Posted on 02/06/2006 4:45:25 AM PST by FerdieMurphy
Federal agents assigned to the Department of Homeland Securitys Border Enforcement Security Task Force or BEST, in Laredo, Texas, have seized materials for 33 Improvised Explosive Devices, grenade components, large quantities of assault weapons, rifles, silencers, machine gun assembly kits, bulletproof vests, police scanners, narcotics and cash. On January 27, 2006, BEST task force officers from the FBI, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Laredo Police Department executed a search warrant at a location in Laredo. The search revealed two completed Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) and materials for making approximately 33 more IEDs.
Agents also discovered 300 primers, 1,280 rounds of ammunition, 5 grenade shells, 9 pipes with end caps, 26 grenade triggers (14 with fuses and primers attached), 31 grenade spoons, 40 grenade pins, 19 black powder casings, as well as 65 firearm magazines, a silencer, and other firearms components.
The day before the seizure of the IEDs, members of the BEST task force arrested an accused weapons dealer/manufacturer in Laredo and found a weapons cache at his home. On January 26, 2006, agents arrested the 30-year-old man for federal firearms violations after he allegedly sold a fully-automatic AK-47 assault rifle and cocaine to an undercover ICE agent.
A search of his home revealed 6 kits to assemble fully-automatic weapons and at least 20 assembled firearms, including AK-47 and AR-15 assault rifles, pistols and rifles. Agents also found 26 firearm magazines, 2 silencers, 2 bulletproof vests, sniper scopes, police scanners, pinhole cameras, 2,600 rounds of ammunition, quantities of cocaine, methamphetamine and cash.
On January 12, 2006, BEST team members arrested another Laredo resident after executing a search warrant on his home where they found firearms and narcotics. Agents seized roughly 400 pounds of marijuana, two AK-47 assault weapons, two Uzi assault weapons, a silencer, and approximately $5,000.
Formerly known as Operation Black Jack, BEST is a Homeland Security-led, intelligence-driven task force that was created in Laredo in July 2005. Officers from federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies are collocated in the task force to share information and target the leadership and supporting infrastructure of violent criminal organizations operating in the Laredo/Nuevo Laredo area.
Since its inception, BEST has arrested 28 individuals and seized 36 assault rifles, 10 handguns, 5 silencers, a large quantity of weapons components, kits, and ammunition, as well as roughly 700 pounds of marijuana, 336 pounds of cocaine, 1.5 pounds of methamphetamine and roughly $1.14 million.
The BEST in Laredo is composed of agents and officers from ICE, ATF, Customs and Border Protection, Drug Enforcement Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation, US Marshals Service, Texas Department of Public Safety, Laredo Police Department, and other state and local law enforcement agencies. The United States Attorneys Office and the District Attorneys Office provide significant support to BEST.
Some other recent enforcement actions by the task force include the following:
On October 27, 2005, BEST team members traveled to Rockwall, Texas, after receiving information that two subjects wanted for murder in Laredo lived there. A search of a residence resulted in the arrest of the two subjects wanted for drug-related murders that occurred as far back as 2003. During the search, agents also encountered four additional subjects who were arrested for various crimes. Two subjects were arrested for entering the country without inspection. One was also a person of interest in a 2003 murder in Laredo. Another subject was a fugitive from the US Marshals Service. Another, the occupant of the residence, was arrested for possession of cocaine and marijuana. The search also resulted in the seizure of $132,991, a handgun, money counter, and scales.
On October 11, 2005, BEST team members received information about a residence in Laredo where a homicide suspect might be located. The information was shared with the Laredo Police Department who investigated. The next day the Laredo Police Department contacted BEST when the investigation revealed that the homicide suspect was not located there, but $342,880 in currency and 10 fully-automatic AK-47s weapons had been discovered.
The BEST investigation has revealed that the occupant at the home was guarding the weapons and currency prior to them being smuggled to Mexico and that he was working for a cell operating on behalf of reputed Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin Chapo Guzman. Much of the violence in the Nuevo Laredo area is caused by competition between the remnants of Mexicos Gulf Cartel which is supervised by Osiel Cardenas Guillen, and Joaquin Chapo Guzman Loera and Arturo Beltran Leyva, who are members of the Federation that is attempting to take control of this important smuggling Plaza.
Last month, the Department of Homeland Security announced that several new BEST task forces would be created along the border based on the Laredo BEST model. The new task forces will focus on every element of the enforcement process, from interdiction to prosecution and removal, with the goal of eliminating the top leadership and supporting infrastructures that sustain cross-border criminal organizations.
The next BEST will be stood up in Arizona, after Homeland Security conducts a threat assessment of that area. Homeland Security will conduct similar assessments as it moves forward in establishing more task forces and will constantly measure results in order to refine and focus its enforcement actions.
Sources: US Department of Homeland Security, Federal Bureau of Investigation, US Department of Justice, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, US Attorney's Office, National Security Institute
Oh, don't worry!!!
Just selling those guns and drugs the Americans won't sell.
Uh oh...
When are we going to build the fence?
Committing the domestic terror that Americans are unwilling to commit...
To Kill People.
It's from the Sierra Times. They're somewhat agenda-driven, and you'll notice from the blurb at the bottom that the article relies primarily on "sources," which could mean pretty much anybody who happens to be associated with the federal agencies. At any rate, those "sources" probably didn't include any names, and they may not even have had personal knowledge of the cases.
Not drug RUNNERS, but drug WARRIORS. These people are trying, successfully, to bring the equivalent Colombian Drug Wars right home to our borders. It may be narco-terror, and not islamic terror, but the disease and the cure are awfully similar. I expect if the roots ever get teased out, we will find that they each have their nasty tentacles embracing the other.
It is almost unbellievable how the Oval Office of the President of the United States is not heading up these America saving activities.
This is in the face of all the posturing Bush is doing on a regular basis when he "bleats" incessantly about his absolute duty to protect America at all costs and then is missing in action by not leading the charge.
The drug runners on this border are terrorists. I would be surprised if they are not linked in some way to the terrorists you are thinking of.
The illegals who pick the fruit, and veggies, and the sheet-rockers are indeed linked to this. Illegal immigration and smuggling of people and drugs are completely intertwined on the border. One feeds on another; many illegals pay the coyote who smuggles them in by bringing in drugs. Illegal immigration, smuggling and Mexican military incursions are all related activities and it is a never ending increasingly violent circle.
Should the two meet, prayers...
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