Disturbing.
Glad we are watching. The rest of the world can't see this:
Supervisors in the Tucson Sector declined to comment for this article. T.J. Bonner, a 25-year veteran of the force and president of the National Border Patrol Council, the union that represents 9,000 rank-and-file agents, confirmed that the documents were authentic. In the documents, agents suggest that amid the crowds and chaos, they are in danger of losing control of segments of the 1,951-mile U.S.-Mexico border
...because they are watching Bruce and Steve run out of the courtroom doors on the evening news [which WILL be the top story].
Coming to a city near you, killers, rapists, terrorists. The new immigrant society. (let's not forget the prayer blankets found in the desert...
On the Border, the Dead, Detained, and Disappeared
Commentary, Victor Clark-Alfaro,
Pacific News Service, Apr 20, 2004
Editor's Note: For decades one human rights observer has monitored the Mexico-U.S. border region, and finds the border body count is rising today in ways it never did before. Not only are deaths more brutal and numerous, the writer says, news of them is so habitual that border Mexicans seem unaffected by their most graphic details.
TIJUANA, Mexico--Seen from here, the number of deaths along Mexico's northern border with the United States in the last decade is entering an unusual dimension. Together with the dead, thousands of their surviving family members have become direct victims of the violence in what has become an astonishingly frightening Mexican border society. Even the way the hapless die is becoming more brutal.
---More than 411 women have been murdered and more than 500 disappeared among what is known today as "The Dead Women of Juarez," cases of mostly young, pretty women often found mutilated in the desert around Ciudad Juarez and elsewhere in the state of Chihuahua.
---More than 600 persons have been kidnapped and then disappeared, and more than 2,000 executed as a result of organized crime vendettas in northern Mexican states.
---More than 2,800 undocumented Mexican migrants have died trying to cross the U.S. border, often on the United States side.
Seen as a whole, the count of bodies is entwined with organized crime, authorities involved in crime, corruption and government impunity.
There have been many hypotheses about why so many women have died in Juarez, for instance, from the participation of police, drug traffickers, and serial killers to delinquents linked to satanic cults. What is certain is that the deaths remain unsolved and the dead continue to appear.
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http://news.pacificnews.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=3e18ee3cfaba5263de5c0f5b4842af50