Posted on 01/01/2005 12:03:01 PM PST by SandRat
SIERRA VISTA - The U.S. Border Patrol's drug seizures and illegal immigrant apprehensions rose for the agency's Tucson sector and Cochise County in fiscal year 2004 and continue to rise in the first quarter of fiscal year 2005.
Officials say these heightened numbers are a result of increased enforcement personnel within the county and within the Tucson Sector, which stretches from the New Mexico state line to Yuma County, a length of 261 miles.
The Border Patrol seized 362,351 pounds of marijuana and made 347,263 apprehensions during its 2003 fiscal year, which ran from Oct. 1, 2002 to Sept. 30, 2003.
Agents seized 446,754 pounds of marijuana during the fiscal year 2004, and apprehending 491,771 border violators. The 2004 fiscal year ran from Oct. 1, 2003 to Sept. 30, 2004.
Joe Brigman, a spokesman for the Border Patrol's Yuma Sector, said the value of the marijuana confiscated can be approximated by multiplying the weight in pounds by $800.
Ninety-nine percent of illegal immigrants apprehended in the Tucson Sector are Mexican nationals, sector spokesman Charles Griffin said.
In Cochise County, Border Patrol agents seized 75,172 pounds of marijuana in 2003, and 175,854 illegal immigrants.
The Border Patrol seized 76,943 pounds of marijuana and 235,549 illegals in fiscal year 2004 within Cochise County.
"We increased our force by 10 percent with the 200 agents that we got," Griffin said. "And these are seasoned officers. They come from many sectors."
Griffin said the increase in apprehensions and seizures is "absolutely" a reflection of the increased ground support in the Tucson Sector and is not necessarily evidence of increased illegal immigrant traffic.
"They were targeting specifically the west desert region - Tucson to Ajo, basically," Griffin said, to prevent migrant deaths "and to grab hold of that area."
"That's been a strategy for quite a while," he said.
This Arizona Border Control Initiative began with the augmented federal border support on March 16, comprising the addition of not only patrol personnel but of more helicopters, "detail agents," and special operations agents. Some of the detail officers to the Tucson Sector are qualified as "Border Patrol Search, Trauma, and Rescue" agents who are trained as medical technicians in addition to border enforcement.
Border Patrol strategy or chosen route for illegal immigrants aside, the numbers have spiked again since the end of the 2004 fiscal year.
Since Sept. 30 through Thursday, the Tucson Sector has recorded 76,408 illegal-migrant apprehensions. During the same period last year, the number of apprehensions was 68,316. The comparison of the three-month time periods yields about an 11 percent jump in apprehensions during the first quarter of this year.
In the Naco-Douglas Corridor of the Tucson Sector, which comprises the area particular of Cochise County's apprehension statistics, the first quarter of fiscal year 2005 shows 37,987 apprehensions, compared to 76,408 for entire Tucson Sector.
Comparatively, the Yuma Sector, which is west of the Tucson Sector, has recorded 22,843 apprehensions in the first quarter of fiscal year 2005. Last year, the Yuma Sector recorded 8,192 apprehensions during the first quarter of the fiscal year.
The Yuma Sector recorded 56,638 illegal immigrant apprehensions total in fiscal year 2003, and 98,060 in fiscal year 2004.
In fiscal year 2003, there were 900,565 total on the entire southwest U.S.-Mexico border and 931,557 by Border Patrol nationwide.
For fiscal year 2004, there were 1,139,282 total apprehensions by Border Patrol on the southwest border and 1,160,395 nationwide.
The working motto of the new initiative is to "gain, maintain, and expand" U.S.-Mexico border enforcement, Griffin said.
For the urban border areas in Arizona, the statistics have changed in ways other than the reactive arrest and confiscation numbers since the mid-1990s, Griffin said. The preventive infrastructure established in Naco, Douglas and Nogales has served a proactive enforcement purpose, he said.
The walls were part of the now-tenured Operation Safeguard within the Tucson Sector.
"Property values rose tremendously," Griffin said. "Crime statistics decreased tremendously."
At that same time, during the mid-1990s and particular to each sector's needs, the El Paso Sector implemented Operation Hold the Line and the San Diego Sector implemented its Operation Gatekeeper.
For such permanent infrastructure, Griffin said, environmental impact studies are done prior to construction. Though no plans to construct another wall in Douglas have been filed, there is an environmental impact study contract under way in that urban border area in Cochise County.
Griffin said the Tucson Sector is well-known as a high-traffic region for illegal migrants, as it comprises approximately 40 to 45 percent of all illegal crossings along the entire southwestern U.S. border.
Cochise County Sheriff Larry Dever said interpretation of apprehension statistics is widely subjective, but added the Sheriff's Department certainly appreciates the Border Patrol and other agencies' presence and dedication in the county. It can be debated indefinitely whether or not increased arrests are the result of more border-crossing activity or improved law enforcement, he said.
"What we do know is that there are still hundreds of thousands of people crossing our border here in Cochise County," Dever said. And while some are caught, many aren't.
He added the county and its courts, health services and residents continue to suffer because of illegal immigration and drug smuggling from Mexico. He feels that without reaching a state of complete border security, "there is no rest."
"For fiscal year 2004, there were 1,139,282 total apprehensions by Border Patrol on the southwest border and 1,160,395 nationwide"
"There are an estimated 80,000 criminal illegal aliens in the country, which are people who have committed crimes in the United States and are due for deportation but remain at large. An estimated 4,000 of those criminal illegal aliens are from countries that support terrorism."
Source: Lou Dobbs
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/12/13/immigration.bill/index.html
Our government at work... pretend something is being done, then do nothing. Keeping the sheeple at bay.
I think they say in Texas "all hat and no cattle". Reminds me of the guy in the WH.
His last speech was literally a broadcasted invitation for millions more to pour in. I am a little surprised that it wasn't done in both English and Spanish.
Of course!
The other fact they don't tell you, is the increase on the Northern border came from seasoned agents from the Southern border.
Its 3 card Monty.
Just think of how many got through over the past years.
Nope, not that I recall.
So write, call, email, fedex, whatever you Congress-critters and get your friends family and neighbors to do the same. We've been saying this for a long time on FR especially those of us on the Forward Edge of the Battle Area, the border with Mexico.
Yes those guys out there on the ground do deserve a raise. I talk to them regularly, they agree with me that they are sent out to do their job with their hands tied behind their back.
If Arizona is the model, we are in trouble, there are still a lot more get away, than get caught.
The AZ program I was referring to is Prop200 that stops all welfare and services to illegals.
Does anyone have a list of organizations that help to catch, apprehend and prosecute the illegals?
(no I am serious wishful thinking about catch and apprehend)
I mean like:
ALIPAC
Report Illegals
Groups like that and also the ones who email and fax Senators for you.
Lets get a list of all groups, organizations and post it, lets stop these turd (third world country) illegals .
Toll-free Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) number to report illegal aliens:
1-866-DHS-2ICE
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.