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CORRUPTION CROSSES THE BORDER WITH AGENT BRIBES
The Houston Chronicle ^ | 30 May 2005 | James Pinkerton

Posted on 05/30/2005 8:55:33 PM PDT by MeneMeneTekelUpharsin

MCALLEN - The Border Patrol checkpoint on a remote stretch of South Texas ranchland was the ideal route for a drug trafficking ring to move tons of marijuana. To make sure their product got through, traffickers paid $1.5 million to U.S. Border Patrol agent Juan Alfredo Alvarez, 35, to wave trucks loaded with a ton or more of marijuana through checkpoints outside Hebbronville, according to a plea bargain Alvarez agreed to earlier this month. As Mexican drug cartels have transformed the Texas-Mexico border into one of the major transport corridors for marijuana, cocaine and heroin, traffickers have stepped up their efforts to bribe agents.

While attention has been focused on the wide-scale corruption of Mexican law enforcement officials by powerful drug organizations, recent investigations along the border have revealed corruption of several U.S. agents at key international crossings. Alvarez, who awaits sentencing, joined nearly a half-dozen federal agents on the Texas border who have been convicted or charged in the past few months of taking bribes from drug dealers or human smugglers. Two weeks ago, members of a U.S. Justice Department sting operation arrested 17 current or former military and law enforcement officers who allegedly were paid $220,000 by undercover agents to allow counterfeit drugs to cross check- points on the Arizona border.

The most recent Texas corruption convictions include:

•Gerardo Diaz, a 43-year-old U.S. Customs and Border Protection inspector who pleaded guilty in El Paso to accepting a $15,000 bribe to allow five kilos of cocaine to enter the Ysleta port of entry. He was sentenced in March to eight years in prison.

•In April, U.S. Customs and Border Protection inspector Fabian Solis, 41, was convicted of taking $300 for each undocumented alien he allowed to enter the country at international bridges in Roma and Rio Grande City. He is awaiting sentencing. Veteran prosecutors and federal agents say trying to bribe an official who mans a border crossing point, a highway checkpoint in the interior, or a stretch of the Rio Grande is a risky but successful tactic.

"To a drug organization, it's the logical extension of a successful business plan," explained former federal prosecutor Eric Reed, who entered private practice in Houston earlier this year. ''I mean, if you have a hook in a law enforcement officer, you've got it made."

For the love of money

The reasons for corruption are varied, officials say, and include the experience of living in close-knit border communities where future drug smugglers grow up and attend school alongside future police officers. Additionally, drug organizations are known to use women to induce agents to help smuggling operations, one prosecutor notes. ''It's usually the money and sex because lots of times there's a woman involved," said a prosecutor, who asked not to be identified. ''Usually it's a male person taking the bribes."

And the bribe amounts can be staggering.

''It's the money and weakness," said one longtime U.S. agent stationed on the border, who would only speak if his name was not used. "It doesn't take a whole lot to approach an officer at a Port of Entry and ask, 'How would you like to make $5,000 a car?' " Federal agents on the border earn more than local police, and a rookie Border Patrol officer is paid $35,000, while experienced customs or immigration inspectors can earn up to $70,000 with overtime, agency officials said. In a corruption case pending in McAllen, a U.S. Customs inspector living in a $500,000 home — complete with a basement movie theater — is accused of accepting up to $10,000 for each drug-loaded vehicle he allegedly waved through his inspection lane on an international bridge. FBI agents testified the inspector was working for two drug organizations. Houston-based U.S. Attorney Mike Shelby, who heads prosecutions in the sprawling South Texas judicial district, said that only terrorist attacks present a more dangerous threat to American society than corruption of public officials.

''Corruption undermines public confidence in all institutions of government, and rightly so," said Shelby, a veteran prosecutor who is stepping down June 11 to begin private practice. ''If you believe public officials are using public office for personal gain, it's difficult for people to believe government is working on their behalf. So when we find it, we use every tool available to prosecute it." Shelby, who in 2001 became chief prosecutor of a 43-county region that includes the border from Brownsville to Laredo, said he boosted the public integrity division from one to five full-time prosecutors. Criminal cases against corrupt officials climbed from four in 2001 to nine cases in 2002, 15 cases in 2003, and 17 last year, he said. Shelby expects this year's prosecutions of corrupt officials will exceed last year's. The public officials are a wide and varying group, including not only border law agents but county commissioners, school board administrators and trustees, city managers, zoning inspectors, state prosecutors, defense attorneys and constables.

But Shelby said the Texas border is no more corrupt than any other in the world, and it is the international exchange of commerce — and not the people — that engenders graft. ''The temptations are so great in the border environment — whether it's in Texas, Arizona or Minnesota — the border itself creates a unique opportunity and unique temptations, and it's true in the U.S., Europe, Africa and Asia," he said. The wealth offered by traffickers is tempting, the prosecutor notes, since ''border officials are often not paid very well for their efforts and, by contrast, people involved in illegal activities on the border are rewarded quite handsomely." Prosecutors are trying to prove that was the situation with longtime U.S. Customs inspector Lizandro Martinez, who earned $55,600 a year but was arrested in December at his north McAllen home worth $529,963. The home, one of three the agent owns, featured a swimming pool cabana with five showers, a basement movie theater and expensive furniture, an FBI agent testified. Martinez, 43, a federal inspector since 1991, has denied the charges.

Lawsuits and benefits

In pretrial hearings, his relatives have said the inspector's income included settlements from civil lawsuits and income tax refunds, as well as government reinstatement benefits after his union successfully fought two past suspensions from the U.S. Customs Service. During a detention hearing, an FBI agent testified that video cameras recorded Martinez on seven occasions waving marijuana-laden pickup trucks through his lane while he worked the midnight-to-dawn shift at the Progreso International Bridge. ''They were filled to the top with marijuana ... sometimes you could see it protruding" from beneath plastic tarps, FBI agent Marella Rueles testified. The FBI agent testified that a suspected drug trafficker, who worked with Martinez when they were both young police officers in nearby Hidalgo, was seen driving up to the inspector's post and signaling how many loaded trucks were to be allowed in without inspection. The inspector would then switch off the automatic license plate reader, which records vehicles entering the United States, and allow the pickups to enter without inspection, according to testimony.

In denying bond, U.S. Magistrate Dorina Ramos expressed ''great concern" about the inspector's financial status, noting Martinez had filed for bankruptcy three times but managed to acquire $217,000 in equity in his homes and a used-car dealership. FBI agents traced an additional $400,000 in cash expenditures he made in 2003, the judges detention order reads. Martinez and 12 co-defendants are scheduled for trial in June.

Prior relationships

Former prosecutor Reed, who grew up in Brownsville and has handled corruption cases over the past decade, said agents frequently are corrupted by old friends. "In so many of these cases, it seems like the law enforcement officer has a prior relationship with the trafficker," Reed said. ''Or a relationship with someone who introduces them, or they have a girlfriend who introduces them." ''And then, it's just the easy money. The rash of arrests and predictions that more will occur as trafficking increases on the Texas border have angered and embarrassed the ranks of federal officers on the border. They say the majority are honest, but they know it is a tough job to stamp out graft entirely. '''How do you stop corruption? You don't, as long as there is money and weakness in the system," said the longtime U.S. border agent. ''You have to keep monitoring."


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; border; bordersecurity; bribes; corruption; dhs; govwatch; illegal; immigrantlist; immigratio; mexicanmafia; mexico; smuggling; texas; wod; wodlist
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To: TKDietz
White boys from up north aren't corruptible? Tell us another one.

Oh, they're corruptible, but La Mordida is more of a foreign practice to them. Also they don't have cultural links to the perps.

The "White boys from up north" still consider the people coming across the border as foreigners.

41 posted on 05/31/2005 6:37:46 AM PDT by Max in Utah (By their works you shall know them.)
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To: Faithfull
There are a couple of problems with not hiring Mexican Americans to work as border patrol agents. First of course is the legal issues that would bring. The government cannot discriminate against Americans who happen to have a Mexican heritage. If they did they'd be discriminating against most Americans living in the southern border areas. This would not only be illegal but it would drastically cut their hiring pool and leave them far less prospective employees to choose from. Also, the border patrol requires its agents who deal with people on the Mexican border to speak Spanish. This is done out of necessity because so many if not most of the people they deal with do not speak English.

Even if the border patrol fired or reassigned everyone with Mexican heritage and hired nothing but blue eyed white Baptists from northern states who happen to speak Spanish, we'd still have corruption at the border. Organized crime from south of the border would find out everything they could about the people working in key positions. Learn their weaknesses. Find out who their friends are. Send beautiful women to tempt them and old "friends" to try to steer them down the wrong path. Find ways to blackmail them. It wouldn't be long before some of them were on the take and it only takes one to get tons of drugs through.
42 posted on 05/31/2005 6:47:18 AM PDT by TKDietz
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To: Max in Utah

I think you are naive. There is plenty of corruption even up north when it comes to drug money. White boys from up north are not immune to this. Some would take money and it only takes a few to get the drugs through.


43 posted on 05/31/2005 6:52:26 AM PDT by TKDietz
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To: MeneMeneTekelUpharsin
The reasons for corruption are varied, officials say, and include the experience of living in close-knit border communities where future drug smugglers grow up and attend school alongside future police officers.

But Shelby said the Texas border is no more corrupt than any other in the world, and it is the international exchange of commerce — and not the people — that engenders graft.

"It's not MY fault I broke the law! I'm just a victim of "international commerce" and of being brought up "in a close-knit border community".

44 posted on 05/31/2005 7:36:20 AM PDT by DumpsterDiver
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To: MeneMeneTekelUpharsin; KC_for_Freedom; PetroniDE; the mo; MSM; Sweet_Sunflower29; TLI; ...

BP Bribes Ping!

Please FReepmail me if you want on or off this South Texas/Mexico ping list.


45 posted on 05/31/2005 7:50:41 AM PDT by SwinneySwitch (Remember, this is only a temporary exile!)
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To: HiJinx

Protect our borders and coastlines from all foreign invaders!

Be Ever Vigilant!

Minutemen Patriots ~ Bump!


46 posted on 05/31/2005 8:35:53 AM PDT by blackie (Be Well~Be Armed~Be Safe~Molon Labe!)
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To: Brad's Gramma

Yeah, the Mintemen are vigilante scum. Just ask Bush, and the rest of the pro illegal crowd in D.C. who have been bought off for cheap labor.


47 posted on 05/31/2005 8:42:59 AM PDT by international american (Tagline now flameproof....purchased from "Conspiracy Guy Custom Taglines"LLC)
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To: Happy2BMe

Amen.


48 posted on 05/31/2005 8:44:06 AM PDT by international american (Tagline now flameproof....purchased from "Conspiracy Guy Custom Taglines"LLC)
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To: Razz Barry
I'd like the return of public executions for treasonous acts as this.

Get to work on building public support for that. (I'll be opposed, as I think that punishment is disproportionate to the crime.)

49 posted on 05/31/2005 9:10:06 AM PDT by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: international american
Just ask Bush, and the rest of the pro illegal crowd in D.C. who have been bought off for cheap labor.

I think you hit the nail on the head. The bribery and corruption go to the very top of our government!

A substantial portion of the Senate is bought and paid for by the cheap labor lobby and nobody has yet come out with a reasonable explanation of President Bush's refusal to enforce our laws.

50 posted on 05/31/2005 9:20:24 AM PDT by jackbenimble (Import the third world, become the third world)
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To: MeneMeneTekelUpharsin
In Mexico bribery and corruption is culturally accepted. One is not allowed to surmise a correlation between surnames and corruption, thus it must just be a coincidence.

I just love letting all these illegals in, we are moving towards becoming the sewer that Mexico is at a faster rate. Presidente Bush will have a legacy of the do nothing President when it comes to the homeland and the interferer when it comes to Afghanistan and Iraq..lovely...
51 posted on 05/31/2005 9:44:16 AM PDT by rolling_stone
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To: Gunrunner2

Bill and Hillary became millionaires and Harry Truman went back to Independence and lived in his mother-in-law's house.

My,how things have changed.


52 posted on 05/31/2005 11:31:31 AM PDT by Mears (Keep the government out of my face!)
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To: Spiff; B4Ranch; Travis McGee; Marine Inspector

news on Aguilar
6/6/05
Cheating down on the border - A kickback scheme among federal agents in Arizona results in some charges--and plenty of questions
By Edward T. Pound
"two men alleged that DAVID AGUILAR--now the head of the Border Patrol in Washington, directing the enforcement efforts of 11,000 agents nationwide--and senior managers in Douglas were aware of the kickback scheme but did nothing to stop it. At the time, Aguilar was the chief patrol agent in Tucson.

Now, the Office of Special Counsel, after reviewing the case for more than two years, has rendered its verdict, one that is sharply critical of both the Border Patrol and its parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security...Special Counsel Scott Bloch said that the agency "failed to thoroughly investigate the whistle-blowers' allegations" against senior Border Patrol officials. He concluded: "It is simply not credible that 45 employees at a single Border Patrol station could engage in a pattern of conduct sufficiently egregious to warrant severe discipline without the knowledge of management.

...Aguilar strongly denied the allegations that he knew of the kickback scheme and did nothing about it." link: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050606/6border.htm

another DHS article, haven't read this one:
5/30/05
Security At Any Price?
Homeland protection isn't just Job 1 in Washington; it's more like a big old government ATM
By Angie C. Marek
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050530/30homeland.htm


53 posted on 05/31/2005 11:22:38 PM PDT by getgoing
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