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BP leaves Rio Grande unguarded

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  • BP leaves Rio Grande unguarded





    McALLEN — When Border Patrol agents assigned to the McAllen Station received their assignments for the 4 p.m. to midnight shift last Saturday, all hell broke loose.

    Typically, agents assigned to the McAllen Station spend their weekend nights tracking undocumented immigrants through the brush between Hidalgo and Sullivan City, a winding 30-mile stretch of the Rio Grande. It’s popular with undocumented immigrants, who dash across the river and melt into small towns along the border.

    Last Saturday, though, the McAllen Station’s shift assignments showed the unthinkable.

    A lone canine unit had been assigned to patrol the border near Mission. Everyone else had been assigned to headquarters, where they would process undocumented immigrants — leaving the Rio Grande virtually unguarded.

    “You put one person out there, that’s like putting a Band-Aid on a broken leg,” said Agent Chris Cabrera, vice president of National Border Patrol Council Local 3307, which represents Rio Grande Valley agents.

    Almost immediately, rank-and-file agents began calling Local 3307 about the problem, Cabrera said, and the union began asking questions. Management later released boats, horse patrol, training units

    and regular agents into

    the field.

    The Monitor reviewed the McAllen Station’s initial shift assignments recorded on a Border Patrol document called Form G-481, which shows every agent’s name and duty, for the 4 p.m. to midnight shift on March 23. The document appears to confirm Cabrera’s account, which was also verified by other agents who wouldn’t speak for attribution.

    Agents speculated the McAllen Station’s management had become overwhelmed with detainees and wasn’t equipped to arrest anyone else.

    Last month, the McAllen Station detained and processed nearly 4,800 people, well above the 2,800 people agents handled in January. Agents have become so concerned about overcrowding and unsanitary conditions that they’ve called the McAllen Fire Department to complain, Fire Marshal Juan P. Salinas said.

    Border Patrol wouldn’t directly address the allegations about staffing, concerned that releasing detailed assignment records would hurt operational security. Asked to comment, Chief Patrol Agent Rosendo Hinojosa, who oversees the Rio Grande Valley Sector, released a statement that dodged questions about the March 23 shift assignments.

    “In the 72 hour period from March 22-24, McAllen agents apprehended nearly 900 people, each of whom had to be individually processed,” according to Hinojosa’s statement. “When a station such as McAllen is heavily burdened due to the number of people in custody, we are obligated to deploy additional resources to the area. Aside from the station personnel, we also have other specialty type personnel to augment line operations and maintain a law enforcement presence along the border.”

    After an inquiry from Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, who serves on the House Appropriations Committee and closely monitors U.S.-Mexico issues, Border Patrol released additional information.

    “I specifically asked their folks, the folks in charge of that area,” Cuellar said. “I said ‘Did you have agents working there?’ and they said ‘Yes, we had agents working there.’”

    Border Patrol had 99 agents working the 4 p.m. to midnight shift on March 23, including 38 assigned to process detainees and another 61 on patrol, Cuellar said, recounting information provided by the agency. During the shift, agents apprehended 63 people, reported 69 turned back after spotting law enforcement and estimated 66 escaped — what Border Patrol calls “got aways.”

    “But again, the folks on the ground and management have a different perspective on this,” Cuellar said.

    With federal budget cuts looming, Local 3307 and the Rio Grande Valley Sector’s management have been increasingly at odds. Agents have recently taken their concerns about border security and staffing public.

    “Most of our guys love to do this job,” Cabrera said. “But lately it’s just deteriorating due to political pressure. People feel, little by little, that they’re not being allowed to do their jobs.”

    The sequester — automatic budget cuts forced by Congress’ inability to reach a spending and debt deal — slashed $521 million from U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s budget. Agents received furlough notices on March 7 and Border Patrol will severely curtail overtime and other payroll expenses.

    To address some of Local 3307’s concerns, including the March 23 shift assignment controversy, Hinojosa attended a union meeting Wednesday night at the Embassy Suites.

    Hinojosa insisted the shift assignment list didn’t involve special units, including boats and mounted agents, who patrolled on March 23. Agents left without finding common ground or reaching an agreement on what happened that night.
    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    I figured after O'bumfuck announced his amnesty deal that the roaches would start running back over here. His intention is to get as many of them over here as possible before the new law takes effect.

    Comment


    • #3
      The only part of that article I find shocking is that the public found out about it.

      Comment


      • #4
        It's not just mcallen, I saw that Laredo and Zapata have open holes too from a BP buddy that says the sequester cut two hours of each shift in the BP agents. Which lead to ultimately a total of 24 hours unprotected borders per week. Watch illegals also flow in and drugs as the Mexican narco state is also being hit with job loss. Mainly due of course for cartels asking for protection money and making mexico insecure as fuck as to kill its nightlife.
        First hand witness at the failure of public healthcare.

        Comment


        • #5
          And this is the result

          Budget cuts, DC debate have illegals surging across Mexican border, experts say
          By William La Jeunesse
          Published April 02, 2013
          FoxNews.com


          Contrary to the Obama administration's claim the border has never been more secure, high-ranking Border Patrol officials in Texas are considering the need for a "tent city" because of a surge of illegal immigrants in the Rio Grande Valley.

          The wave of illegal immigrants, many from Central America, appears to be an unintended consequence of the debate raging in Washington over an immigration bill. In interviews after being apprehended, immigrants say federal budget constraints and expected amnesty or legalization for those already living here make it a no-lose proposition.


          "We've seen a 500 percent surge in the amount of activity from August to December of last year."
          - Janice Kephart, Center for Immigration Studies

          "We've seen a 500 percent surge in the amount of activity from August to December of last year," Janice Kephart, of the Washington-based Center for Immigration Studies, told Fox News.

          Whereas people caught crossing illegally near the Mexican border once opted simply to be turned back, they now increasingly are invoking their right to a hearing, federal sources told Fox News. The reason is twofold: Budget cuts mean they are unlikely to be held pending their appearance, and they also think establishing a paper trail of their presence in the U.S. will help when the debate in Washington ends.

          Border Patrol sources told Fox News the newest illegal immigrants have nothing to fear from being caught.

          “With the knowledge of immigration reform, you will -- and are -- seeing a huge flow of illegals hitting the Southern border looking to stay caught,” a Border Patrol source told Fox News.

          Another said, "Central Americans and South Americans are flooding the system asking for hearings knowing immigration reform/amnesty is coming."

          Last month, the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE and the Border Patrol, announced it was freeing thousands of non-criminal illegal aliens from detention facilities, allowing them to remain in the U.S. while awaiting their hearings. But the source told Fox News that the “notice to appear” they are issued is derisively referred to as a “notice to disappear.”

          Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are trying to reach agreement on a policy that could allow some illegal immigrants to remain in the U.S., while simultaneously discouraging continued border crossings. But the debate, along with the automatic budget cuts prompted by a mandatory action known as sequester have made the process - and its vulnerabilities - transparent. Interviews with illegal immigrants caught near the border indicate that Mexican media outlets have informed the public of about immigration reform and possible furloughs of U.S. government workers. Those are motivating factors.

          Border Patrol sectors had mixed reports for last year, with some showing increases in the flow north and others decreases. But sources said the numbers have spiked dramatically in recent months - coinciding with ICE’s new “catch and release” policy and the budget cuts that make detention a more remote possibility.

          Emails obtained by Fox News show Border Patrol officials in Texas feel overwhelmed by the sudden influx from Mexico.

          "Not sure if you saw our last detention report, but we have approximately 700 [illegal immigrants] ready to go and another 1,000 unprocessed,” read one. "We have been at emergency levels for a while and we are now entering critical mass."

          Another email was even more emphatic.

          “We need to take a hard look at a tent city and maybe even broach the subject with [DHS] Secretary [Janet] Napolitano when she is here,” it read. “Our agents and stations need relief as soon as possible."

          A statement from Customs and Border Protection said adequate resources are being applied to secure the border.

          "Under this administration, DHS has dedicated historic levels of personnel, technology and resources to the Southwest border," read the statement, adding that the agency has more than doubled the number of agents in the last decade. "Additionally, CBP continues to deploy proven, effective surveillance technology tailored to the operational requirements along the highest trafficked areas of the Southwest Border."

          The statement said that apprehensions by the Border Patrol were at or near historic lows in fiscal 2012, which ended in September. Figures were not available for the past six months, in which new factors have arisen that critics say is spurring the current wave.

          Kephart said the newest illegal immigrants know just what they are doing, as Congress moves closer to a bill that would grant some measure of amnesty to those already in the U.S.

          "Everybody talks about the magnet of jobs. The other magnet people are talking about is amnesty,” said Kephart. “That politically is a huge motive for people to try to get here just in time to make it through that process."

          FUCK YOU OBAMA!!

          Comment


          • #6
            But we can spend 1.4 billion sending the failure in charge and his family on vacations so far. FUCK HIM
            Obama family 'costs taxpayers $1.4BILLION per year'
            Politicians looking for savings to deal with the national debt crisis should perhaps start by abolishing the President, as he costs taxpayers over $1.4billion every year.

            Comment


            • #7
              in case you havent noticed immigrants are free to come and go as they please here. we dont enforce the laws. the border patrol is a fucking joke just look around

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              • #8
                The best way to curtail illegals is to have a shitty economy and poor housing market. Barry can claim credit for that.

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