Posted on 06/06/2008 5:14:58 PM PDT by SwinneySwitch
LA JOYA, Texas Local police are accustomed to dealing with illegal border crossings, but they were astounded by the video of 15 Chinese immigrants unfolding themselves from the back of a red Suburban near this small border town.
The vehicle appeared abandoned when police rolled up early on a recent Saturday morning. But when Border Patrol agents arrived and swung open the double rear doors, the Chinese immigrants tumbled out, squinting in the sunlight.
"They were in bad shape," said La Joya Police spokesman Joe Cantu.
The immigrants were silent, able to communicate only with hand gestures.
One man wanted to use Cantu's cell phone. When Cantu asked for the number he was handed one with a 212 area code New York.
Two more Chinese immigrants would be picked up nearby later that day and another group of nine was caught near the border about 50 miles away a few days later.
More than nine out of 10 illegal immigrants detained at the U.S.-Mexico border are Mexican. But for years, this easternmost sector of the border has had more than its share of what the Border Patrol calls "other than Mexicans" or OTMs. The Rio Grande Valley sector has accounted for as many as half of the border's OTM apprehensions in recent years while having only one-tenth of the total border apprehensions.
During the first seven months of this fiscal year, this sector has nabbed nearly 11,000 OTMs, accounting for one quarter of its total apprehensions.
Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador historically are the main sources of immigrants other than Mexico.
After surpassing 2,100 in 2005 and 2006, the number of Chinese immigrants caught along the border fell last year to 837, slightly more than 1 percent of all OTM apprehensions, according to Border Patrol data. In the first eight months of this fiscal year, 512 Chinese were caught.
Border Patrol officials and others familiar with immigrant smuggling say the Rio Grande Valley's popularity likely stems from being the shortest path into the U.S. from Mexico City and Central America.
The specifics of how any of the Chinese ended up in South Texas are unknown, but the methods and routes have been evolving for more than a century. Most pay on average $55,000 to be shuttled from China to a final U.S. destination by an elaborate smuggling operation.
If they get caught, they request asylum and lawyers are often hired by the Chinese smugglers, who will not get full payment unless the immigrants arrive at their destination.
"This was a very early route," said Peter Kwong, a sociology professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center, who wrote "Forbidden Workers: Illegal Chinese Immigrants and American Labor."
Since 1882, when the U.S. began a crackdown on Chinese immigration that would last decades, Chinese have been crossing the Mexican border. Early on, most of the traffic was along the border with California because Chinese rode ships into Mexican ports on the Pacific coast, Kwong said.
Eventually though, Chinese immigrants began sailing directly into U.S. ports.
The Mexican route regained popularity in late 1980s and early 1990s when U.S. ports became less accessible, Kwong said. The Golden Venture spectacle, when the ship carrying 286 Chinese immigrants beached in Queens, New York in 1993, drew broader attention to the issue of human smuggling and further tightened access.
More Chinese began flying into U.S. airports and requesting asylum, Kwong said.
When tighter restrictions on inbound international flights following the Sept. 11 attacks curtailed that path, smugglers began looking for less secure airports, Kwong said.
Immigration attorney Hongxin Shi, joined the Texas law practice of Paul Esquivel last year, after Esquivel saw a need for Mandarin-speaking attorneys at the Willacy County Processing Center the country's largest immigrant detention facility.
Shi, who has about 20 pending immigration cases with Chinese immigrants, said he has heard of immigrants flying into Colombia, Guatemala and Mexico to begin the journey north.
In March 2007, Mexican federal police detained 81 Chinese immigrants and 22 Mexican immigration officers at the Cancun airport. They believed the Chinese were hiding in the airport with the help of the immigration officials until they could begin the next leg of their journey north to the United States.
In Mexico, they meet "coyotes," or smugglers specializing in crossing the U.S. border, who have been arranged by their Chinese smugglers. "It's a like subcontractor," Kwong said.
For years, Chinese and fellow "other than Mexican" illegal immigrants were processed and released with a date to return for a court hearing. The process was known as "catch and release."
Only about one third of those OTMs showed up in court, according to a 2005 report prepared for Congress.
That began changing in late 2005 and early 2006 with a new policy that sought to close that loophole.
Non-Mexicans caught trying to enter the U.S. now are steered into a streamlined process for "expedited removal."
They are detained at centers like Willacy until they go before an immigration judge. Border Patrol credits the end of catch and release with the sharp drop in OTM apprehensions.
Still, "we do encounter people from all over the world," said Daniel Doty, Border Patrol spokesman for the Rio Grande Valley sector.
Just days before the 17 Chinese were picked up in La Joya, 13 Eritreans and five Ethiopians were caught in nearby Hidalgo.
It's an International Speedway!
But we don’t need border security now do we? I mean if the Chinese are coming in, there can’t be room for terrorists.
Sounds like it got too hot for them in Yuma and Cochise counties (AZ), so they’ve moved east...
I feel so much better knowing amnesty lovers McCain, Obama and Clinton will most likely be one of the presumptive nominees.
Correction: meant two instead of one.
So, Mexicans who are 90% of illegal aliens, are still "catch and release."
They “tumbled” out - haha - obviously they were bound for the Chinese acrobat show in Branson! Let them in - they are really good!
Or Cuba and then Mexico. Lots of Chinese in Cuba.
Valle ping!
If you want on, or off this S. Texas/Mexico ping list, please FReepMail me.
Do the math. 9 out of 10 “detained” are Mexicans but in the first seven months 11,000 were OTMs. 11,000 equaled 1%.
This is only getting worse. I would join my fellow Americans on a march to the border even we could ever decide to sacrifice our immediate future for the future of our country.
Chertoff says “we have now ended catch and release”
Department of Homeland Security ^ | 9/21/2006
Posted on Friday, September 22, 2006 10:05:00 PM by Invisible Gorilla
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1706747/posts
1 out of 10 is 10%, so 110,000 were detained.
(They catch maybe 1 out of 3 or 4 on a good day.)
I have heard that the Chinese government refuses to allow the return of deportees. If this is true, we should stop issuing visas to Chinese nationals until they take these people back.
The commie cowards will promptly put a bullet in their head when they arrive home. Then they'll bill the family for the bullet and the plane ride home.
Uncle Sam pays for their plane ride. The Chinese don't execute deportees any more than the Mexicans do. What they do execute people for is anti-government agitation, corruption, murder and drug-dealing.
Swinney, 11,000 OTM’s is the number they ‘caught.’ Imagine that the majority, vast majority, do not get caught.
Thanks. I flunked out of college math but did pass all the English tests. :-)
Kinda hard to put the Chinese back on a bus.
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