Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Border crackdown fuels smugglers' boom
AP on Yahoo ^ | 12/30/06 | Elliot Spagat - ap

Posted on 12/30/2006 2:13:15 PM PST by NormsRevenge

SAN DIEGO - Toughened U.S. border enforcement has prompted substantially more illegal immigrants to hire smugglers to help them cross over from Mexico — and competition among sophisticated criminal networks for customers has spawned violence and sometimes death.

The evidence is abundant in border boomtowns, where human traffickers rustle together flocks of immigrants for the journey north. Further evidence comes from tens of thousands of interviews of illegal border crossers in surveys by a Mexican government-funded research institution, which were analyzed by The Associated Press.

"What was once a discretionary expense has now become a necessity," said Jorge Santibanez, who oversaw the surveys while president of Tijuana-based El Colegio de la Frontera Norte.

AP's examination of the sweeping data found the use of smugglers on the rise among those surveyed. The interviewees were border crossers who returned to Mexico within three years or were caught and kicked out by the Border Patrol.

About half of those surveyed in 2005 said they had hired a smuggler. That compared to about 1 in 3 in 2004 and just 1 in 6 in 2000.

The actual percentage of illegal immigrants who hire smugglers may be even higher than what the AP analysis found. That's because people may hesitate to admit they hired someone to commit a crime. And the survey excludes those who made it across and remain in the United States — a successful crossing often depends on the expertise of a hired guide.

"You're less likely to get caught if you're using a smuggler," said David Spener, an immigration expert at Trinity University in San Antonio.

While smugglers have spirited people into the United States since Congress first limited immigration in the 1880s, the current spike coincides with heightened border security following the 2001 terrorist attacks.

In this market, where customers pay several times what they did a decade ago, increasingly brazen organizations compete for business.

While most smugglers walk their customers several nights across the deserts that dominate the frontier's nearly 2,000 miles, others take frightening risks.

Inspectors at a San Diego crossing found a 14-year-old girl strapped under the metal bars of a car seat, the driver sitting atop her, and occasionally find children inside compartments that once served as the gas tanks.

Smugglers in Arizona have hijacked loads of customers from rivals — in one case, resulting in a highway shootout that killed four people in 2003. In Tijuana, across from heavily fortified San Diego and the world's busiest border crossing, three bullet-ridden bodies were found in May, covered with roasted chickens. Spanish slang for a smuggler includes "pollero," literally a poultry handler.

"It's become a very good business — more dangerous, but a good business," said Daniel Rivera, 63, who recruits migrants walking the streets of Tijuana.

The Border Patrol has grown from 8,400 agents in 1999 to 12,400 agents today and is projected to reach 18,000 by the end of 2008. President Bush dispatched the National Guard to the border last spring and recently signed legislation to erect 700 miles of fencing from California to Texas. Meanwhile, the government is buying sensors, unmanned aircraft and other border security gadgets.

A senior official at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said the fact that migrants are increasingly relying on smugglers shows that heightened border enforcement is working.

The trend of hiring smugglers is "a natural outgrowth of the fact that we have more control," said Ralph Basham, commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which oversees the Border Patrol. He expects it will continue.

Critics say the border crackdown isn't working, that the U.S. government's own estimates suggest the number of illegal immigrants here grew by 2 million between 2000 and 2005 to 10.5 million people. The big winners, they say, are the smugglers.

"It has turned a modestly lucrative business into a fantastically profitable industry," said Wayne Cornelius, an immigration expert at the University of California, San Diego.

For this story, the AP analyzed the responses of nearly 61,000 illegal immigrants interviewed by El Colegio de la Frontera Norte researchers over six years, ending in June 2005. The college surveys were conducted at airports, bus stations and crossings in eight Mexican border cities, from Tijuana on the Pacific to Matamoros, just south of Brownsville, Texas.

The study is one of the most ambitious efforts to quantify immigrant smuggling between Mexico and the United States. People surveyed were about evenly split between those deported and those who returned voluntarily after crossing successfully within the previous three years.

Nowhere are smugglers more prominent than Arizona — the border's desolate midsection and the central front in the U.S. government's struggle against illegal crossings.

According to AP's analysis, of those who said they crossed the border through one of three major Arizona corridors, 55 percent hired a smuggler last year. That compared to 28 percent in 2003 and 18 percent in 2000.

Along the entire border the numbers were slightly lower: 47 percent of respondents in 2005 hired a smuggler, up from 20 percent in 2003 and 16 percent in 2000.

For Meliton Aurelio Sanchez, hiring a smuggler became a life-and-death question.

The 42-year-old father of three from Mexico's Veracruz state didn't bother hiring a smuggler in 2001 when he and a friend hiked two days across the border near Naco, Ariz., eventually settling in North Carolina to make $6 an hour as a carpenter.

Sanchez eventually returned home and in May set off again for North Carolina. At the same border he crossed without help before, he paused — spooked by the deaths of hundreds of migrants who perish each year in the desert and convinced that heightened enforcement would force him along obscure routes.

"I'd get lost if I tried alone, left to die in the desert," Sanchez said.

So Sanchez agreed to pay a smuggler $1,500 to get him to Phoenix — like many, he would pay nothing unless he crossed successfully.

Over a two-week span he tried to cross four times in groups of about 20 people, but the Border Patrol nabbed him each time. After being dumped back into Mexico, Sanchez would return to the bustling border boomtown of Altar, a 90-minute drive from the Arizona state line. Mexicans who are arrested are typically freed within 24 hours, after a quick stop at jail for fingerprints. (Sanchez eventually got across. In a later phone interview from Durham, N.C., where he landed a $10-an-hour carpentry job, he said he paid $1,800 to a smuggler to be guided across the Rio Grande near Laredo, Texas, and be shuttled to Chicago by van and bus.)

Like an army in the field, smuggling networks require layers of support. Entrepreneurs have remade Altar, where dozens of boarding houses have sprouted in recent years and shuttle vans line the central square, where migrants gather before they cross. Taco stands share space with a Red Cross trailer that treats migrants for blisters, parasites and swollen fingers.

Francisco Garcia, a former Altar mayor who now runs a migrant shelter, has tallied 14 hotels, 80 boarding houses and 120 taxis — for a community of about 16,000 permanent residents.

"You would think this was a tourist spot but we have nothing — no architecture, no beaches to show off," said Garcia, who describes the town as "the waiting room for migrants."

An estimated 3,500 people pass through every day from January to April, the peak crossing season — before summer, after a home visit for Christmas. Vans line the square, cramming up to 30 people inside and charging the equivalent of $30 a person for a ride to the border.

Tijuana's red-light district offers another glimpse of the increasingly sophisticated smuggling trade.

Before a crackdown in the mid-'90s, illegal immigrants famously massed along an open border and sprinted into the night.

As security increased, smugglers worked solo, collecting $300 tips to guide immigrants on a short walk into San Diego, where the customers would hop a trolley or be collected by a friend or relative. Then came two steel mesh fences, along with more Border Patrol agents, stadium lighting and motion sensors.

Now, the men who worked as solo smugglers a decade ago are minions in a larger scheme. They get paid about $100 to recruit migrants on Tijuana's streets for organizations that charge $1,600 to sneak people through the mountains near Tecate, 35 miles east of San Diego. Some migrants pay $2,500 to hide inside a car trunk.

"Times have changed — it's a lot more difficult to get across, there are a lot more problems, and there's a lot more walking," said Juan Torres, 45, a smuggler who leads immigrants through the mountains. His cut is about $300 from the usual $1,600 fee. Drivers and people who run safehouses in the United States also get a cut.

Migrants linger inside dingy Tijuana hotels, waiting for a cab or bus ride before sunset to begin a trek that can last up to four days. A driver meets them on the U.S. side and speeds them to a drop house, sometimes with deadly consequences as they try to evade Border Patrol highway checkpoints.

One man who survived a July 2005 crash that killed five people — including the man's pregnant wife, 13-year-old son and 11-year-old daughter — said he had agreed to pay $1,500 a person to get his family from Tijuana to Los Angeles.

Business is so good that some Border Patrol agents are taking a cut. In one of several recent convictions, two supervisory agents in southeastern California admitted taking nearly $180,000 in bribes to release immigrant smugglers and illegal immigrants from federal custody.

Smugglers — often called "coyotes" — have flourished for decades and witnessed boom times before. Demand grew after a temporary worker program with Mexico ended in 1965 and again after the 1990s crackdown in San Diego and El Paso, Texas.

Smuggling entered a new growth phase after 2000 as the Border Patrol shifted agents to Arizona. The Border Patrol's Arizona stations accounted for half of the agency's 1.2 million arrests along the Mexican border in 2005, up from only 8 percent of 1.2 million arrests in 1992.

U.S. officials say they make no systematic effort to track how many of the people they arrest hired smugglers. Customs and Border Protection has not responded to a Freedom of Information Act that the AP submitted in April to disclose what information it collects in the Border Patrol's database of apprehensions.

Bulmaro Arizmendez del Carpio, 22, was one of those caught by the Border Patrol. He decided to save the $1,600 fee and forsake a guide, then walked three days in triple-digit temperatures in early June before being arrested with 17 others outside Phoenix. After the first day he ran out of water and twice had to fill jugs with dirty water from cow tanks. His feet were covered with blisters.

Back at a bus station in Mexico, where he was deported, Arizmendez said, "If we had hired a smuggler it would have been different."

___

Associated Press researcher John Parsons contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; Mexico; Politics/Elections; US: Arizona; US: California; US: New Mexico; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: aliens; border; bordersecurity; coyotes; crackdown; illegalaliens; illegals; immigrantlist; immigration; smugglers

Protesters calling for immigration law reform march past the Capitol Building during a rally on the Washington Mall September 7, 2006. According to the Pew Hispanic Center, there are 2 million families in the United States with mixed status, meaning some members are undocumented. (Jason Reed/Reuters)


1 posted on 12/30/2006 2:13:17 PM PST by NormsRevenge
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge
a flashback from the year gone by ...

An elevated passenger train passes over a street jammed with demonstrators during a march through downtown Chicago, in this May 1, 2006, file photo, to show support for immigrant rights. The demonstration was part of a nationwide action that is meant to show both support for immigration reform and opposition to legislation that would criminalize the actions of an estimated 11 million illegal immigrants. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast/FILE)


2 posted on 12/30/2006 2:14:24 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ......)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: NormsRevenge
Bush's fault.. :-\

sorry.

PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2006 U.S. President George W. Bush speaks about immigration reform at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington June 1, 2006. REUTERS/Larry Downing (UNITED STATES)

4 posted on 12/30/2006 2:17:02 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ......)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge

When the price of drugs goes up due to enforcement, that is seen as a success.. when the price of getting into the country illegally goes up, that is seen as a failure.

Bizarro world.


5 posted on 12/30/2006 2:23:34 PM PST by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge

"Bush's fault.. :-\
sorry."

This time it actually is.


6 posted on 12/30/2006 2:24:21 PM PST by BW2221
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge
The press secretary for the California Republican Party is the son of illegal aliens who came the USA 35 years ago. In this article he chronicles how in recent years there has been a massive change in the number and kind of illegals coming north. Including a crimnal element that is causing a deterioration in the quality of life of Americans. Consider this article Illegal aliens murder 12 Americans daily Death toll in 2006 far overshadows total U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq, Afghanistan

People have been referring to the Captains Quarters as a rebuke to the assertions of the article. The Captain's Quarters makes the assertion that -- for the numbers to be true -- it would have to be the case that a small number of people were committing a lot of crimes. That is to say far outside the statistical norm for the USA. The problem is that he didn't actually check the federal stats. As it happens it is the case that illegals tend to be very repeat offenders.

Below are some government stats to back up the article's assertioms

From the FBI crime statistics * An estimated 16,692 persons were murdered nationwide in 2005, an increase of 3.4 percent from the 2004 figure. * Murder comprised 1.2 percent of the overall estimated number of violent crimes in 2005. (Based on Table 1.) * There were an estimated 5.6 murders per 100,000 inhabitants.

Illegal Alien Crime Wave

On April 7, 2005, the US Justice Department issued a report on criminal aliens that were incarcerated in federal and state prisons and local jails. In the population study of 55,322 illegal aliens, researchers found that they were arrested at least a total of 459,614 times, averaging about 8 arrests per illegal alien. Nearly all had more than 1 arrest. Thirty-eight percent (about 21,000) had between 2 and 5 arrests, 32 percent (about 18,000) had between 6 and 10 arrests, and 26 percent (about 15,000) had 11 or more arrests. Most of the arrests occurred after 1990. They were arrested for a total of about 700,000 criminal offenses, averaging about 13 offenses per illegal alien. One arrest incident may include multiple offenses, a fact that explains why there are nearly one and half times more offenses than arrests. Almost all of these illegal aliens were arrested for more than 1 offense. Slightly more than half of the 55,322 illegal aliens had between 2 and 10 offenses.

CRIMINAL HISTORY

More than two-thirds of the defendants charged with an immigration offense were identified as having been previously arrested. Thirty-six percent had been arrested on at least 5 prior occasions; 22%, 2 to 4 times; and 12%,1 time. Sixty-one percent of those defendants had been convicted at least once; 18%, 5 or more times; 26%, 2 to 4 times; and 17%, 1 time. Of those charged, 49% had previously been convicted of a felony: 20% of a drug offense; 18%, a violent offense; and 11%, other felony offenses. Twelve percent had previously been convicted of a misdemeanor. Defendants charged with unlawful reentry had the most extensive criminal histories. Nine in ten had been previously arrested. Of those with a prior arrest, half had been arrested on at least 5 prior occasions. Fifty-six percent of those charged with a reentry offense had previously been convicted of a violent or drug-related felony. By contrast, under half of those charged with alien smuggling, a third of those charged with unlawful entry, and just over a quarter those charged with misuse of visas and other charges had previously been arrested. The criminal histories of these defendants were generally less extensive: more than 70% had been previously arrested fewer than 5 times. Sources: US Department of Homeland Security, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, National Security Institute, National Association of Chiefs of Police, US Department of Justice
7 posted on 12/30/2006 2:24:26 PM PST by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge
Six gang rapes by illegal aliens,
Smugglers of Illegal Aliens Cause Rising Violence in Arizona
America as Predators Paradise
More illegal aliens tried in gang rapes

Man (illegal alien), 19, accused of lewd and lascivious acts with girl, 13
Illegal aliens linked to gang-rape wave

14 farm workers arrested in kidnap, rape
Sting rounds up 25 foreigners for sex crimes
Illegal alien rapes puppy
Study: 1 million sex crimes by illegals - 100 offenders crossing border daily
Charge is sex with 13 year old
Border Sex Slave Ring Defendant Gets 10 Years

Jeffersonville suspect caught in Louisville (molested 8 year old girl)
Court dates loom in taxi, school rapes
Man sentenced to 20 years under new sex offender law (raped 8 year old)
Illegal immigrant rapes one woman and assaults another
4 illegal aliens gang-rape woman in NYC,

Another Child and drug Smuggling Arrest at Hidalgo Port
16 Year Old Illegal Immigrant sentenced to 33 years for rape and burglary
Feds Bust 25 Illegal Alien Sexual Predators in L.A.
Illegal alien suspect in newlywed's rape arrested in Texas
Calif. fugitive wanted on sex charges arrested at Canadian border
Man, 19, accused of lewd and lascivious acts with girl, 13

Illegal Immigrant Arrested for Rape of Newlywed
Jamaican Immigrant Sentenced for Rape of 13-Year-Old
Fugitive Sexual Predators Wanted by Interpol Nabbed in New Jersey
Illegal immigrant denied bail reduction (for trying to abduct 11 year old girl)
Child-rape suspect tells police he has HIV
(raped 5 year old and knew he had HIV)
Man pleads guilty in Frame Park rape
Illegal immigrant pleads guilty to assaulting 6-year-old girl

Illegal Immigrant Suspected in Rapes and Dozens of Sexual Assaults,
More Details on Illegal Immigrant Accused of Raping Children,
Illegal aliens linked to gang-rape wave - The crime epidemic no one will talk about?,
Outrage as 'rapist' vanishes,
Illegal immigrants charged with sexual assault on two 13 year old girls,
Illegal immigrant is given 10 years in gross sexual imposition case,

Theories swirl around Friday's kidnapping, rape,
Illegal immigrant accused of impregnating 10-year-old girl
“Worst of the worst” arrested during Special Operation
, Illegal alien kidnaps and rapes 9 year old girl,
Immigrant Suspected in 7 Sexual Assaults,
Police Looking For Illegal Immigrant Suspected Of Raping A Child,
Illegal Immigrant Charged with Sodomizing Young Boy,
Members of Mexican Sex Slave Ring Sentenced,
Illegal alien jailed for sexual assault of girl, 14

,
16-year-old illegal immigrant sentenced for brutal knifepoint rape
, Naked illegal alien In Mask Attacks Babysitter,
36 Immigrant Sex Offenders Arrested In Orange County
,
Illegal immigrant is given 10 years in gross sexual imposition case,
8 posted on 12/30/2006 2:24:59 PM PST by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge

Mines. Machine Guns. Cobra's, Abrams, Hummer's, Grunts, A-10's, Marines, Soldiers, Hunters, or whatever else it takes.

Why are we still talking about this?


9 posted on 12/30/2006 2:26:39 PM PST by Gunny Gene
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge

The availability of cheap illegal labor, on this side of the border, has resulted in many American employers becoming law breakers, and the article reveals accelerating law breaking and violence on the other side.

I hope that those who are responsible for this situation will one day find themselves indicted, tried, convicted, and punished for their criminal negligence.


10 posted on 12/30/2006 2:30:32 PM PST by gas0linealley
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: gas0linealley

The availability of cheap illegal labor, on this side of the border, has resulted in many American employers becoming law breakers, and the article reveals accelerating law breaking and violence on the other side.


I'm surrounded by convenience stores, banks and little kids with lunch money but I haven't robbed anyone.


11 posted on 12/30/2006 2:36:39 PM PST by freedomfiter2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge; glock rocks; jennivinson
>>The actual percentage of illegal immigrants who hire smugglers may be even higher than what the AP analysis found. That's because people may hesitate to admit they hired someone to commit a crime.

Shocking. Even the AP admits it is a crime to sneak across the border! Holy Mackeral Andy! Truth on the AP in 2006. Maybe 2007 is going to be a good year after all.

12 posted on 12/30/2006 2:49:31 PM PST by B4Ranch (Press "1" for English, or Press "2" and you will be disconnected until you learn to speak English.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: gas0linealley

"I hope that those who are responsible for this situation will one day find themselves indicted, tried, convicted, and punished for their criminal negligence."

You want to see the President in jail?


13 posted on 12/30/2006 2:54:00 PM PST by BW2221
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: NormsRevenge
the U.S. government's own estimates suggest the number of illegal immigrants here grew by 2 million between 2000 and 2005 to 10.5 million people

Bump

14 posted on 12/30/2006 2:59:34 PM PST by A. Pole (Hugo Chavez: "Huele a azufre, pero Dios está con nosotros")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: ckilmer
You may want to add two more cases to your excellent list of links. Both cases quite recent, within the past 2 - 3 weeks.

The illegal alien scum who shot that police officer in Long Beach (SoCal). Caught and killed by police gunfire in Santa Ana within the last several days. This one had been deported three times previously. No need for a fourth time.

The two scum who shot at police in the Orangefair Mall (Fullerton, SoCal). Police returned fire, killing the driver and wounding the other one. One, possibly both, are illegal aliens.

Multicultural diversity at work...

15 posted on 12/30/2006 3:22:27 PM PST by Czar ( StillFedUptotheTeeth@Washington)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: BW2221
You want to see the President in jail?

Wouldn't bother me any. You do know his maid was an Illegal, she now works in the white house and is legal.

16 posted on 12/30/2006 3:24:49 PM PST by org.whodat (Never let the facts get in the way of a good assumption.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: 1_Inch_Group; 2sheep; 2Trievers; 3AngelaD; 3pools; 3rdcanyon; 4Freedom; 4ourprogeny; 7.62 x 51mm; ..

ping


17 posted on 12/31/2006 12:48:54 PM PST by gubamyster
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Comment #18 Removed by Moderator

To: Ladycalif
All material from La Opinion is link and excerpt only.

Updated FR Excerpt and Link Only or Deny Posting List due to Copyright Complaints

19 posted on 01/04/2007 8:41:00 PM PST by Admin Moderator
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]

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.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson