Media Advisory US Customs and Border Protection

July 5th, 2011

Nogales Fence Construction Nears Completion – 2.8 Miles of Landing Mat Replaced

TUCSON, Ariz. – U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) would like to invite the media only to view the final stages of the Nogales fence construction at Hamburger Hill that began in April of this year.  The 2.8 miles of “landing mat” fence is being replaced with new bollard fencing.  The improvements to this infrastructure have already enhanced efforts to deter illegal activity by increasing the height of the fence and providing a deeper, more robust below-ground foundation.

The fence replacement project is part of the Department of Homeland Security’s ongoing efforts to strengthen the security of the Southwest Border in Arizona. Representatives from the Border Patrol will be available to answer questions.

New Mexico_100_Blog_Maurice Sherif 2011.

Event: Nogales Fence Replacement Project at Hamburger Hill

Invited Guests: Nogales Border Patrol Station, Consulate of Mexico, Granite Construction, International Boundary and Water Commission, City of Nogales

Date: Thursday, June 30, 2011

Time: 9:30 a.m.

Location: TBD (East of the DeConcini Port of Entry) 

Point of Contact: Tucson Sector Public Affairs Office (520) 748-3210

Please RSVP for attendance no later than 2:00 p.m. June 28, 2011

Hysteria, of course, has become a feature of the American diet.

January 30th, 2011

About 11.8 million people live in the US-Mexico border area. Approximately one-quarter of the population in the US counties bordering Mexico live at or below the poverty line. This is over double the rate of the national average (12 percent) of the US population living in poverty. Furthermore, the unemployment rate in US counties on the southern border is 5.6 percent compared to 4.7 percent in the rest of the country. Mexican border states have an average poverty rate of 28 percent, significantly below the Mexican national average of 37 percent. (Sources: Environmental Protection Agency; Pan-American Health Organization/World Health Organization; Inter-American Development Bank; CIA World Factbook)

The border area in the United States consists of 48 counties in four states. Approximately 300,000 people live in 1,300 colonias in Texas and New Mexico. Colonias are unincorporated, semirural communities characterized by substandard housing and unsafe public drinking water or wastewater systems. Communities on the Mexican side of the border generally have less access to basic water and sanitation services than border communities in the United States. (Sources: Environmental Protection Agency; Pan-American Health Organization/World Health Organization)

Two of the 10 fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the United States, Laredo and McAllen, are located on the Texas-Mexico border. Estimates indicate the population of many border cities will double in 30 years. The population along the Texas border region is increasing at twice the rate of Texas as a whole. (Source: US Census Bureau)

Glenn Spencer – American Patrol Report – AL JAZEERA

January 26th, 2011

Glenn Spencer is an activist who advocates greater vigilance in securing the United States–Mexico border against illegal immigration. Spencer is the founder of the American Border Patrol group based in Sierra Vista, Arizona. American Border Patrol is a private, non-governmental, organization with the stated purpose of informing Americans about the border. It is known for using small, radio-controlled aircraft and ground sensing equipment to track illegal immigrants, and then relaying that information to the US Border Patrol. Spencer also has assisted with the Minuteman Project and prior to 2004, worked closely with borderlands property owner and anti-illegal immigration activist Roger Barnett.

American Border Patrol

In August 2002, Glenn Spencer left his wife and children and moved to Arizona and formed the American Border Patrol. The organization uses cameras, sensors, “hawkeye” spotters, and unmanned aerial vehicles to identify suspected border crossings (The organization has outfitted three model airplanes with cameras which are designed to home in on ground sensors triggered by people walking in the desert). Once identified, the suspected illegal immigrants are videotaped whenever possible and reported to the United States Border Patrol. Video of their aerial patrols of the border are also available on the organization’s website. According to Spencer, American Border Patrol differs from other civilian patrol groups operating in Arizona in that their volunteers do not carry firearms and do not attempt to detain migrants, but rather focus on documenting border intrusions. . – Congressional Research Service (CRS) Report for Congress, Civilian Patrols Along the Border: Legal and Policy Issues, April 7, 2006.

UN to Mexico: Investigate abuse, kidnap of migrants

January 24th, 2011

GENEVA – The U.N.’s top human-rights official urged Mexico on Friday to investigate possible abuses and complicity by officials in kidnappings and extortion involving 40 Central American migrants.

Mexico is the transit route for thousands of illegal migrants seeking to reach the United States, with many falling victim to gangs and organized crime.

U.N. rights chief Navi Pillay said 40 migrants, mostly from El Salvador and Guatemala, were “abducted in highly questionable circumstances” on Dec. 16 from a freight train in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her office said Friday that the northbound freight train was stopped first “in a joint operation by police and migration officials” who detained 92 of the 250 migrants aboard.

“According to some accounts, military personnel were also involved,” Pillay’s office said, citing U.N. interviews with human-rights groups. “A somewhat confused picture has emerged about what happened next.”

According to the U.N., about 150 migrants got back on the train, run by a government-owned company. The driver then demanded money from the migrants but was not satisfied and told them there would be “more problems ahead.”

A half-hour later, the train was reportedly boarded by gunmen who assaulted and robbed some of the migrants and abducted 40 of them, including at least 10 women and one child.

Two days later, some escaped and managed to reach a migrant shelter in Oaxaca run by Alejandro Solalinde, a well-known Roman Catholic priest and migrant-rights activist who first reported the abductions.

“The Mexican authorities need to ascertain whether or not any state officials, including those working for the state-owned train operator, were complicit with the criminal organization that carried out the abductions and extortion, both in this and other cases,” Pillay said.

Copyright 2011 Arizona Daily Star. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Bill would stop Mexican Consulate officials entering Texas schools, colleges

January 23rd, 2011

AUSTIN, Jan. 20 – A bill filed at the state Capitol seeks to prevent foreign consular officials from entering public schools or state universities in order to distribute foreign identification cards or accept applications for such cards.

If HB 428, authored by state Rep. Allen Fletcher, is passed into law, Mexican Consulate staff would not be allowed to go onto to a school or college campus to help students with their matricula consular applications.

Maurice in Otay Mnt_JB

In an exclusive interview with the Guardian, Fletcher, who served in the Houston Police Department for 21 years, explained the rationale behind his bill.

“The bottom line is we’re trying to keep foreign consuls from being on our campuses,” said Fletcher, R-Houston. “I don’t like them using our public facilities and our schools to basically access the foreign nationals that are in our country and give them an opportunity to take advantage of our benefits when they’re here illegally.”

The Matrícula Consular de Alta Seguridad (MCAS) (Consular Identification Card) is an identification card issued by the Government of Mexico through its consulate offices to Mexican nationals residing outside of Mexico regardless of their immigration status. -

It’s ridiculous but not terribly surprising in the current political environment. There are 40+ similar legislative proposals currently proposed in the Texas legislature according to Denise Gilman of Clinical Professor of Law – Immigration Clinic – University of Texas School of Law

© Copyright of the Rio Grande Guardian, www.riograndeguardian.com. Publisher: Steve Taylor. All rights reserved. – By Jesse Bertron

Political Intoxication – Is Mexico Building a Wall on the Guatemalan Border?

January 23rd, 2011

The Inter-Press Sevice (IPS) is reporting that the head administrator of the Mexican Superintendency of Tax Administration, Raul Diaz, has confirmed that his government is building a wall in the state of Chiapas, along the Mexican/Guatemalan border.

The official reason is to stop contraband from coming into Mexico, but as Diaz admitted: “It could also prevent the free passage of illegal immigrants.”

Texas_28

Erick Maldonado, executive secretary of Guatemala’s National Council on Migrants said:  “We are watching the Mexican government’s initiative with concern because the migrants are in a situation of highest vulnerability, as demonstrated by the massacre in Tamaulipas, where five Guatemalans died.”

Maldonado said the wall “is going to make the migrants’ situation worse, because to meet their needs they are always going to find blind points where there are no migration or security controls, which implies greater risks.”

Original Article: http://www.examiner.com/immigration-reform-in-national/hypocritical-mexico-is-now-building-their-own-wall-on-border-with-guatemala-press-ignores?cid=examiner-email

U.S.-Mexico Border Crossing Deaths Are A Humanitarian Crisis, According To Report From The ACLU And CNDH

May 20th, 2010

SAN DIEGO – U.S., Mexican and international officials must recognize the deaths of migrants occurring during unauthorized crossings of the U.S.-Mexican border as an international humanitarian crisis and respond with reforms that make human life a priority, according to a new report released today by the American Civil Liberties Union of San Diego and Imperial Counties and Mexico’s National Commission on Human Rights (CNDH). The report, Humanitarian Crisis: Migrant Deaths at the U.S.-Mexico Border, finds that border deaths have increased despite fewer unauthorized crossings due to the economic downturn.

The release of the report marks the 15th anniversary of the border enforcement policy Operation Gatekeeper that concentrated border agents and added walls and fencing along populated areas, intentionally forcing migrants to hostile environments and natural barriers that increase the incidence of injury and death.

“The current policies in place on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border have created a humanitarian crisis that has led to the deaths of more than 5,000 people,” said Kevin Keenan, Executive Director of the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties. “Because of deadly practices and policies like Operation Gatekeeper, the death toll continues to rise unabated despite the decrease in unauthorized crossings due to economic factors.

South of Texas

South of Texas

The report analyzes deadly border enforcement policies and practices and their impact on individuals, families and communities and offers concrete recommendations to significantly decrease and possibly end the humanitarian crisis at the border.

Some of the report’s major findings include:

  • Border deaths have increased despite the economic downturn, fewer migrant crossers and a steady drop in apprehensions.
  • In the last 15 years, the deaths occurring during unauthorized border crossings have been a predictable and inhumane outcome of border-security policies like Operation Gatekeeper.
  • Migrants’ risk of death during unauthorized crossings has increased in spite of government programs that attempt to reduce the harmful effects of border enforcement policies and strategies.
  • The ongoing deaths of migrants have exposed government incompliance with international law obligations in the treatment of the dead and their families.

Since Operation Gatekeeper went into effect in 1994, an estimated 5,600 migrants have died while attempting unauthorized border crossings. In response to government failures to prevent migrant deaths, many organizations have set up water stations, desert medical camps, humanitarian-aid patrols and other rescue and recovery operations in an attempt to save lives along the U.S.-Mexican border area. As the report details, these activities have been increasingly met with government opposition and punishment.

“By any measure, Operation Gatekeeper is a failure. It didn’t reduce unauthorized border crossings, the economy did. It has, however, cost thousands of people their lives,” said Andrea Guerrero, Field and Policy Director of the ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties. “Instead of policies that foster fatalities, we need sensible, humane immigration and border policies that prioritize human life over death.”

The report recommends actions that the U.S. and Mexican governments should take to protect and advance the human right to life of migrants, including:

  • Recognize border crossing deaths as an international humanitarian crisis.
  • Adopt sensible, humane immigration and border policies.
  • Shift more U.S. Border Patrol resources to search and rescue.
  • Support nongovernmental humanitarian efforts at the border.
  • Direct government agencies to allow humanitarian organizations to do their work to save lives and recover remains.
  • Establish a binational, one-stop resource for rescue and recovery calls and convene all data collecting agencies to develop a uniform system.
  • Invite international involvement.

Javier Garcia, whose testimony about his brother who died while crossing the border is featured in the report, said, “I hope that my brother’s case is taken as an example of what should not happen, that things change.”

The report can be found online at: www.aclu.org/immigrants/gen/41186pub20091001.html
Courtesy of ACLU 2010.

The American Wall Sections in Roma, Rio Grande City 2010

May 17th, 2010
South of Texas

South of Texas

May 4 the GAO issued a report on SBInet, which included a statement that DHS has allocated fiscal 2010 funds to build the 3 sections of wall in Roma, Rio Grande City, and Los Ebanos which have been on hold for the past 2 years because DHS could not get approval from IBWC.

South of Texas

100-mile radius raises debate over Constitution, civil rights

May 17th, 2010
100-mile radius raises debate over Constitution, civil rights

100-mile radius raises debate over Constitution, civil rights

WASHINGTON — Vince Peppard was cruising up the highway toward San Diego, wife in the seat next to him and a bunch of tile in tow.

The 53-year-old retired social worker was driving north from Tecate, Mexico, on his way to fix up an old house.

“I breezed right through the checkpoint,” Pepper recalled. “Then a half-hour later, when I got into the U.S., they were opening my trunk and searching my car. I didn’t feel like I was in the United States. I felt like I was in some police state.”

Peppard was stopped about 20 miles north of the Mexican border by customs officials who demanded to search his car, he said. When he refused, Peppard said, a customs official brought in search dogs, hassled his wife — who is from Syria — for her citizenship papers and detained him for more than 30 minutes.

He was ultimately let go. But he can’t let go of the fact that he was stopped inside the United States.

“I actually feel nervous that I’m going to be pulled over,” Peppard said via a video hookup at a news conference Wednesday. “Now I have to have my passport when I go to the Home Depot or something.”

It was stories like Peppard’s that prompted a civil rights group to challenge the constitutionality of practices carried out by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The American Civil Liberties Union charged Wednesday that searches by customs agents within 100 miles of the U.S. border threatens the rights of millions of Americans.

The civil rights group released a map showing that nearly two-thirds of Americans – 194.7 million people — live within a 100-mile-radius of the U.S. borders and could be subject to an infringement of their Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches.

“This is an area where the government is attempting to turn into a Constitution-free zone,” said Caroline Fredrickson, director of the ACLU’s Washington Legislative Office. “The federal government has been allowed to turn areas of this nation into places where anyone can be stopped and searched for any reason — or no reason at all.

“It is a classic case example of law enforcement powers expanding far beyond the proper boundaries–in this case literally.”

The group said it will push for legislation in the next administration to curtail customs officials’ search authority.

Customs and Border Protection, which falls under the Department of Homeland Security, was authorized by Congress nearly 50 years ago to operate within a “reasonable distance” inside the border, which it designates as a 100-mile radius. The agency operates 33 checkpoints, and the ACLU said complaints about the checkpoints have risen since Sept.11.

But border patrol officials say that the checkpoints are anything but unconstitutional.

“The 100-mile zone absolutely is not a Constitution-free zone,” said Jason Ciliberti, a supervisory border patrol agent with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection. “Those 100 miles are what essentially is said to be a reasonable distance from the boundary from the United States, and the Supreme Court has come down firmly on our side and said that what we’re doing is not unreasonable.”

Ciliberti said that the department is sensitive to citizen complaints about checkpoints and has tried to smooth the process.

“The vast number of those encounters is very brief,” Ciliberti said. “If [necessary], agents do take some time to conduct investigations. But, of course, they conduct those investigations with due diligence and as minimally invasive as possible.”

“In order to arrest that person, we still need probable cause as anywhere in the United States,” he added.

But, he noted, the agency will continue its searches as part of its efforts to stop drug smugglers and illegal immigrants.

“We do have a job to do and we don’t have the opportunity to be wrong — even once,” Ciliberti said. “So, we understand if people are offended by our tactics. We take the Constitution very seriously, we take it to heart.”

by Erica L. Green

Arizona-Sonora Recovered Human Remains

May 17th, 2010

Fiscal Year (October 1- September 30)

2000-2001            136

2001-2002            163

2002-2003            205

2003-2004            234

2004-2005            282

2005-2006            205

2006- 2007           237

2007- 2008           183

2008-2009            206

October 1, 2009 – February 28, 2010      110

Total Human Remains = 1,961

Road_Cross_04

This Year’s Deaths

“Coalción de Derechos Humanos” counts the number of bodies recovered in Arizona for the fiscal year, which begins October 1st and ends September 30th of every year. This will be so that we can compare the numbers put out by the government officials with those that we gather, in collaboration with the Consular offices and county medical examiners.

Data courtesy of (®).Coalción de Derechos Humanos