepted by local Sheriffs deputies, members of the Texas Department of Public Safety, and the Border Patrol. A chase ensued whereby the humvees and one SUV successfully retreated into Mexico, one SUV
    became stuck in the Rio Grande River and was destroyed by the individuals involved, and the last vehicle was captured and found to contain more than 1,400 pounds of marijuana. At this hearing, I will show the video of the chase and activity on the banks of the Rio Grande River. Unfortunately, the individuals escaped to a safe haven and avoided apprehension. There is an on-going investigation into who actually perpetrated this crime; the successful outcome of the investigation will depend on coordination between all levels of the U.S. government and, most importantly, cooperation from the Mexican government.

    This is just one of several serious incidences. A few examples include:

    • In March 14, 2000, near Santa Teresa, New Mexico, Border Patrol agents apprehended 9 individuals involved in an incursion after being fired upon,

    • In October 14, 2000, Border Patrol agents in San Diego, California were shot a

    t from across the border by individuals appearing to be Mexican military,

    • In May 18, 2002, in Ajo, Arizona, a Border Patrol agent had the rear and side windows of his vehicle shot out during a reported incursion.

    Since October, 2005, to date, there have been six more known incursions at the border. We share a common border with Mexico, but we also share a responsibility for developing effective policies to deter a highly organized and armed criminal element that is a threat to both of our countries. We will hold our friend and neighbor to the south to a high standard of cooperation and responsibility. This organized criminal element
    threatens the security and well being of the citizens of both of our great nations.

    In response to the increased violence on the border, Texas state and local law enforcement implemented “Operation Linebacker.” This program involves cooperation between the Border Patrol and local enforcement preventing illegal immigration and subsequent criminal activity. The House of Representatives, on December 16, 2005 passed the Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005, which will strengthen enforcement of immigration laws and enhance border security. We call on the Senate to pass H.R. 4437. It is important now, more than ever to have increased border security and enforcement of our immigration laws.

    The first duty of this government is to protect and defend its citizens, and protecting and securing our borders is a crucial part of this duty. Our borders cannot become the gateway for criminal enterprise and trafficking and terrorist activity. Our border must be the crossroads for safe and mutually beneficial
    trade, travel and tourism.

    Our border is in a crisis. We know that Al Qaeda would like to exploit our borders and we know that they are vulnerable. I have often stated that in the post 9/11 world this is no longer just an immigration issue but one of national security.

    Today we will hear from several border sheriffs who put themselves on the front lines everyday. It is they who live the violence and face the threats. But this is a threat not
    only to law enforcement and the border, it is a threat to the safety and security of all Americans. It is our duty and responsibility in the Congress to protect the American
    people.

  • Congressional Subcommittee Orders DHS Report on Rrustem Neza

    Press Release from Rep. Gohmert:

    Neza’s Deportation Delayed Thanks to Rep. Gohmert’s Intercession

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – US Rep. Louie Gohmert has helped to assure that east Texan Rrustem Neza should remain in the United States for at least one more year, deterring U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from physically drugging and shipping Mr. Neza to Albania where his fate is potential death. The House Immigration Subcommittee, on which Rep. Gohmert is a member, considered the Congressman’s private bill for Neza and requested a departmental report from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in order to further investigate Mr. Neza’s situation. The Subcommittee has an agreement with DHS that Neza’s deportation will be stayed until March of 2009.

    The Subcommittee discussed Congressman Gohmert’s private relief bill H.R. 4070 that he filed in November 2007 during the hearing and then recessed to attempt to gain additional information. However, after Homeland Security’s top personnel were not helpful, the committee proceeded to request a report from DHS in order to move on with Gohmert’s bill. The legislation would allow Neza to apply for and be granted lawful permanent resident status. The report request is one step closer to passing the bill through subcommittee and is a significant step toward seeing that Neza will not be forcefully separated from his home and family in a forced, drug-induced stupor anytime soon. Due to ineffective counsel when Neza initially applied for asylum, he has not yet been allowed to present his unique case to an immigration judge, and Rep. Gohmert feels that Mr. Neza deserves this opportunity.

    Rep. Gohmert stated, “This is encouraging news for Neza’s family and for the community that has rallied around them during this difficult time. Neza is a productive and loved resident of Nacogdoches, evidenced by the overwhelming outcries from the local community at the news of his deportation which have made their way to my office. Sending him back to Albania is like signing a death warrant for an innocent man, which I cannot sit idly by and allow to happen. I will continue to seek legitimate asylum for Mr. Neza until he and his family can safely and peacefully carry on with their lives.”

    Rrustem Neza fled from Albania to Belgium and later to the United States in January 2001 after his brother witnessed the murder of a leading member of the Democratic Party of Albania who helped bring down the nation’s Communist regime in the 1990’s. Rrustem Neza himself made the information public which put killers on the trail of both him and his family. Two of Neza’s cousins were murdered for their knowledge of the incident. Neza’s brothers were granted asylum in the United States, but his claim was denied even though it was based on the same facts as his siblings’. Congressman Gohmert has been working for several months to bring relief to the man who is now a successful restaurant owner and member of the east Texas community.