Posted on 07/20/2015 4:01:41 AM PDT by Vigilanteman
HOUSTON Northleaf Drive runs through a suburban neighborhood where residents manicure their lawns and hedges.
American flags flap near their front doors.
Kids ride bikes in a loop along roads called Heather Hills, Winding Trace and Cactus Flower.
To residents, the squat ranch on Northleaf Drive in northwest Houston seemed to fit in. True, no one seemed to know the names of the four men who lived there, off and on. But neighbors told a Tribune-Review investigations reporter that they were still shocked when, eight days before Christmas 2012, police surrounded the home, guns drawn.
We got inside and locked the door, like they told us to do, said Jim Gomez, 21. Wed seen the guys there, but we never talked to them. We saw no one parked there. We saw no one coming or going but those guys.
Inside the 1,700-square-foot house, officers found 43 undocumented Honduran and Salvadoran immigrants clad only in underwear, a tactic used by some stash house operators to keep illegal immigrants from fleeing atrocious living conditions or bolting before relatives can wire the final installment of their smuggling fees what smugglers call the buyout.
Other smugglers rely on threats of being caught and deported to keep undocumented immigrants in line.
Police found one unescorted 5-year-old boy clutching a scrap of paper scrawled with his moms cell phone number, the only way to reach her.
The quartet of coyotes an American enforcer who kept house discipline with a baseball bat; another American who gathered the wire transfers; a pair of cooks, from Mexico and Honduras were heavily armed.
Stash house operators know that their human cargo usually cant escape. And even if they do, they rarely go to the police because theyll probably be deported. Ratting out smugglers for fraud, violence or sex crimes committed against illegal aliens can trigger similar reprisals on relatives back home, so they keep mum.
But we dont want Houston to become a hunting ground for the predators, said Capt. H.D. Dan Harris, director of the Houston Police Departments vice division and its new anti-trafficking task force.
The nations fourth largest city, Houston is about 350 miles north of the Mexico border. Its become the top destination for illegal immigrants trafficked nationwide after entering the United States and a hub for moving people and money across the hemisphere, often using stash houses.
Detectives traced the Northleaf Drive ring to a criminal syndicate in Reynosa, a Mexican city along the Rio Grande River. Rival cartels, Los Zetas and Cártel del Golfo, split that citys underworld. The immigrants freed by the police had been smuggled into the United States near Rio Grande City, Texas, transported from stash house to stash house across a jumble of towns to the east, and then taken north around Falfurrias, where Border Patrol mans a large highway checkpoint midway between Houston and the border.
In the Rio Grande Valley, stash house operations are becoming more violent, authorities say, with traffickers now stealing at gunpoint crowds of illegal immigrants being housed by rival gangs. Then they ransom off the people.
That tactic has yet to arrive in Houston but the number of traffickers employing fraud, coercion, starvation and force on illegal immigrants has become so bad that the citys police in March launched a special squad of detectives to crack down.
It doesnt matter who you are or where you come from, if youre a victim, the Houston Police Department wants to know about that, Harris said.
A Trib investigative analysis of 3,254 human smuggling convictions in federal courts that oversee the border from Houston to San Diego shows what Harris and his vice cops are up against.
The analysis found 82 coyotes in 2013 and 2014 who were found guilty of ransoming off immigrants. Fifteen others were alleged to have raped female immigrants inside stash houses.
Of those 97 convicted coyotes, 44 were arrested in the Rio Grande Valley, 29 in Houston, and eight in Falfurrias the midway point, showing how stash houses work in the smuggling corridors and beyond.
A Trib investigations reporter followed local police and U.S. Homeland Security agents on stash house surveillance missions and raids across southern Texas, including a Dec. 10 roundup along Doolittle Road in Edinburg. Inside, cops found a dozen undocumented immigrants from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Mexico.
American coyotes interviewed by the Trib investigations team said some stash house operators are vicious, but added that illegal immigrants have incentive to lie about conditions as a ploy to curry sympathy with authorities, staving off deportation or obtaining permanent visas.
Arrested in 2013, American coyote Jisel Emery Cruz, 32, calls her 46-month sentence for conspiracy in human smuggling totally unfair. An immigrant told authorities that Cruzs two brothers kidnapped him from a rival stash house and fed him one egg daily, but Cruz said the immigrants dined on pizza, chicken and other fast food and werent being ransomed.
Rather, the coyotes were awaiting cash they were owed to transport them to Houston. Too often, she said, prosecutors believe the aliens over U.S. citizens, a complaint echoed in several interviews with incarcerated coyotes.
I dont know why the illegals claimed what they did. I saw them a couple of times alone and they never told me anything was wrong, Cruz said. They were treated decently.
Jisel Emery Cruz needs to be tried for treason and executed. she aided a foreigner in an attack on our borders.
All coyotes are traitors and should be shot on sight.
Never says the fate of the rescued illegals.
Deported or put up at the Hilton?
The open borders present an enormous danger to this country.
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