'Minutemen' to Patrol Arizona Border
Associated Press
http://www.sierratimes.com/05/02/21/minutemen.htm
WASHINGTON (AP) - Intent on securing the vulnerable Arizona border from
illegal immigrant crossings, U.S. officials are bracing for what they call a
potential new threat this spring: the Minutemen. Nearly 500 volunteers have
already joined the Minuteman Project, anointing themselves civilian border
patrol agents determined to stop the immigration flow that routinely, and
easily, seeps past federal authorities.
They plan to patrol a 40-mile stretch of the southeast Arizona border
throughout April when the tide of immigrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border
peaks.
``I felt the only way to get something done was to do it yourself,'' said Jim
Gilchrist, a retired accountant and decorated Vietnam War veteran who is
helping recruit Minutemen across the country.
``We've been repeatedly accused of being people who are taking the law into
our own hands,'' said Gilchrist, 56, of Aliso Viejo, Calif. ``That is an
outright bogus statement. We are going down there to assist law enforcement.''
Officials concede the 370-mile Arizona border is the most porous stretch on
the U.S.-Mexico line. Moreover, recent intelligence show that al-Qaida
terrorists are likely to enter the country through the Mexico border, James
Loy, the deputy secretary of the Homeland Security Department, said last week.
``Several al-Qaida leaders believe operatives can pay their way into the
country through Mexico, and also believe illegal entry is more advantageous
than legal entry for operational security reasons,'' Loy said in written
testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Of the 1.1 million illegal immigrants caught by the U.S. Border Patrol last
year, 52 percent crossed into the country at the Arizona border. The agency
increased the number of agents in the Tucson sector, which has its largest
staff, from 1,700 to 2,100 over the last 18 months.
But that number is going to grow to try to plug the remaining holes, said
Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Robert C. Bonner. About 10,000
federal agents now patrol the 2,000-mile southern border, he said.
Officials fear the Minuteman patrols could cause more trouble than they
prevent. At least some of the volunteers plan to arm themselves during the
24-hour desert patrols. Many are untrained and have little or no experience in
confronting illegal border crossings.
``Any time there are firearms and you're out in the middle of no-man's land in
difficult terrain, it's a dangerous setting,'' said Bonner, whose agency is
keeping a close eye on the Minutemen plans.
``The Border Patrol does this every day, and they are qualified and very
well-trained to handle the situation,'' he said. ``Ordinary Americans are not.
So there's a danger that not just illegal migrants might get hurt, but that
American citizens might get hurt in this situation.''
Civilian patrols are nothing new along the southern border, where crossing the
international line is sometimes as easy as stepping over a few rusty strands
of barbed wire. But they usually are limited to small, informal groups,
leaving organizers to believe the Minuteman Project is the largest of its kind
on the southern border.
It may also prove to be a magnet for what Glenn Spencer, president of the
private American Border Patrol, described as camouflage-wearing,
weapons-toting hard-liners who might get a little carried away with their
assignments.
``How are they going to keep the nutcases out of there? They can't control
that,'' said Spencer, whose 40-volunteer group, based in Hereford, Ariz., has
used unmanned aerial vehicles and other high-tech equipment to track and
report the number of border crossings for more than two years.
``There's a storm gathering here on the border, and there are conditions ripe
for some difficulty,'' he said.
The border agents agree.
The Minutemen ``clearly have every reason to be upset with the federal
government for abandoning them,'' said National Border Patrol Council
president T.J. Bonner, no relation to the commissioner.
But ``if anything goes wrong, God forbid, someone does injure an agent, this
government is going to be turning both barrels on them and come after them
with a vengeance,'' he said.
Gilchrist said the Minutemen are under strict orders to merely identify and
follow illegal border crossers and alert federal agents. They should not
interact with the immigrants except to offer food, water or medical care. If
there's a couple of ``bad apples'' who turn up in the group, Gilchrist said,
they will face prosecution if they step outside the law.
Something dramatic needed to be done to curb the years of crime, property
damage and trash dumping caused by the border crossings, Gilchrist said.
``Things are out of control'' he said. ``And they've been out of control for
decades.''
http://www.sierratimes.com/05/02/21/minutemen.htm
What Others Have Said So Far...
There have been 5 responses to this article
From: Rick Ford
I keep hearing about how the federal government is letting them down on
illegal immigration, but no one will actually blame Bush who wants to grant
all the illegals amnesty. Their blind devotion to Bush is bordering on the
occult.
Submitted: Wednesday March 2,2005 - 08:14:00 am
From: GCE
Isn't it amazing that the government can track a cow in Canada to the stall
where she sleeps, but can't locate 11 million illigal aliens wandering around
our country?
Submitted: Saturday February 26,2005 - 12:16:00 pm
From: Randy
Perhaps my observations can give you some idea of the extent of the problem.
I was in my neighborhood Fresh Choice restaurant last week and asked the
employee at the cash register if Fresh Choice hires illegal workers. He said,
“yes”, they did, a...
more...
Submitted: Thursday February 24,2005 - 03:38:00 pm
From: Elena
"They should not interact with the immigrants except to offer food, water or
medical care."?
Excuse me?!!! Why bother patrolling the border? Just have a bunch of welcome
wagons and serve free BBQ,beer, maps and government welfare forms!
If the con...
more...
Submitted: Wednesday February 23,2005 - 11:35:00 am
From: Elena
"They should not interact with the immigrants except to offer food, water or
medical care."?
Excuse me?!!! Why bother patrolling the border? Just have a bunch of welcome
wagons and serve free BBQ,beer, maps and government welfare forms!
If the con...
more...
Submitted: Wednesday February 23,2005 - 11:35:00 am
http://www.sierratimes.com/05/02/21/minutemen.htm
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