Friends of the Border Patrol announced
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Mexico border watch expands
By Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20050502-125924-3843r.htm
An organization of citizens in California, created last year to support the
U.S. Border Patrol, will begin its own Minuteman-style vigil in August,
using volunteers to spot illegal aliens in areas around San Diego,
organizers said yesterday.
The Friends of the Border Patrol, led by Chairman Andy Ramirez, said 300
retired police officers, military personnel, pilots and other citizens have
offered their services for the "FBP Border Watch," which the organization
hopes to expand eventually from the Pacific Ocean to the Arizona state line.
The volunteers, Mr. Ramirez said, also include people to patrol the border
on horseback and a contractor who has offered to build a base camp for the
operation.
"America was built on the spirit of volunteerism and community," said Mr.
Ramirez, who previously headed Save Our State, which helped defeat efforts
by California lawmakers to authorize drivers licenses for illegal aliens.
"Citizens volunteering to defend our nation in time of war and crisis is a
time-honored American tradition.
"The American people are looking for ways to bolster Border Patrol numbers,"
he said. "It's clear they want more agents and secure borders."
The planned California vigil is patterned after the Minuteman Project,
during which more than 800 volunteers manned observation posts on a 23-mile
stretch of the Arizona-Mexico border east and west of Naco, shutting down a
flood of foreigners in the area -- one of the most popular corridors for
alien smugglers in the country.
Minuteman founder James T. Gilchrist, a retired California certified public
accountant and combat-wounded Vietnam veteran, endorsed the California
effort, offering his support and advice -- including the need for law
enforcement and military personnel to participate to help "weed people out
who do not belong."
Minuteman co-organizer Chris Simcox, a Tombstone, Ariz., newspaper publisher
and founder of Arizona's Civil Homeland Defense Corps., has said that "tens
of thousands" of volunteers will be ready in October to control illegal
immigration along the U.S.-Mexico border from California to Texas.
"We will package up what we've done here and do it again as a multistate
border project. We will tell the government to do its job in securing this
border or we will shut it down ourselves," he said.
Mr. Simcox also said this past week that the Minutemen are looking to help
organize patrol efforts in four states along the U.S.-Canada border --
Idaho, Michigan, North Dakota and Vermont.
"We shouldn't have to be doing this," he said Tuesday. "But at this point,
we will continue to grow this operation -- also to the northern border."
Mr. Ramirez said a well-organized and planned operation around San Diego was
essential "to ensure the safety of everyone involved, from Border Patrol
agents, the volunteers, illegal aliens and even those counterprotesters
seeking to disrupt the Border Watch.
"We have asked everyone that they participate with but one intention -- to
behave in a professional manner and follow the rule of law," he said.
Advising the California volunteers will be Joseph N. Dassaro, former vice
president of the National Border Patrol Council, which represents all 11,000
nonsupervisory Border Patrol field agents.
Mr. Dassaro, a 13-year Border Patrol agent and head of the council's Local
1613 in San Diego, quit the agency last week, saying a failed bureaucracy
and lack of support from Congress and the Bush administration made it
impossible for rank-and-file agents to secure the borders.
In a letter to Local 1613 members, Mr. Dassaro called the Border Patrol "one
of the most inefficient and misleading agencies in the history of
government."
Officially, the Border Patrol was not supportive of the Minuteman Project,
saying immigration enforcement was the responsibility of the federal
government. It has cast similar doubts on the California proposal.
Numerous rank-and-file agents in Arizona, however, told The Washington Times
they welcomed the volunteers and the nationwide attention their project
brought to the problem of the porous southern border.
==============
Long lines of traffic clogged the San Ysidro Border Crossing in San Diego,
waiting to enter the United States legally last month April 5, 2005.
(AP)
======================
Governor's stance on illegal immigration might backfire
Ventura County Star (subscription), CA - 20 hours ago
... Andy Ramirez of Chino has established a group called Friends of the
Border Patrol that he says has already attracted 400 volunteers and will
begin monitoring ...
Group plans California border watch Contra Costa Times
Minutemen do the dirty work that 'government won't do' San Francisco
Chronicle
Minuteman splinter groups plan California border patrols Press-Enterprise
(subscription)
Contra Costa Times -
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