Adios and good riddance, Elvira Arellano 

Filed under: General on Tuesday, August 21st, 2007 by Tarantulas | 1 Comment

This is an excellent commentary on the Arellano fiasco, showing how it has hurt everyone.

BLUFF CALLED | Felon with huge sense of entitlement mocked law, gave immigrants stigma

The faceoff has ended. The lady in the church snuck out, made it as far as L.A., got nabbed by the feds and is finally back in Mexico.

Most people couldn’t pronounce her name and didn’t know she slipped into the country not once but a second time after border officials made it clear she was not to return. After being welcomed with open arms by whoever hires the cleaning ladies at O’Hare Airport, she was snagged in a post-9/11 raid and, a newly convicted felon, was ordered out of the country in 2004.

She refused to go, saying it was unfair for the government to separate her from her son Saul, who she said needed to be here to get treatment for “severe attention deficit disorder and severe separation anxiety.”

Saul, who on the Fourth of July 2006, after a long day of handing out pro-immigrant fliers in the hot sun, cried openly asking his “mami” why he hadn’t played in sprinklers and watched fireworks like other kids.

Saul, who despite his supposed medical disorders, was trotted out in front of every TV camera and microphone that appeared at the church’s door, then flown all over North America with a handler du jour to plead his mom’s case.

Saul, who in those first weeks of sanctuary was said to have been in contact with his unnamed father — who didn’t want to be smeared in the press — and months later would tell me, coldly, “I don’t have a father.”

Saul, whom I watched spend a long, miserable year holed up in a tiny apartment watching Spanish-language TV while trying to avoid the parade of people who stopped by to visit. Saul who had no mom or dad to take him to school everyday.

Saul who had to again watch his mother get arrested because she refused to go willingly.

Then there’s Elvira who, after being convicted of stealing someone’s identity, was given a pass on jail time in exchange for her departure. She proceeded to thumb her nose at the laws of the country she so desperately wants her son to grow up in.

Her entitlement complex turned off people who might have had a modicum of sympathy for the plight of illegal immigrants. Added bonus? It fueled the hatred from those who already wanted to see them all rounded up and shipped off.

In the process she made life more difficult for legal immigrants and U.S.-born Hispanics who will continue to endure the wrath of a country that’s disgusted that there seem to be one set of laws for “us,” and a more lenient set for the 12 million “them” who toil here for next to nothing at the cordial invitation of businesses and bargain-shoppers everywhere.

Though she only learned a rudimentary amount of English while in sanctuary — enough to deliver a brilliantly written speech I’d bet my life she didn’t compose — her message was crystal clear. Maybe not with her words, but with her actions Arellano did in fact say, “Catch me if you dare.”

Now that Immigration and Customs Enforcement called her bluff I can be clear, too: Adios and good riddance.

Elvira wasn’t “the face” of the 12 million illegal immigrants she claims to represent — they’ve been out working every day, unsheltered by the fear of the publicity disaster a church raid would have rained on ICE.

Those 12 million aren’t out flaunting their illegality in people’s faces or getting free food, shelter, child care, toys and cash donations delivered to their door daily while they spend their time doing radio interviews and posting protest songs to their MySpace pages.

Game over, Elvira.

Illegal leaves Chicago church sanctuary, is arrested, deported 

Filed under: I.C.E. on Tuesday, August 21st, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

It’s another fine day in this country as the Rule of Law triumphs once again over political correctness and sanctuary policies. This woman is a convicted criminal who was holed up in a Chicago church for a whole year. Now she’s back in her native country where she belongs, not illegally present in our country.

Newly deported immigration activist Elvira Arellano, joined Monday evening by her 8-year-old son, vowed to continue her fight for immigration reform but acknowledged that she has little chance of ever returning to the United States.

Sitting in a Chinese restaurant in this bustling border town less than a day after her deportation by U.S. authorities, Arellano expressed no regrets at leaving her sanctuary at a Chicago church, saying she would rather have been arrested fighting for immigrants’ rights than remain in refuge.

“If my deportation has united the people, for me it’s good,” she said. “That price had to be paid. If that’s the way it happened, I’m satisfied.”

Immigrant activists in Los Angeles, where Arellano was seized Sunday afternoon, said a march is planned for this weekend to protest her deportation. Pro-enforcement advocates, meanwhile, praised the arrest.

Arellano, however, was focused Monday evening on the agonizing question of whether her son, Saul, would stay with her in Mexico or return to Chicago, where he has lived most of his life. Family friend Rev. Walter “Slim” Coleman said late Monday he expects the boy will return to Chicago for school. Earlier, Arellano had said she hoped he would stay with her, but would take Saul’s wishes into account.

“I will continue to tell him about the beauties of my country,” she said. “He will know that he will have a marvelous future here.”

A 32-year-old undocumented immigrant from Mexico, Arellano said she left Chicago because she feared authorities were preparing to arrest her at Adalberto United Methodist Church in Humboldt Park, where she had taken refuge last August to avoid deportation.

“Their messages about me were getting stronger and stronger. I couldn’t just stay there quiet,” she said. “I did what I had to do: fight. They arrested me but they arrested me fighting, not quiet, not hiding in fear.”

But U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said Monday it was her decision to leave the church that prompted the arrest. They chose to detain her on a Los Angeles street rather than in the Chicago church, a spokesman said, because they believed it would be safer for the arresting officers, as well as Arellano, her companions and the public.

“We had reason to believe that there was going to be a lot of people in there, in the church, there to protect her or do whatever,” said Glenn Triveline, the Chicago field office director for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, at a news conference Monday.

Coleman, pastor at the Adalberto United Methodist Church, said U.S. authorities were less concerned about safety than avoiding the potential embarrassment of raiding a church.

“Nobody would do anything to them,” said Coleman. “I think they obviously didn’t want the embarrassment of breaking into a church and separating a mother from her son in front of the cross.”

Arellano was taken into custody Sunday afternoon as she, Saul, and several supporters were leaving a downtown L.A. church on their way San Jose, Calif., where she was to continue giving speeches about the need for immigration reform and visiting sanctuary congregations.

Arellano recounted how she tried to plead her case with U.S. immigration officials one more time after her arrest, pointing out that private bills had been introduced by U.S. Reps. Bobby Rush and Luis Gutierrez, both Chicago Democrats, aimed at keeping her in the United States.

The officials refused to discuss the matter, she said.

“They were angry with me for everything I have done,” she said. “They were in rush to deport me.”

Arellano was detained for nearly nine hours and questioned by U.S. and Mexican officials before she was taken across the border to Tijuana near midnight.

Arellano’s case reverberated in Mexico, where she spent much of Monday doing interviews with local television, radio and newspaper reporters. Two major Mexico City newspapers, Reforma and El Universal, played the news of her arrest as a top international story. Reforma described Arellano as “a mother who was the symbol of immigrants.”

In a sign of the political overtones surrounding her case and the sensitivity of immigration issues in Mexico, the Mexican Foreign Relations Ministry released a statement criticizing the “swiftness” of her deportation.

Michael Keegan, a spokesman for U.S. Customs and Enforcement in Washington, said U.S. law prohibits an immigrant from entering the U.S. legally for 10 years if they have previously been deported. Still, a U.S. consular official could override the law and allow Arellano legal entry into the U.S. if she can present mitigating circumstances. The final decision rests with the U.S. State Department, Keegan said.

As a U.S. citizen, Arellano’s son also could petition to have his mother re-admitted to the U.S., but only after he turns 18.

But Arellano said Monday that she has no intention of trying to return either legally or illegally to the United States. She has already received a job offer in Mexico.

“I am in my country. I can walk through the streets free, without fear,” she said.

Good for you. Walk through the streets without fear. Just don’t come here illegally again.

And hey, I.C.E. - good going!

Immigration officials won’t halt raids during 2010 census 

Filed under: I.C.E. on Tuesday, August 21st, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

Now and then we hear some good news on the topic of immigration. This is a good day.

Immigration officials sharpened their message a day after being coy about whether they would agree to halt enforcement raids during the 2010 census.

“We won’t entertain any request to scale back our efforts,” Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Kelly Nantel said Friday.

Census officials had planned to speak with immigration agents about curbing enforcement during the population count, the Census Bureau’s second-ranking official said in an interview earlier this week.

Raids during the population count would make an already distrustful group even less likely to cooperate with government workers who are supposed to include them in the headcount, Deputy Director Preston Jay Waite had said.

When asked Thursday if the immigration enforcement agency would consider suspending raids during the census, spokeswoman Pat Reilly said, “If we were, we wouldn’t talk about it.”

“We’re an investigative agency,” she added. “We don’t talk about how we target our enforcement activities.”

The Constitution requires the Census Bureau to count everyone, including illegal immigrants, in the census.

Immigration agents informally agreed to cooperate with the Census Bureau during the 2000 census by not conducting any large-scale raids, said Waite and Kenneth Prewitt, who directed the Census Bureau during the 2000 count.

Public discussion about possibly repeating the policy in 2010 knocked the Bush administration off message a week after two members of the president’s Cabinet announced stepped-up efforts to enforce the nation’s immigration laws.

Nantel said she wanted to clarify the enforcement agency’s position.

“I don’t want there to be any question in the American people’s mind as to whether or not ICE would suspend enforcement efforts,” Nantel said. “The answer to that is emphatically no.”

Suspect in fatal crash remains at large 

Filed under: Crime on Tuesday, August 21st, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

Be on the lookout for this illegal alien scumbag who killed a teenager in Wisconsin. Another fine upstanding “guest” in our country who runs away from a car crash where he’s at fault. It’s becoming a typical and expected response from illegals, yet Americans almost never do this. It says a lot about the class of people who come here illegally.

The Sheboygan County Sheriff’s Department continues to seek a 27-year-old man who is suspected of causing a traffic accident that resulted in the death of 17-year-old Port Washington boy.

An arrest warrant has been issued for the man, identified as Eddie Carbajal-Lile. Sheriff’s Capt. David Adams said Carbajal-Lile is an undocumented immigrant who might be en route to Mexico. The U.S. Border Patrol has been alerted, Adams said.

Carbajal-Lile reportedly uses a number of aliases, including: Eddie Carbajal; Eddie Lile; Eddie Carbajal-Farvies; Negro Carbajal; Negro Carbajal-Lile; and Negro Lile.

The Sheboygan County district attorney’s office Thursday charged Carbahal-Lile with three felonies: hit and run, fatality; and two counts of hit and run, injury.

Paul Watry of Port Washington died Thursday afternoon as a result of injuries suffered in the accident Tuesday night in the Town Lima.

Another passenger in the car in which Watry was riding, Jillian Fitzmaurice, 18, of Oostburg was treated at Froedtert Hospital and released.

The driver, Scot Mueller, 18, of Port Washington was treated at St. Nicholas Hospital in Sheboygan and released.

The three were passengers in a Chevrolet Cavalier that was struck by a Nissan Sentra on Highway 32 at Highway V in Sheboygan County. Witnesses told investigators that the Sentra failed to stop for a stop sign.

After the collision, the Nissan driver - believed to be Carbajal-Lile - fled on foot, witnesses said.

Anyone with information on his whereabouts is asked to call their local law enforcement agency or the Sheboygan County Sheriff’s Department at (920) 459-3112.

Illegal alien sentenced in vehicular assault 

Filed under: Crime on Tuesday, August 21st, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

This is just a horrible story. Illegal drunken driver causes life-altering injuries to pedestrian. Sickening.

Alejandro Xuya-Sian did more than shred the skin on his victim’s body - he shredded his victim’s dignity, making him feel “too embarrassed” by his appearance to face the drunken driver who nearly dragged him to his death, a judge said as he sentenced Xuya-Sian to 3 1/3 to 10 years in prison.

“You didn’t just injure him physically. You shattered his life,” Suffolk County Judge James Hudson told Xuya-Sian before he imposed his sentence. Hudson said Xuya-Sian treated his victim with less regard than he should “an injured animal.”

Xuya-Sian, 27, pleaded guilty last month to vehicular assault, driving while intoxicated, leaving the scene of an accident and other charges.

Suffolk prosecutors said Xuya-Sian struck Anselmo Chin-Sabam, 21, with his 2002 GMC Envoy in the parking lot of a Riverhead bar in April. Chin-Sabam became lodged in the front left wheel of the SUV, and had his skin shredded as Xuya-Sian drove three-quarters of a mile before realizing he was there.

Assistant District Attorney Thalia Stavrides said Xuya-Sian “stopped the car, got out and undoubtedly dislodged him from the car,” then kept driving, crashing into a tree about two miles away. Stavrides said Xuya-Sian was arrested with a blood-alcohol level of .08 percent, right at the legal limit.

Chin-Sabam suffered first-degree burns on more than 40 percent of his body, multiple fractures and had some parts of his body torn to the muscle, Stavrides said. He is still recovering and was in no condition to be in court yesterday, she said.

Given the opportunity to make a statement before receiving his sentence, Xuya-Sian began speaking when his Legal Aid attorney, Bryan Browns, interrupted him. Browns took him to the side, and then said his client would remain silent.

Browns said Xuya-Sian, an illegal immigrant, had two children and a wife in his native Guatemala and had been working a $450-a week job to help support them.

“He regrets and he takes full responsibility for what happened,” Browns said in court. “I think his time in prison is going to allow him to reflect and get on with his life.”

Hudson said he would recommend that Xuya-Sian be deported after completing his sentence - a sentence that Hudson said was “too lenient” because of limitations of law.

“[The sentence] is not enough to give consolation to your victim that this is how such a violation of his body was punished,” Hudson said.

I’ve always thought that the punishment should fit the crime, and wondered what it would be like to subject the criminal to the same treatment that he gave to his victim. It’s a horrible, barbaric idea, fit only to mete out to horrible barbarians like this guy.

Criminal Illegal Alien Free On Bond Kills Family 

Filed under: Crime on Tuesday, August 21st, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

More Americans die at the hands of the illegals. This one was free on bond awaiting trial for assault. Talk about a culture of corruption. These people do seem to bring their corruption with them when they come here, don’t they?

In yet another tragic example of the government’s failure to protect Americans from violent illegal immigrants, a drunken Mexican man with a criminal record killed an entire family when he crashed his car into theirs on Houston freeway.

The illegal alien, Juan Felix Salinas, suffered minor injuries and was out on bond for a previous assault charge. His blood alcohol level was three times the Texas legal limit when his speeding vehicle rammed into another occupied by a 26-year-old woman, her husband and 2-year-old son.

The Williams family, which was returning from a movie, died immediately in the burning wreckage. Their small car was instantly demolished by the powerful impact of the illegal alien’s much larger speeding van.

Not only was Salinas free on bond in a criminal case, he had been previously deported to his native Nuevo Leon Mexico two years ago yet entered the U.S. again illegally and was allowed to remain in the country after his recent arrest for assault.

It took the horrific murders of three innocent Americans for federal authorities to finally take action. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have finally placed a so-called “immigration hold” on Salinas, who has been charged with three counts of intoxication manslaughter. The Williams family would still be alive had their government acted sooner to rid the country of this multiple offender.

Making matters worse, Salinas didn’t even have a valid driver’s license and never should have been operating a vehicle on a U.S. highway. The Lone Star Times verifies that Salinas only had a Texas identification card frequently obtained by illegal immigrants.

Illegal alien kills highway construction workers 

Filed under: Crime on Tuesday, August 21st, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

Why do they always run and abandon their vehicles after they crash and hurt someone? Is it a “cultural” thing that we Americans wouldn’t understand? It seems like a basic problem of personal integrity, although given their lawbreaking to come here maybe that’s to be expected.

BURTONSVILLE, Md. — The man arrested and charged in the hit-and-run accident that killed two members of a road crew has told authorities he is in the U.S. illegally.

Manuel De Jesus Gonzalez-Geronimo, 31, is a Guatemalan living in Hyattsville. He surrendered to police early Tuesday morning to face charges in the Monday accident on Route 29 in Burtonsville.

The construction workers were taking a break and sitting on a guardrail when they were hit by a van that also hit a construction truck.

The van driver ran from the scene.

Martin Ruffin, of Baltimore, and James Cronin, of Glen Burnie, died, and three co-workers were injured.

Police spokeswoman Lucille Baur said Gonzalez-Geronimo revealed during his bail hearing that he is an undocumented worker. He is being held without bond.

At least they didn’t just cut him loose on bail to escape to Guatemala, or drive again and kill another American. Maybe our court system learns from its mistakes.

Border violence fueled by drug war in Mexico 

Filed under: Crime on Sunday, August 19th, 2007 by Tarantulas | 3 Comments

An interesting and frank article from the Arizona Republic. They seem to repeat themselves several times. Apparently they think that makes the story more interesting. Or maybe telling the same story two or three different ways makes it sound like there are two or three different stories.

Violent crime along the U.S.-Mexico border, which has long plagued the scrubby, often desolate stretch, increasingly is spilling northward into the cities of the American Southwest.

In Phoenix, deputies are working the unsolved case of 13 border crossers who were kidnapped and executed in the desert. In Dallas, nearly two dozen high school students have died in the last two years from overdoses of a $2-a-hit Mexican fad drug called “cheese heroin.”

The crime surge, most acute in Texas and Arizona, is fueled by a gritty drug war in Mexico that includes hostages being held in stash houses, daylight gun battles claiming innocent lives, and teenage hit men for the Mexican cartels. Shipments of narcotics and vans carrying undocumented workers on U.S. highways are being hijacked by rival cartels fighting over the lucrative smuggling routes. Arson fires are being set in national forests to divert police.

In Laredo, Texas, a teenager who had been driving around the United States in a $70,000 luxury sedan confessed to becoming a Mexican cartel hit man when he was 13. In Nogales, Ariz., an 82-year-old was caught with 79 kilograms of cocaine in his Chevrolet Impala. The youth was sentenced to 40 years in prison for one murder and is awaiting trial on another; the old man drew 10 years.

In Southern California, border patrol agents routinely encounter smugglers driving migrant-laden cars who try to escape by driving the wrong way on busy freeways. And stash houses packed with dozens of illegal immigrants have been discovered in Los Angeles.

But a huge U.S. law enforcement buildup along the border starting a decade ago has helped stabilize border-related crime rates on the California side; a recent wave of kidnappings in Tijuana, Mexico, largely has been contained south of the border.

The sprawling U.S.-Mexico border has been criss-crossed for years by the poor seeking work in the United States and drug dealers in the hunt for U.S. dollars. For decades neither the U.S. nor Mexico has managed to halt the immigrants and narcotics pushing north. But with the Mexican government’s newly pledged war on the cartels, and an explosion of violence among rival networks, a new crime dynamic is emerging: The violence that has hit Mexican border towns is spreading deeper into the U.S.

U.S. officials are promising more Border Patrol and federal firearms officers, more fences and more surveillance towers along the desert stretches where the two nations meet.

But law enforcement officials are wary of how this new burst in violence will play out, especially as the enemy is better armed and more sophisticated than ever. Among their concerns are budget cutbacks in some agencies — including a hiring freeze in the Drug Enforcement Administration — and community opposition to the surveillance towers.

Bolding mine. When the Arizona Republic starts talking about “the enemy” in an immigration story, you have to know they think the problem is serious.

Johnny Sutton, U.S. attorney in west Texas, said he would need at least 20,000 new Border Patrol agents in El Paso alone to hold back the tide. But that is the total of number of agents that Washington, D.C., hopes to have everywhere on the border by the end of 2009.

Suggestion: Ask for volunteers to keep watch on the border. Give them a little training and a bunch of lawn chairs and wait for them to start calling in on their cellular phones. Oh, wait, they’re already there - the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps.

In six years, Sutton’s office has tried 33,000 defendants, about 90 percent of them on drug and immigration violations. “We’re body-slamming them the best we can,” he said.

In Phoenix, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio holds 10,000 inmates in his jail and overflow tents; 2,000 of them he said are “criminal aliens” from the border. It is his deputies who are investigating the deaths of 13 people executed in the desert.

Sheriff Arpaio is an incredible asset to this country. He leads the way in opposing human smuggling at the local level. Other local officials are catching up, but some are being hindered by activist judges. I hope we keep seeing more courageous local officials joining our Sheriff in the fight.

Jennifer Allen, director of the nonprofit Border Action Network in Tucson, Ariz., that supports immigrants’ rights, said Washington, D.C., and Mexico City need fresh approaches. “The smugglers are no longer mom-and-pop organizations. Now it’s an industry,” she said. “So the violence increases. That’s incredibly predictable.”

And it’s also incredibly predictable that an “immigrants rights” group would have no solution to offer. What a shocker.

Raul Benitez, an international relations professor in Mexico City who also taught at American University in Washington, D.C., blames both countries for the crime wave. As long as Americans crave drugs and the cartels want money, “security in both directions is jeopardized,” Benitez said.

This guy is even worse. Hey Professor! How about blaming the people responsible - the criminals!

Nestor Rodriguez, a University of Houston sociologist, said people on both sides of the Rio Grande view themselves as one community. “People say the river doesn’t divide us, it unites us,” he said. “When you’re at Ground Zero at the border, you see yourselves as one community — for good or bad.”

This makes no sense. It’s little more than empty rhetoric. Quick reality check - what’s on the other side of the river? Right - a different country. Divided by a river. Jeez…

Rodriguez knows. His first cousin, Juan Garza, born on this side but trained by criminals in Mexico, ran his own murder-and-drug enterprise out of Brownsville, Texas. He was executed in 2001 by the United States.

“Of course there is a spillover of violence into this country,” Rodriguez said. “It’s pouring across our border, and anybody can get caught up in it.”

The small town of Sierra Vista, Ariz., learned firsthand of the rising violence in 2004, when police chased a pickup carrying 24 illegals on the border town’s main drag, Buffalo Soldier Trail. Speeds reached 100 mph. The truck went airborne, hit a half dozen cars, and killed a recently married elderly couple waiting at a stoplight.

“It was just the worst kind of tragedy,” said Ed Rheinheimer, the Cochise County attorney. “The coyotes (smugglers) are just more willing to either shoot at the police, fight with the police, or to try to flee.”

Even more brazen have been several kidnappings of from 50 to 100 immigrants by rival cartels, who hide them in stash houses in and around Phoenix until family members pay a ransom. One captive’s face was burned with a cigarette, another nearly smothered in a plastic bag. A woman was raped. Fingers have been sliced off and sent back to families with demands for money.

The border crime issue became so urgent in Arizona that top officials met in Tucson in June with their counterparts from Sonora, Mexico. Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano agreed to help train Sonoran police to track wire payments to smugglers. Sonoran Gov. Eduardo Boors agreed to improve police communications with U.S. authorities.

In the first nine months of this year, Tucson officials surpassed their record from last year of 4,559 human smuggling arrests.

In tiny Douglas, Ariz., so far this year, the Mexican consulate has identified the bodies of five Mexican nationals who died under suspicious circumstances while crossing into the U.S., and he is awaiting identification of five more he presumes were Mexicans as well. There were only seven such deaths in all of last year.

Statewide the picture is equally bleak. Murders of illegal crossers is up 21 percent over last year.

Get the point? Crossing illegally into our country is dangerous. Don’t do it. Stay at home with your families.

Another visible effect of the cross-border crime wave is the flood of drugs into the country.

Anthony J. Coulson, assistant special agent in charge of the DEA in Arizona, said records indicate that cocaine and heroin seizures might end up twice as high as last year. Marijuana seizures are increasing 25 percent; nine months into the current fiscal year, he said, they had seized more pot than all of last year, “and 2006 was a record year, ” Coulson said.

In the Tucson sector alone there has been a 71 percent increase in marijuana seizures over the last year, with the U.S. Border Patrol reporting 648,000 pounds grabbed since October.

In tony Scottsdale, a Phoenix suburb, said Sheriff Arpaio, a cartel operative was openly selling heroin to high school kids. “He was getting 150 calls a day on his cell phone,” the sheriff said.

So Scottdale is “tony,” eh? Never heard that term used in that way before. I guess it’s a small distraction from the fact that these criminals are selling heroin to our children. How much does it take to set the alarm bells ringing?

The DEA believes 80 percent of the methamphetamine in the United States is coming from labs in Mexico, which were set up after police raids shut down many of the labs in the U.S.

In Dallas, police are dealing with the deaths of 21 high school students in the last two years from “cheese heroin,” a mixture of Mexican heroin and over-the-counter cold medicine. The hits sell for $2 to $5. Several arrests of dealers have been made; now officials are bracing for the coming school season.

Not only are they selling heroin to our children, they are killing them with it. Any alarm bells ringing in your local City Hall yet?

Antonio Oscar “Tony” Garza Jr., the U.S. ambassador to Mexico, has issued repeated diplomatic notes of objection to the Mexican government. Last year he sent an advisory to American tourists that “drug cartels, aided by corrupt officials (in Mexico), reign unchecked in many towns along our common border.”

Ding ding? No?

A House subcommittee on Homeland Security has investigated the so-called “triple threat” of drug smuggling, illegal border crossings and rising violence and found that “very little” passes the border without the cartels’ knowledge.

The cartels send smugglers into the United States fully armored with equipment — much of it imported to Mexico from the U.S. — including high-powered binoculars and encrypted radios, bazookas, military style grenades, assault rifles and silencers, sniper scopes and bulletproof vests, the panel found. Some wear fake police uniforms to confuse police as well as Mexican bandits who might ambush them.

And they have police scanners and night vision goggles and some of them wear fake US military uniforms. Did I see you glance over your shoulder just then, Mister Mayor?

The panel’s report cited numerous recent crimes. In McAllen, Texas, “two smuggled women from Central America were found on the side of a road badly beaten and without clothing. Their captors (had) intimidated the victims by shooting weapons into the walls and ceiling as they were raped.”

Where are the NOW advocates, decrying the terrible violence against women? Apparently as long as the victims are non-American and nonwhite, they’re below the NOW radar.

In Laredo, Webb County sheriff’s deputies came upon 56 illegal immigrants locked in a refrigerator trailer. Eleven were women; two children. After six hours, “Many were near death by the time they were rescued.”

There was another case in Texas where several of the illegals did die. The truck driver abandoned them in the locked trailer. Non-American, nonwhite, not important?

It was in Laredo last summer where police encountered Rosalio Reta, then 17, a Houston native who fell under the spell of the Gulf Cartel across the river. Known as “Bart,” the youth was 13 when he started visiting Mexico.

“They walk across the bridge,” said Laredo Detective Robert Garcia, who investigated a murder that involved Reta. “They see all the night clubs with no age limit. They see the guys their age spending money, throwing money around, paying for everything. They like the lure, the women, the fancy cars. They start moving weapons and guns and pretty soon they start asking for money for hits.”

Garcia said Reta told him how he helped break a cartel leader out of a Mexican prison. From there he moved up to hit man, and returned to Texas behind the wheel of a $70,000 Mercedes Benz, Garcia said.

Then last year a Laredo man named Noe Flores was murdered in front of his home, shot by mistake because the cartel thought they were getting his half brother in a dispute over a woman.

In a hand-written statement to police, Reta admitting driving the car with two accomplices. One of them, identified by Reta as Gabriel Cardona, jumped out and “shot two rounds at first,” he wrote. “That was when he fell to the floor and then shot em 13 more rounds and that was when Jesus Gonzales (the other alleged accomplice) started shooting from the rear windows.

“Then we left the sene of the crime and we left the car like three blocks away. The work was done for the Gulf Cartel of Mexico.”

At trial last month, a witness said Reta and the accomplices were paid a total of $15,000 for the hit. But the case ended abruptly when Reta pleaded guilty in return for a 40-year sentence; he had faced 99 years.

Webb County Judge Joe Lopez told the youth: “It’s a young life. Come to terms with your God and your faith, or whatever it may be.”

Cardona also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 80 years. Gonzales was arrested but made bail, and disappeared back into Mexico.

How do these people get out on bail? Why are they not reported to ICE and held for deportation? How can our court system justify such actions?

Reta awaits trial in a second case, involving the ambush slaying in December 2005 of Moises Garcia, shot in his car in a Laredo restaurant parking lot as his pregnant wife and family watched helplessly.

So much death and destruction and sorrow. And still they keep coming, killing our kids and our cops and each other. Build the wall. Build it high and build it now. Start throwing employers in prison for hiring illegals. And make sure illegals cannot receive a single penny’s worth of public benefits. They need to go home and stay home…in their own country!

Day Laborer Center must check workers’ immigration status 

Filed under: Legislation on Friday, August 17th, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

This should be the benchmark for every day laborer center in the nation. After all, if they don’t check, they could be facilitating the commission of a crime.

HERNDON, Va. (AP) - A crackdown on providing services to illegal immigrants in Herndon will likely mean big changes for the town’s day-labor center.

The Herndon Town Council voted last night that the center would have to begin checking the legal status of workers who congregate there. The vote came after two days of debate and means a new group will have to take over the center to keep it running.

The current operator — a nonprofit called Project Hope and Harmony — has refused to check whether workers are legal residents.

Herndon’s day-laborer center was 1 of the region’s first. It has sparked debate over illegal immigration and how to deal with workers who used to gather at a 7-11 parking lot, waiting to be hired for the day.

Some residents say they’re afraid the council’s decision will mean workers will go back to Herndon’s streets to find work.

Suggestion for the illegals - go back to your home countries. You can work their legally. You can’t work here legally. Soon everyone will be checking your immigration status and you won’t be able to find a job anywhere in this country. Better head home now and beat the rush or all the good jobs will be gone. And when you get back home, remember what it was like here, and work to change your own country for the better. That way, none of your countrymen will ever die crossing the Arizona desert.

See? It’s a humanitarian gesture to get the illegals to go home. Let no one ever say that Americans don’t have big hearts.

Thousands of illegals deported by authorities 

Filed under: General on Friday, August 17th, 2007 by Tarantulas | No Comments

Illegals camping out just north of the border, waiting for transportation. Hundreds of police sent to the border to transport the illegals back south to their home countries. In Mexico.

The closure of an American-run railroad in Mexico stranded thousands of U.S.-bound Central American migrants near the Guatemala border and many of them were deported Wednesday by immigration authorities.

Some camped along rail lines waiting for trains that will never come. Others tried to walk hundreds of kilometers (miles) to the next working rail line and some turned themselves in to Mexican authorities.

The government sent hundreds of federal police and soldiers Tuesday to clear out the migrants, who for decades have hopped freight cars on the Chiapas-Mayab railway. The company has run freight trains on two sets of tracks in southern Mexico — one that passes near Guatemala’s northern jungle, and another that goes from the Guatemalan border up the western coast.

In late July, the Connecticut-based Genesee & Wyoming Inc. withdrew from a 30-year concession to operate the Chiapas-Mayab line.

Company spokeswoman Jeanette Rosado said damage to railway tracks caused by a 2005 hurricane forced the pullout. She also said rail workers had been assaulted, and that train-hopping migrants delayed operations and cost the company money.

“It is not the same, pulling a normal train or pulling it with 300 people riding on top,” Rosado said.

So Mexico sends their Federales to the border, yet objects when we put the National Guard on our border. Ooookay…