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America’s border wars: What the Border Patrol doesn’t want you to know
The Hill ^ | 02/02/19 | Patrick G. Eddington

Posted on 02/02/2019 5:38:13 PM PST by yesthatjallen

For years, federal Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials have claimed that internal “immigration inspection” checkpoints located in Texas and elsewhere in the American Southwest are vital tools in stopping illegal immigration. They further claim that operations at these checkpoints are blessed by Supreme Court rulings. As with most claims by CBP officials, neither stands up to genuine scrutiny.

In November 2017, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that some 40 percent of the stops and seizures at internal CBP checkpoints involved “1 ounce or less of marijuana from U.S. citizens.” GAO also found that between 2012-2016 along the southwest border, 42 percent of apprehensions occurred “one-half mile or less from the border in fiscal year 2016 compared to 24 percent in fiscal year 2012.”

Rousting Americans with “dime-bags” of marijuana at these checkpoints seemingly violates the Supreme Court’s ruling in Martinze-Fuerte v. United States, the decision that CBP agents routinely cite to motorists when detaining them. The Court did not grant CBP the authority to operate checkpoints as generalized crime control stops. Indeed, in City of Indianapolis et al v. Edmond, the Court ruled that generalized crime control checkpoints were unconstitutional.

Nor did the Court authorize CBP to detain motorists on ostensible immigration inspection grounds in order to delay their departure until local or state law enforcement personnel could arrive at the checkpoint and charge them with another crime. Yet according to internal CBP documents obtained by the Cato Institute via Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) litigation, that is exactly what CBP leadership authorizes and encourages.

According to a Jan. 25, 2018 CBP document titled “El Centro Sector Standard Operating Procedure Noncompliant Motorist Protocol,” if confronted with “noncompliant” motorists, agents were to

Advise the motorist they are creating a possible safety hazard and if they refuse to move their vehicle to secondary inspection, the BPAs [Border Patrol Agents] will be required to move it for them. Under this circumstance, BPAs are encouraged to seek assistance from state and local law enforcement because the driver’s actions may violate state/local traffic laws.

Yet in the same document, CBP acknowledges that a motorist’ refusal to answer questions does not justify using punitive measures. “Just the fact that someone is refusing to answer questions or is being otherwise passively noncompliant, absent exigent circumstances, does not equate to a violation of law,” the document states.

Indeed, a Nov. 24, 2015 memo to Falfurrias, Texas area CBP agents explicitly state that a detained motorist “DOES NOT have to state his/her citizenship directly” and that “A person does not have to say ‘I am a US Citizen’ for you to be relatively certain that they are US Citizens (or lawfully allowed to be in the U.S.)” It should be noted that the documents obtained by Cato appear to have been disseminated CBP-wide.

A recent federal appeals court ruling involving the Freer, Texas checkpoint struck a blow at the overly broad and questionable criteria CBP agents use to stop vehicles.

On Jan. 25, 2019, in United States v Freeman, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling that CBP Agent Carlos Perez had inadequate “reasonable suspicion” to stop Houston resident Jeffrey Louis Freeman when Freeman made a right turn onto Farm-to-Market (FM) road 2050 just before the Freer checkpoint, about 50 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border. While the court conceded that FM 2050 was a well-known smuggling route, that fact alone was hardly sufficient to pursue Lewis for nearly eight miles, then stop and search his vehicle.

The appeals court also took issue with other claims federal authorities made that supported the stop, including the fact that Lewis’ truck had a paper (i.e., temporary) license plate, that he drove “erratically” (disproven by the lower court), and that the vehicle was registered to an individual rather than one of the local companies. Indeed, Agent Perez stated it was CBP policy to stop every vehicle that turned right onto FM 2050—an absurd notion that clearly treats every motorist using that road as a suspect first, and a citizen second, at best.

Congress can end this insanity by banning CBP internal checkpoints and mandating the agents be sent to the border. Ending the checkpoints and redeploying CBP agents closer to the problem would not only stop unconstitutional rights violations of innocent Americans, it would place the agents where they would be far more effective at catching illegal crossers than President Trump’s proposed border wall.

Former CIA analyst and ex-Capitol Hill staffer Patrick Eddington is a policy analyst in civil liberties and homeland security at the Cato Institute.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: border; cbp; immigration; wall
The description of what the CBP can and cannot do or ask motorists makes me wonder why we even have a CBP.
1 posted on 02/02/2019 5:38:13 PM PST by yesthatjallen
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To: yesthatjallen

When I came back from Central America (Panama), I thought I was coming back to a free country.

No more checkpoints, to be approached with fear and trepidation.

Once I got to Yuma, I immediately noticed the checkpoints.

This, I thought, in America?


2 posted on 02/02/2019 5:47:31 PM PST by marktwain (President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
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To: yesthatjallen

They should be working at the border not rousting people 20 miles away.

L


3 posted on 02/02/2019 5:51:41 PM PST by Lurker (Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Plan accordingly.)
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To: marktwain
What is all the hoooooooooo haaaaa about; there was a checkpoint at the Canadian/USA border back in the late '50s, where they checked cars and there wasn't a pot/dope problem back then.

And I bet that few if any here know, that in the late teens /early '20s of the 20th century, you needed a PASSPORT to get into and out of Canada; but Americans did!

4 posted on 02/02/2019 6:00:40 PM PST by nopardons
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To: nopardons

Aren’t talking about the border...In AZ, the Checkpoint is nearly 100 miles from the border at mile marker 76-77 on Hwy 95 North.


5 posted on 02/02/2019 6:05:47 PM PST by abigkahuna (How can you be at two places at once when you are nowhere at all?)
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To: abigkahuna
Frankly, I don't care.

OTOH...what we need at the border is a wall, like THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA, covered in razor wire, with a trench in front of it all loaded with boobytraps, explosives and such.

6 posted on 02/02/2019 6:17:39 PM PST by nopardons
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To: Lurker

I agree.


7 posted on 02/02/2019 6:21:53 PM PST by ravenwolf (Left lane drivers and tailgaters have the smallest brains in the world.)
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To: abigkahuna

and the cartels already have a foothold 100 miles inside our borders, been that way for awhile - tough call


8 posted on 02/02/2019 6:56:48 PM PST by stylin19a (2016 - Best.Election.Of.All.Times.Ever.In.The.History.Of.Ever)
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To: yesthatjallen
it would place the agents where they would be far more effective at catching illegal crossers than President Trump’s proposed border wall.

I don't think anyone expects the border wall to catch illegal crossers. I expect it to funnel illegals into a smaller, more easily patrollable, area.

9 posted on 02/02/2019 7:07:29 PM PST by exDemMom (Current visual of the hole the US continues to dig itself into: http://www.usdebtclock.org/)
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To: yesthatjallen
The border zone is 100 miles from the border or coastline.

It needs to be reduced.


10 posted on 02/02/2019 7:11:05 PM PST by GreenLanternCorps (Hi! I'm the Dread Pirate Roberts! (TM) Ask about franchise opportunities in your area.arare)
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To: marktwain

No checkpoints = no control....at least on or near borders...
and other know high traffic area....I remember a joke in the 70s: What’s a Texan? A Mexican on his way to Oklahoma....


11 posted on 02/03/2019 4:28:06 AM PST by trebb (Don't howl about illegal leeches while not donating to FR - it's hypocritical.)
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To: yesthatjallen
I've gone through the Texas one a couple of times and have been treated like a criminal every time. Woe was me the one time I tried to, very respectfully, push back. Not arrested or anything but they sure managed to delay me and make sure that I knew there were consequences for asking questions.

At the same time illegals stream across the border and get a bus ticket to where ever with a promise to show up in court two years later.

How these are legal is beyond me.

Land of the free my big white butt.

12 posted on 02/03/2019 5:28:19 AM PST by Proud_texan (McCarthy was right)
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To: yesthatjallen
And of course, they have to add in a dig at Trump at the end... A wall doesn't 'catch' any illegal aliens, it prevents them from even easily getting in at all!

Ending the checkpoints and redeploying CBP agents closer to the problem would not only stop unconstitutional rights violations of innocent Americans, it would place the agents where they would be far more effective at catching illegal crossers than President Trump’s proposed border wall.
13 posted on 02/03/2019 6:32:03 AM PST by Svartalfiar
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