BORDER NEWS WATCH SPECIAL EDITIONS - 12/2019

 

 

12/14/2019 BORDER NEWS WATCH SPECIAL EDITION

 

Breitbart News
Judicial Watch
ICE Most Wanted List
CBP Website
ICE Website
FOX News on Immigration
Borderland Beat
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Mexican Mormon Massacre
Relatives meet with Mexico president after arrests in Mormon family killings
Other suspects arrested in connection with the Mormon family massacre that left 9 dead
Families of Mexico massacre victims suffer backlash over cartel row
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Opinion
Visa overstays aren't the biggest problem with illegal immigration — the southern border is
Yes, Mexico's drug cartels count as terrorists
Why Trump Should Hit Pause On Designating Mexican Cartels As Terrorists
Why designating Mexican drug cartels terrorists might not be the way to fight organized crime
Mary Beth Sheridan: Five reasons Mexico objects to Trump's plan to designate its cartels as terror groups
Trump plan to label Mexican cartels as terrorists may backfire, Mexico, experts warn
Letter: Pima County and Border Barriers
Editorial: Meanwhile, on the southern border ...
Letter: Re: Contract for stretch of Arizona border wall raises concerns of improper influence

Murder And Mayhem In Mexico

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Opinion Polls
Border wall protest erupts in downtown Tucson
Nearly 70 Percent of People in Mexico Believe Trump's Wall Will Do Nothing to Stop Border-Crossers: Poll
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US Congress
Bill Would Designate Mexican Cartels as Something Other Than Terrorists
A bipartisan immigration bill that will help farmers

Apparently Washington is Never Too Divided to Capitulate to the Demands of Big Ag
House Approves Amnesty & Indentured Servitude for Illegal Farm Workers

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The 'Wall"

Judge blocks some border wall spending Trump wants

Judge blocks Trump from constructing sections of border wall
Pentagon authorises $1bn for Trump‘s border wall
U.S. Homeland Security seeks proposals for wall with Mexico
Editorial: Meanwhile, on the southern border ...
Trump delays closing US-Mexico border for at least a year

EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Yes, Physical Barriers Matter on the Border, Says JTFW Director
Exclusive Video: Border Is ‘Matter of National Security,’ Says JTFW Director
Sharyl Attkisson: Has Trump Kept Promise About Border Wall? Is There A Way To Quantify What's Been Done?
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DHS
New DHS Chief Discusses Sanctuary City, Border Security Challenges
Border Apprehensions Dropped for 6th Consecutive Month, per DHS Data
DHS: Border security ‘near systemwide meltdown‘
Report: DHS Lacked Technology to Track Separated Migrant Families
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CBP
Border Crisis: CBP’s Response
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Border Patrol
Former U.S. Border Patrol officials question Trump plan to add agents

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ICE
Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction
US immigration deported more than 267,000 illegal immigrants in 2019, 91% were criminals
ICE hits 5-year high for deportations despite expansion of sanctuary cities
ICE makes early morning arrest in Nashville
Pre-Thanksgiving ICE sting nets dozens of DC-area illegal immigrants with criminal histories
Workplace Immigration Investigations Quadruple Under Trump
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AMO

Air and Marine Operations Interdicts $81.5 Million in Cocaine
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US Military
Pentagon IG to Probe Use of Military Personnel on U.S.-Mexico Border _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ignoring ICE Detainers: Alien Arrests Followed by Release
Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction
 
Declined Detainer Outcome Report
What Is the Law, and Why Should It Be Followed?
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US Congress: Immigration Policy Proposals
U.S. Senators File Bill Targeting Mexican Cartels with Sanctions Similar to Terrorist Designation
Massive Farmworker Amnesty Proposed in House
Apparently Washington is Never Too Divided to Capitulate to the Demands of Big Ag
New Farm Bill: Good for Ag Employers and Illegal Aliens, Bad for American Workers
The Farm Workforce Modernization act
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Border Perspective
Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction
On the other side of the wall: Mexicans on the border are ‘psychologically traumatized‘
Mexican Border Cities: Too Dangerous For Americans But Safe Enough For Migrants, U.S. Says
Apprehensions down along the border, but other issues are on the rise
NBC Report: Thousands of Foreign Students May Have Overstayed Visas Through Shell Companies ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Illegal Immigration Trends
Border Apprehensions Dropped for 6th Consecutive Month, per DHS Data
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction
Arrests of Brazilian migrants entering US illegally spiked in 2019
300 Bodies Of Illegal Immigrants Found On US-Mexican Border In One Year Span
1,000 Migrants a Day Made This Tiny Guatemala Town a Smuggler’s Paradise. The Business Has Dried Up.
Trump lays out new approach to illegal immigration
Tucson Sector Border Patrol reports slight increase of border apprehensions
In a Reversal, Fewer Migrants Are Arrested at the Border
Number of Mexican Migrants Escalates due to Violence ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Nogales Tunnels
Border tunnel found in Arizona after 4 migrants caught
Border Patrol discovers another tunnel in Nogales; second tunnel found this month
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Illegal Immigration: MPP Policy
Official: President Trump's "Diplomatic Persistence" Has Let to Sharp Declines in Illegal Migrants
Mexico won’t accept foreign deportees, US must assume responsibility – FM Videgaray
 
Incremental Progress on Immigration
Thousands of migrants sent back to Mexico under Trump policy have given up their asylum claims: DHS
Trump Administration Expands 'Remain In Mexico' Program Despite Reports Of Asylum Seekers Facing Violence Across Border

 
“Migrant Protection Protocol” requires migrants to wait in Mexico while their asylum claims are being adjudicated
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Asylum
Lots of Useful Information in the Refugee Report to Congress
Trump orders overhaul of asylum system, would force applicants to pay fees

Asylum Explained
Mexico’s Refugees
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Birth Tourism
372,000 Born to Illegal Aliens and Visitors Every Year, 33,000 to 'Birth Tourists'
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African Migrants
African migrants wait in limbo in Mexico, dreaming of sanctuary in Canada
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Migrants in Mexico
New shelter makes immigrating to the U.S. a little easier
Immigrant from El Salvador waiting U.S. asylum hearing is murdered in Mexico
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Illegal Immigration: Indians
Illegal immigration: Menace Continues Due to Government Laxity
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Human Smuggling
4 Mexican nationals accused of smuggling 15 others into U.S. north of Cut Bank
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Drug  Trafficking
CBS 5 Investigates exposes new drug-smuggling trend possibly linked to vaping injuries
UK drug gang bosses jailed for importing huge quantities of cocaine and heroin in chickens

UPS employees ran drug trafficking ring for a decade, authorities say

World Drug Report 2017
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Tramadol
How tramadol, touted as safer opioid, became 3rd world peril
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Vaping
CBS 5 Investigates exposes new drug-smuggling trend possibly linked to vaping injuries

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Santa Cruz County Tunnel
32-foot smuggling tunnel discovered at the Arizona border
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San Diego
San Diego's Border Busts
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POE Douglas
Douglas border crossing to undergo renovations starting Monday
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Pima County

Pima County: Using federal Stonegarden grant for border security costs local taxpayers

Pima County seeks help from Arizona members of Congress to get delayed Stonegarden funding

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Judicial
Judge Grants DACA Stay; Hanen OKs Delay Pending SCOTUS Result
Federal judge: Border Patrol in Arizona violated court order
Challenges to Operation Streamline Are Moving Forward
Illegal Alien In Sacto Sentenced For Identity Theft, Fraud, And Voting

Judge Who Ordered Free Mental Health Services for Migrants Should Have His Head Examined
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Sanctuaries
Sanctuaries to Release Illegal Immigrants Jailed for Rape, Murder, Child Molestation ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Politics
Making Progress at the Border is Making Progressives Unhappy
Joe Biden releases immigration plan, providing amnesty for all illegal aliens in the US

DEA agent who caught El Chapo: Trump labeling Mexican cartels 'terrorists' would be 'game-changer'
 
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GOM
Upset at Trump, Mexico voices ‘worry and irritation‘ to U.S. envoys
Mexico won’t accept foreign deportees, US must assume responsibility – FM Videgaray
Mexican president: US military not allowed to fight drug cartels in Mexico

Why can't Mexico control the cartels? Some blame America
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Mexico
‘Not promoting illegality’? Mexico invests $50mn in legal aid centers at its US consulates
Official: Mexico rejected US plan on 3rd-country deportees
‘Tuberculosis out of control:’ cases have soared 140% this year

There are no short cuts in resolving Mexico’s spiraling violence
Mexico Needs A New Strategy For Fighting Crime
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Cartels in the USA
A ruthless Mexican drug lord’s empire is devastating families with its grip on small-town USA ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartels as Mexican Terrorists
U.S. Senators File Bill Targeting Mexican Cartels with Sanctions Similar to Terrorist Designation
Bill Would Designate Mexican Cartels as Something Other Than Terrorists
Yes, Mexico's drug cartels count as terrorists
Why Trump Should Hit Pause On Designating Mexican Cartels As Terrorists
Trump's Plan to Define Mexican Drug Cartels as Terror Groups Is Problematic
Why designating Mexican drug cartels terrorists might not be the way to fight organized crime
Mary Beth Sheridan: Five reasons Mexico objects to Trump's plan to designate its cartels as terror groups
Trump plan to label Mexican cartels as terrorists may backfire, Mexico, experts warn
Families of Mexico massacre victims suffer backlash over cartel row ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartels
GRAPHIC: Gulf Cartel Gunmen Burn Rivals Alive in Mexico near Texas Border
Death Toll Put At 20 For Mexico Cartel Attack Near US Border
How The Gunfights In North Mexico That Left 22 Dead Unfolded  
How Mexico’s ‘small armies’ came to commit a massacre

US, Mexican lawmen going after border’s ‘most wanted’ criminals
A Mexican drug kingpin you've never heard of is infiltrating small-town America

Borderland Beat
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Cartels: Judicial Watch
Mexican Drug Cartels: How Far Is Their Reach? | Chris Farrell
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Maritime Incidents
34 arrested in two maritime smuggling incidents off coast of San Diego County

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Selected Incidents
Alleged human smuggler leads Border Patrol on car chase through UTEP campus
Border Patrol seizes nearly $1 million in drugs during weekend smuggling attempts
California border agents find 11 Chinese nationals hiding inside appliances, furniture in truck from Mexico
Border Patrol: 2 Tucson sector agents assaulted in 24-hour period last week
Border Agents Rescue 20 Migrants from Flooded Pipe on Thanksgiving ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

American Election Politics
Pete Buttigieg nods in agreement when leftist pastor says Mexican illegal immigrants are 'coming back to land we stole' ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Breitbart News
Judicial Watch
ICE Most Wanted List
CBP Website
ICE Website
FOX News on Immigration
Borderland Beat
USInc
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·         Gulf of Mexico Oil Industry Reeling From Hundreds of Pirate Attacks in 2019

·         Mexico’s Former Top Security Official Indicted on US Drug Charges

·         Macri Leaves Office in Argentina With Mixed Reviews on Crime

·         Guyana’s Mining Region is Open Door to Venezuelan Organized Crime

·         Chile’s Status as Marijuana Destination of Choice Confirmed by Record Bust

·         Record Cocaine Seizures in Brazil Reveals Drug Flooding Ports

·         Costa Rica Struggling to Stop Repeated Organ Trafficking Cases

·         Drug Traffickers Used Venezuela’s Isla Margarita as Backdoor to Europe

·         InSight Crime Conference Talks Trends, Perspectives on LatAm Organized Crime

·         Wave of Murders Hits Small Coca-Producing Town in Northern Colombia

·         Transportista’ Groups Expand Operations in Costa Rica

 


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Archive

Fast and Furious

All--

See below article, forwarded to me by a friend.

Thanks,

Ron C.

*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***

The deadly-but-forgotten government gun-running scandal known as “Fast and Furious” has lain dormant for years, thanks to White House stonewalling and media compliance. But newly uncovered emails have reopened the case, exposing the anatomy of a coverup by an administration that promised to be the most transparent in history.

At least 20 other deaths or violent crimes have been linked to Fast and Furious-trafficked guns.

A federal judge has forced the release of more than 20,000 pages of emails and memos previously locked up under President Obama’s phony executive-privilege claim. A preliminary review shows top Obama officials deliberately obstructing congressional probes into the border gun-running operation.

Fast and Furious was a Justice Department program that allowed assault weapons — including .50-caliber rifles powerful enough to take down a helicopter — to be sold to Mexican drug cartels allegedly as a way to track them. But internal documents later revealed the real goal was to gin up a crisis requiring a crackdown on guns in America. Fast and Furious was merely a pretext for imposing stricter gun laws.

Only the scheme backfired when Justice agents lost track of the nearly 2,000 guns sold through the program and they started turning up at murder scenes on both sides of the border — including one that claimed the life of US Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.

While then-Attorney General Eric Holder was focused on politics, people were dying. At least 20 other deaths or violent crimes have been linked to Fast and Furious-trafficked guns.

The program came to light only after Terry’s 2010 death at the hands of Mexican bandits, who shot him in the back with government-issued semiautomatic weapons. Caught red-handed, “the most transparent administration in history” flat-out lied about the program to Congress, denying it ever even existed.

Then Team Obama conspired to derail investigations into who was responsible by first withholding documents under subpoena — for which Holder earned a contempt-of-Congress citation — and later claiming executive privilege to keep evidence sealed.READ

MORE:  https://nypost.com/2016/05/21/the-scandal-in-washington-no-one-is-talking-about/

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We Say it Often, Numbers Count. And Here's An Example of Why
With reduction in migration flow, agents return focus to border crime
DHS ‘Reprograms’ Budgets as More Illegal Aliens Go Free
The Fiscal Burden of Illegal Immigration on United States Taxpayers
The United States Loses $150 Billion Annually in Remittances
A shifting border policy
The Real Cost of 'Free' Health Insurance for Illegal Immigrants
American-Made .50-Caliber Rifles Help Fuel Mexican Cartel Violence
Where does Mexico really get its guns?
 
Flores Settlement Agreement

What Ending the Flores Agreement on Detention of Immigrant Children Really Means
California, 18 Other States, and D.C. Sue over Flores Regulation: My take: Insufferable, politically motivated, taxpayer-funded bloviation
Finally, a Final Rule to Fix the Flores Loophole: But there are hurdles ahead
Why Trump wants to detain immigrant children longer
FAIR Applauds Trump Administration on Closing Flores Loophole
Flores Settlement Agreement
How Can Congress Address the Current Border Crisis?

20 Times Breitbart Reported on Migrant Deaths During Obama-Biden Years and No One Cared
The Other Border Crisis
Release of Illegal Aliens into U.S. Drops 65 Percent Since Trump-Mexico Deal
Report: Fewer Illegals Will Cross the Border in June. But the Invasion Will Continue
100K Illegals Got Away From Border Agents
Illegal immigrants learn a trick to sneak in: Dress like drug smugglers
Mexico Sends Almost 15,000 Troops to US-Mexico Border to Curb Illegal Immigration
Mexico says it has deployed 15,000 forces in the north to halt U.S.-bound migration
Agents confront challenging border dynamics
Tucson Border Patrol Agents Confront Challenging Border Dynamics
Lessons From The Border’s Volatile History.
Trump admin program sends asylum-seekers to await claims in Mexico, despite fears of violence: report
Migrants rush to enter Mexico ahead of security crackdown demanded by Trump
Deal Or Not, Mexico Can’t Stop The Border Crisis On Its Own
At Mexico’s southern border, migrants feel the pinch of a crackdown spurred by U.S.
House Republicans: DHS Failed to Implement Available Border Fixes

How Can Congress Address the Current Border Crisis ?
What’s behind the spike in immigrants at the border
Illegal Aliens Are Caught — Then Released Into U.S. Interior
5 facts about illegal immigration in the U.S. 
A Growing Border Crisis: A report from Arizona
What's It Gonna Be...A Welfare State or Open Borders?
Americans Clueless About Border Invasion, Illegals Dumped Into the Heartland
What a real border crisis looks like, in a chart

Understanding Trump's Mexico Tariffs: A Reader's Digest Of 9 Important Points On The Border Crisis

Explainer: How does the situation on the U.S.-Mexico border compare with the past?
Remittances Key to Central American Economies: Incentivizing the departure of their nationals?
In the Era of Split-Screen Views of the Border, Each Side Has Its Story, and the Political Implications Are Enormous
The Conservative Hispanic army that’s fighting hard for President Trump
Ninth Circuit Hands Trump a Win on 'Return to Mexico: The court still misses a major point
Appeals Court Rules Trump Administration Can Keep Sending Asylum-Seekers To Mexico
Appeals court: Trump can make asylum seekers wait in Mexico
Border Patrol chief warns of more releases of migrant families into communities
Rising cost of migrant health care is straining charities, Border Patrol
YOUR questions answered by Center for Immigration Studies
Why US Aid Cuts to Central America Will Help Organized Crime
US Corruption List Highlights Northern Triangle Presidents’ Criminal Ties

Talking Points Suggest E-Verify Is Part of the President’s New Immigration Plan: The key that shuts off the jobs magnet
What’s to Fear About Social Security’s No-Match Letters?
Radio ads offer to 'help out' migrants trying to enter US, Border Patrol official says
Why Immigrants Who Overstay U.S. Visas Are So Difficult To Track
2019 Border Tour Videos
Government Releasing Sick Illegals in American Communities
Illegal-alien Invasion Crisis Not Just at the Border
A Bipartisan Panel Reports Alarming Findings on the Border Crisis
Expand Expedited Removal, Mr. President
Can the President Shut Down the Border?
Buttressing The Border – On Both Sides
History of U.S. Immigration
The History of the Flores Settlement: How a 1997 agreement cracked open our detention laws

Cannabis Effects

Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
New Books
Our 50-State Border Crisis by Howard G. Buffett
also see:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/our-50-state-border-crisis-howard-buffett/1127331052
https://www.amazon.com/Our-50-State-Border-Crisis-Epidemic-ebook/dp/B074M6FT8F
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/howard-g-buffett/our-50-state-border-crisis/Books

Double Wide
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The following was excerpted from: Breitbart News  See: https://www.breitbart.com/border/2019/01/08/29-facts-about-the-border-and-mexican-cartels-you-need-to-know/

29 Facts About the Border and Mexican Cartels You Need to Know

As the debate about the construction of a wall and other border security issues, here are 29 facts that you need to know. The topics came up during the most recent episode of “Coffee with Scott Adams.” Brandon Darby, the Managing Editor for Breitbart’s Border and Cartel Chronicles, sat down with the famed creator of the Dilbert comics to discuss the intricacies of border security.

1) No one is proposing a wall between all of Mexico and the U.S.—the U.S. southern border is approximately 2,000 miles. The discussion is about 1,000 miles of physical barriers in regions that are heavily controlled by drug cartels.

2) The Texas border is about 1,200 miles of the approximately 2,000 miles of the total southern border. Most of that border is the Rio Grande, a river which varies in intensity with respect to currents.

3) Mexico has numerous states under the direct influence of drug cartels that have standing armies with access to RPGs, armored vehicles, artillery, and explosives. Most of Mexico has military forces patrolling streets to deal with cartel paramilitary forces.

4) The most violent drug cartels operate south of the Texas border. Factions of Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel routinely allow their violence to spill over to the average person.

5) The border city of Tijuana has some of the highest murder statistics in all of Mexico. Despite record-setting figures, most of the victims tend to be tied to drug trafficking.

6) Border cities south of Texas like Reynosa, Tamaulipas, have much lower murder rates than Tijuana. Despite the difference, average citizens are often touched by cartels including shootouts, kidnappings, and other violent activities.

7) Most of the efforts by drug cartels to control migration happens South of the Texas border. Criminal organizations like the Reynosa faction of the Gulf Cartel profit more from human smuggling than drug trafficking.

8) The majority of tunnels are found on the Arizona and California borders. The tunnels are generally discovered in areas where there are population centers on both sides of the border and a wall or fence is already in place. Few have been found in Texas, where there is a river.

9) Most tunnels are discovered thanks to informants; law enforcement technology has rarely been successful in locating border tunnels.

10) Most of the border does not have a drug tunnel problem. They are typically found in Douglas and Nogales, Arizona, as well as Mexicali, San Diego/San Isidro, California.

11) Cartels spend a lot of money building a tunnel–only to be discovered shortly after.

12) Claims by Democrats about the low crime rates in El Paso are an example of walls working. In areas with considerable border barriers such as El Paso, the regional criminal groups turn more professional and shy away from illegal immigration to traffic harder drugs through ports of entry.

13) The presence of physical barriers in cities like El Paso has led to fewer people coming over the border to commit petty crimes or bring loads of drugs on their backs. The criminal organizations in the area shifted toward corrupting U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials to smuggle harder drugs.

14) A partially secured border is more deadly than an open or well-secured one. Previous administrations put barriers south of most cities in Arizona and California to funnel illicit traffic into areas that were easier to manage or too desolate to cross. This led to a spike in deaths since the desire of people to reach the U.S. pushes them to more remote and dangerous areas

15) Human smuggling and illegal immigration will continue to be a problem until economic opportunities improve in Mexico and in Central America.

16) Mexican transnational criminal groups and their leaders have grown beyond the size and power of the American mafia from Prohibition Era and Al Capone. Cartels are integrated into the Mexican political culture and bureaucracy. Legalization would not stop them.

17) The decriminalization of marijuana and the production of higher quality plants in the U.S. versus Mexico had a series of unspoken consequences. After marijuana from Mexico was not able to compete with U.S.-grown plants, some cartels shifted their model more toward human smuggling–becoming a factor in the 2014 migrant crisis and the current one at the U.S. border.

18) After marijuana decriminalization in the U.S., cartels shifted to increase their cultivation of poppies and the production of black tar heroin. In order to compete with the Asian product, cartels use fentanyl–playing a role in the current opioid overdose epidemic.

19) The U.S. State Department influences how hard authorities crack down on cartels. U.S. agencies have been told to “measure their law enforcement priorities with the State Department’s diplomatic concerns.”

20) A cartel’s power in Mexico comes not from kingpins, but from politicians, financiers, lawyers, and money launderers. U.S. authorities and diplomats routinely focus on kingpins such as “El Chapo” and his lieutenants, but never go after the rest of the circle.

21) The state of Tamaulipas, directly south of Texas, has two former governors currently indicted for their alleged roles in helping cartels. One remains in Mexico, while the other is in U.S. custody awaiting trial.

22) U.S. diplomats are negotiating and playing along with the same Mexican politicians that protect cartels, in the interest of trade and diplomacy.

23) Certain factions of drug cartels have crossed the line into terrorism and should classified as such. The designation would change the way the U.S. alienates them from banks, financial resources, and politicians. Other cartels would be forced to tone down their actions or risk similar consequences.

24) Worries of Middle Eastern terrorists crossing the southwestern border are at times mitigated by cartel members who are informants for U.S. agencies that enjoy handsome incentives to turn people in.

25) The more likely scenario for terrorism deals with people flying into Canada and then entering the U.S. with visas. Most people on the terror watch list who try to enter the U.S. across the southern border are Somalis or Kurds.

26) Certain organizations like Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel present more of an imminent threat than foreign terrorists entering through the southern border.

27) Mexico’s ongoing cartel violence and drug war has led to more murders and disappearances than some international wars. Mexico has suffered more than 250,000 homicides and at least 30,000 disappearances since 2009.

28) Up to 70 percent of the women and girls from Central America who come through Mexico to the U.S. are sexually assaulted en route. Most women who leave Central America for the U.S. have the expectation of facing multiple abuses at the hands of cartel-connected human smugglers.

29) The State Department keeps U.S. law enforcement from being more aggressive against cartels. The State Department has everything to do with how law enforcement and intelligence agencies operate in Mexico–and any effort to secure the border without addressing the Department’s timidity in Mexico will likely fail or be less successful than it otherwise could be.

Ildefonso Ortiz is an award-winning journalist with Breitbart Texas. He co-founded the Cartel Chronicles project with Brandon Darby and Stephen K. Bannon.  You can follow him on Twitter and on Facebook. He can be contacted at Iortiz@breitbart.com.
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From ICE Acting Director Homan:

Excerpt from:
https://www.numbersusa.com/blog/blame-congress-rapid-rise-illegal-border-crossings

REFORM THE TRAFFICKING VICTIMS PROTECTION REAUTHORIZATION ACT (TVPRA) -- Commonly referred to as the William Wilberforce Act, TVPRA prohibits Border Patrol from quickly removing unaccompanied children from non-contiguous countries who attempt to cross the border illegally. UACs from Mexico and Canada can be quickly returned once Border Patrol is able to determine that they're not victims of human trafficking. But for minors from countries outside of Mexico and Canada, minors must be turned over to Health and Human Services, allowing them to stay in the country indefinitely.

REFORM THE ASYLUM PROCESS -- Under existing law, anyone apprehended at the border who makes a credible fear claim that passes the initial screening is released. Since 2008, there's been a 1700% spike in the number of credible fear claims made at the Southern border, and 80% pass the credible fear screening. However, only 20% of those who pass the credible fear screening are granted asylum by a federal judge.

MANDATE E-VERIFY -- Foreign nationals cross the border illegally because they can obtain jobs in the U.S. Homan said requiring all employers to use E-Verify would discourage most illegal immigration to the United States and dramatically reduce the number of illegal border crossings.

END SANCTUARY CITIES -- At last count, more than 300 sanctuary jurisdictions exist across the country, including California which recently passed legislation making it a sanctuary state. Jurisdictions that protect illegal aliens from removal encourages illegal border crossings because illegal aliens know they have hundreds of safe-havens to choose from once they get here.

TERMINATE FLORES AGREEMENT -- The spike in the apprehension of family units is a result of the Flores Agreement, which restricts the period of time that Border Patrol can detain family units. The Flores Agreement encourages illegal border crossers to cross with children, knowing that Border Patrol has to release them after a certain period of time. If BP were able to hold family units until their court date, family units would be less likely to cross the border illegally.

All of Homan's policy recommendations are included in Rep. Bob Goodlatte's H.R. 4760, the Securing America's Future Act, but not surprisingly, none are part of the ongoing DACA amnesty negotiations between House Republicans.

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Mexico
Here’s How Mexico Treats Illegal Immigrants

Authored by: Matt Palumbo

While combating illegal immigration has long been a bipartisan issue, the so-called anti-Trump “resistance” has decided that guilt tripping anyone who supports a sensible immigration policy is a viable political strategy. We’ve all heard the arguments; that opposing illegal immigration is preventing people from “just looking for a better life,” or over the past few months, is “separating families.” And of course there’s the most common insult, that enforcing immigration laws is “racist.”

But are America’s immigration laws, or our treatment of illegal immigrants uniquely awful?

To answer that question, let’s examine the situation in another nation: Mexico.

Mexico Rejects More Asylum Requests than the U.S. 

Speaking of the rise in asylum request rejections under Trump, a writer at the American-Statesman noted a “dramatic” change. They write, “Immigration judges, who are employed by the Justice Department and not the judicial branch like other federal judges, rejected 61.8 percent of asylum cases decided in 2017, the highest denial rate since 2005.”

Meanwhile in Mexico, nearly 90 percent of asylum requests are denied (and the figures are similarly high for other Latin American countries, such as El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala).

Mexico Regulates Immigration Based on Race

I only bring this up, because for all the rhetoric about Trump’s supposed racism or disdain for certain immigrants, there is one country that does regulate their immigration flows by race, and that’s the country Trump is most accused of being racist against.

In Article 37 of Mexico’s General Law of Population, we learn that their Department of the Interior shall be able to deny foreigners entry into Mexico, if, among other reasons, they may disrupt the “domestic demographic equilibrium.” Additionally, Article 37 also states that immigrants can be removed if they’re detrimental to “economic or national interests.”

Mexico Deports More Central American Illegal Immigrants than the United States

In July 2014, former Mexican president, Enrique Peña Nieto and former president of Guatemala Otto Pérez Molina, announced the start of a migration security project called Plan Frontera Sur (Southern Border Plan). The U.S. has committed at least $100 million towards this plan to help aid Mexican border security, because it’s mutually beneficial. Both Mexico and the U.S. want to keep out Central American illegal immigrants (and they have to pass through Mexico to reach the U.S.)..

Since Plan Frontera Sur, Mexico has deported more central American illegal immigrants than we have in the U.S. Even CNN had to acknowledge that:

According to statistics from the US and Mexican governments compiled by the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute, Mexico in 2015 apprehended tens of thousands more Central Americans in its country than the US did at its border, and in 2015 and 2016 it deported roughly twice as many Central Americans as the US did.Since migrant children are the hot-button topic in the American immigration debate currently; In 2014 there were 18,169 migrant children were deported from Mexico, and 8,350 deported to Central America the year before. From January 2015 to July 2016, 39,751 unaccompanied minors were put in the custody of Mexican authorities.

A report this year from Amnesty International concluded that “Mexican migration authorities are routinely turning back thousands of people from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala to their countries without considering the risk to their life and security upon return, in many cases violating international and domestic law by doing so.”

Mexico Has Their Own Southern Border – and Invisible Wall

For us much as Donald Trump is criticized by the political class in Mexico for wanting to beef up security on the U.S.-Mexico border, as previously mentioned, Mexico has accepted our help in enforcing their immigration laws on their own southern border with Guatemala. While they don’t have a literal border fence, they do have checkpoints, patrols, raids, etc. According to NPR:

Rather than amassing troops on its border with Guatemala, Mexico stations migration agents, local and federal police, soldiers and marines to create a kind of containment zone in Chiapas state. With roving checkpoints and raids, Mexican migration agents have formed a formidable deportation force.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

14 killed in shooting attacks in Mexican border city

Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/64717234.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_cam____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________In Homan's conversation with CIS's Jessica Vaughan, he identified five actions that Congress can take to end the surge of illegal border crossings.


===============================================================================================================================================================================

The Current "Wall" Images

========================================================================================================================================================

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NEW BOOK by Judicial Watch's Tom Fitton: Clean House: Exposing Our Government's Secrets and Lies

Judicial Watch: Open Records Laws and Resources ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Leo Banks is a Tucson-based reporter who covers border-related issues.

New Book
Double Wide
A novel by
Leo W Banks

=================================================================================================================================================================================

Excerpt from CIS: https://cis.org/Fact-Sheet/Asylum-Removal-and-Immigration-Courts

Asylum

Definition:

An applicant for asylum has the burden to demonstrate that he or she is eligible for that protection. To satisfy that burden, the applicant must prove that he or she is a refugee. A “refugee” is a person outside of his or her country of nationality or habitual residence who is “unable or unwilling” to return to that country “because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.”

Talking Points:

Expedited Removal

Definition:

The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) allows immigration officers — rather than judges — to order the deportation of arriving aliens who are inadmissible because of fraud or misrepresentation, because they have no documentation (like a passport or a visa) that would allow them to be admitted, or because they entered illegally and are apprehended within 100 miles of the border and 14 days of entry.

Talking Point:

Credible Fear

Definition:

If an alien in expedited removal asserts a fear of persecution, the arresting officer will refer the alien to an asylum officer for a “credible fear interview”. If the asylum officer determines that the alien has a credible fear, the alien is placed in removal proceedings before an immigration judge, where the alien can file his or her application for asylum. Under the INA, the term “‘credible fear of persecution’ means that there is a significant possibility, taking into account the credibility of the statements made by the alien in support of the alien’s claim and such other facts as are known to the officer, that the alien could establish eligibility for asylum under section 208.” This is a very low standard, and credible fear is found in 75 to 90 percent of all cases in which an alien claims credible fear.

Talking Points:

Bond

Definition:

“Bond” is the term used in immigration for the release of an alien pending removal proceedings or removal. Aliens can be released on their own recognizance, or on a minimum bond of $1,500. Bond can be granted by either an immigration judge or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Parole

Definition:

“Parole” is the term used in immigration for the release of an arriving alien. It can only be granted by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Again, DHS can release an alien on parole on his or her own recognizance, or for a sum of money as bond.

Unaccompanied Alien Child (UAC)

Definition:

An alien under the age of 18 who enters the United States or is apprehended by DHS who does not have a parent or guardian in the United States. Under section 462 of the Homeland Security Act (2002), UACs must be turned over to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), not DHS, for detention.

Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA)

Definition:

Modified the rules governing the detention of unaccompanied alien children (UACs). Under the TVPRA, UACs must be turned over to HHS within 48 hours of detention by DHS, or identification as a UAC, and “promptly placed in the least restrictive setting that is in the best interest of the child,” generally meaning release to a family member or friend.

Talking Point:

Flores Settlement Agreement

Definition:

An agreement between the then-Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and a class of alien minors in 1997, which is currently overseen by Judge Dolly Gee of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. In 2016, it was read to create a presumption in favor of the release of all alien minors, even those alien minors who arrive with their parents.

Talking Points:

Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR)

Definition:

Agency of the Department of Justice (DOJ) with jurisdiction over the immigration courts and the Board of immigration appeals (BIA).

Immigration Courts

Definition:

Courts with primary jurisdiction over removal proceedings. Immigration judges in these courts determine removability, set bond where they have jurisdiction, and can adjudicate applications for relief from removal, including asylum.

Talking Point:

Backlog

Definition:

Cases that have been pending before the immigration courts for more than one year. The backlog more than doubled from FYs 2006 through 2015, primarily due to declining numbers of cases completed per year. There were 437,000 pending cases at the start of FY 2015, when the median pending time was 404 days.

Talking Points:

Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA)

Definition:

 Appellate tribunal with jurisdiction over appeals from immigration courts. Most aliens have a right to appeal immigration court decisions to the BIA.

Topics: Immigration Courts, Asylum

Fact Sheet
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Southwest Border Tour, Spring 2019: Hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies
Read Accounts and View Pictures of Past Tours:
Unrest in the Rio Grande Valley
Diligence on a Changing Canadian Border
Constant Activity on the California Border
Holding Steady in West Texas
A Washington Narrative Meets Reality
Sunshine, Saguaros, and Smugglers
Reflections from the Border

End of 12/14/2019 BORDER NEWS WATCH SPECIAL EDITION

 

 

 

12/21/2019 BORDER NEWS WATCH SPECIAL EDITION

 

Breitbart News
Judicial Watch

ICE Most Wanted List
CBP Website
ICE Website
FOX News on Immigration
Borderland Beat

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Fast and Furious
Mexican authorities arrest suspect in killing of a U.S. Border Patrol agent
Operation Fast and Furious: The Forgotten History of the ATF’s Notorious Gunwalking Scandal
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Mexican Mormon Massacre

Mexico's cartel crisis – and ours
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Opinion
Tom Homan: 2020 Dems making promises to illegals 'guaranteeing' Trump win
How to Eliminate the Visa Waiting Lists Without a Massive Influx of New Aliens

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
US Congress
Congress Passes Funding Bills: Weaken Enforcement and Increase Visas
The Impact of Immigration on the Apportionment in the U.S. House in 2020

Congressman: On tackling security, López Obrador has ‘failed miserably’


A bipartisan immigration bill that will help farmers

Apparently Washington is Never Too Divided to Capitulate to the Demands of Big Ag
House Approves Amnesty & Indentured Servitude for Illegal Farm Workers
Massive Farmworker Amnesty Proposed in House
Apparently Washington is Never Too Divided to Capitulate to the Demands of Big Ag
New Farm Bill: Good for Ag Employers and Illegal Aliens, Bad for American Workers
The Farm Workforce Modernization act

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The 'Wall': Brian Kolfage
Air Force hero reveals international organization allows access to illegal aliens across southern border


EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Yes, Physical Barriers Matter on the Border, Says JTFW Director
Exclusive Video: Border Is ‘Matter of National Security,’ Says JTFW Director
Sharyl Attkisson: Has Trump Kept Promise About Border Wall? Is There A Way To Quantify What's Been Done?
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DHS
Trump Administration Seeks to Bar Convicted Immigrants From Asylum
Border Apprehensions Dropped for 6th Consecutive Month, per DHS Data
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CBP
‘Absolutely Impacted Their Pocketbook’: CBP Chief Touts Success In Fight Against Migrant-Smuggling Cartels
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Border Patrol
Shots Fired at Border Patrol Agents During Vehicle Pursuit in Arizona
Border Patrol Agents Fired on: Suspects in Custody

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
ICE
U.S. Interior Immigration Arrests Fell Despite Admin Push

Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Workplace Immigration Investigations Quadruple Under Trump
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
FBI: BPA Nick Ivie
Border Patrol Agent Nick Ivie Was Killed By Smugglers, Not Friendly Fire
    https://www.amazon.com/Shot-Nick-Ivie-Huey-Freeman/dp/1734295104

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
DOS
U.S. issues Mexico travel advisory due to crime and kidnapping
Visiting Mexico Includes Expanded Risks

U.S. says Americans shouldn't travel to these 5 Mexican states
Parts of Mexico Still as Dangerous as Middle East War Zones for Travel, Say Feds _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Ignoring ICE Detainers: Alien Arrests Followed by Release
Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction
 
Declined Detainer Outcome Report
What Is the Law, and Why Should It Be Followed?

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Border Perspective and Immigration Trends
Border Patrol: Brazilian migrant arrests increasing at border
Numbers of Brazilians Who Arrive in US-Mexico Border Surges

Report: Crackdown puts smugglers back in control of migrant flow to U.S. border
What crackdown? Migrant smuggling business adapts, thrives
Illegal immigration declines 85%, but cartels seek other ways to enter US

Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction
On the other side of the wall: Mexicans on the border are ‘psychologically traumatized‘
Mexican Border Cities: Too Dangerous For Americans But Safe Enough For Migrants, U.S. Says
Apprehensions down along the border, but other issues are on the rise

NBC Report: Thousands of Foreign Students May Have Overstayed Visas Through Shell Companies
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Illegal Immigration: Deports
U.S. deports Mexicans far from border, may send others to Guatemala
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Nogales Tunnels
Cross-border drug tunnel found beneath Nogales home
Inside look at how Border Patrol agents find tunnels

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Illegal Immigration: MPP Policy
Remain in Mexico Demonstrates Lack of Legit Asylum Claims

Official: President Trump's "Diplomatic Persistence" Has Let to Sharp Declines in Illegal Migrants
 “Migrant Protection Protocol” requires migrants to wait in Mexico while their asylum claims are being adjudicated

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Asylum
Trump Admin Seeks to Bar Convicted Aliens from Asylum
Asylum Seekers Sent to Guatemala Preferring to Return to Home Countries

Mexican children shiver in tents at U.S. border as temperature freezes

Lots of Useful Information in the Refugee Report to Congress
Trump orders overhaul of asylum system, would force applicants to pay fees

Asylum Explained

Mexico’s Refugees

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Birth Tourism
372,000 Born to Illegal Aliens and Visitors Every Year, 33,000 to 'Birth Tourists'
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartel Terrorism
Part IV: Five Ways America Should Secure the Border Against European-Style Terrorist Infiltration
Read Part I, "A New Terror Travel Tactic is Born; Part II; “New Study Explains Why Islamic Terrorists Have Not Attacked Through America’s Southern Border; and Part III, “Like in Europe, America’s Broken Asylum System Enables Terrorist Infiltration Over U.S.-Mexico Border

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cartels as Mexican Terrorists

Call Mexico’s Cartels What They Are: Terrorists
U.S. Senators File Bill Targeting Mexican Cartels with Sanctions Similar to Terrorist Designation
Bill Would Designate Mexican Cartels as Something Other Than Terrorists

Yes, Mexico's drug cartels count as terrorists
Why Trump Should Hit Pause On Designating Mexican Cartels As Terrorists
Trump's Plan to Define Mexican Drug Cartels as Terror Groups Is Problematic
Why designating Mexican drug cartels terrorists might not be the way to fight organized crime
Mary Beth Sheridan: Five reasons Mexico objects to Trump's plan to designate its cartels as terror groups
Trump plan to label Mexican cartels as terrorists may backfire, Mexico, experts warn
Families of Mexico massacre victims suffer backlash over cartel row
DEA agent who caught El Chapo: Trump labeling Mexican cartels 'terrorists' would be 'game-changer'

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Human Smuggling
Report: Crackdown puts smugglers back in control of migrant flow to U.S. border
What crackdown? Migrant smuggling business adapts, thrives
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
American Green Cards
How to Eliminate the Visa Waiting Lists Without a Massive Influx of New Aliens

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Judicial
3 time removed Mexican national sentenced in federal court to 46 months

Judge Who Ordered Free Mental Health Services for Migrants Should Have His Head Examined

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Sanctuaries
Sanctuary City Released Human Rights Violator

Sanctuaries to Release Illegal Immigrants Jailed for Rape, Murder, Child Molestation
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Politics
What DEM Presidential Hopefuls said during December Debate
Tom Homan: 2020 Dems making promises to illegals 'guaranteeing' Trump win
Trump says Guatemala is helping stem asylum seekers in US  __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
GOM
Upset at Trump, Mexico voices ‘worry and irritation‘ to U.S. envoys
Mexico won’t accept foreign deportees, US must assume responsibility – FM Videgaray
Mexican president: US military not allowed to fight drug cartels in Mexico

Why can't Mexico control the cartels? Some blame America

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Mexico
 ‘Not promoting illegality’? Mexico invests $50mn in legal aid centers at its US consulates
Official: Mexico rejected US plan on 3rd-country deportees

‘Tuberculosis out of control:’ cases have soared 140% this year

There are no short cuts in resolving Mexico’s spiraling violence
Mexico Needs A New Strategy For Fighting Crime
Murder And Mayhem In Mexico
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Mexican Mennonites
Celebrating Mexico's Mennonites During the Christmas Season
 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartels
Videos Show Armed Gulf Cartel Paramilitaries Patrolling in Mexico near Texas Border
Mexico's cartel crisis – and ours

US, Mexican lawmen going after border’s ‘most wanted’ criminals
A Mexican drug kingpin you've never heard of is infiltrating small-town America

Borderland Beat
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartels: Judicial Watch
Mexican Drug Cartels: How Far Is Their Reach? | Chris Farrell
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Liberia
Liberian Amnesty Stuffed into NDAA 2020: It's overbroad, sets a bad precedent, and has nothing to do with defense

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Selected Incidents
Deported Criminal Migrant Arrests Continue Along Southwest Border
Smuggler leads California agents on chase with 11 piled in pickup, Border Patrol says


Read more here: https://www.newsobserver.com/news/nation-world/national/article238608218.html#storylink=cpy

Shots Fired at Border Patrol Agents During Vehicle Pursuit in Arizona
Suspects In Custody After Firing On Border Patrol Agents Days After Anniversary Of Agent Terry’s Murder
Bold Smuggling Attempt at US-Mexico Border
4 Men Arrested After Being Accused Of Smuggling 200 Pounds Of Narcotics

Ultralight plane used to smuggle 200 pounds of meth across border, prosecutors say
Border Patrol apprehends MS-13 gang member
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
New York: 'Green Light' Law
WATCH: Hundreds of illegal immigrants flood New York DMVs for driver's licenses
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Breitbart News
Judicial Watch

ICE Most Wanted List
CBP Website

ICE Website
FOX News on Immigration
Borderland Beat
USInc

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

  • INSIGHT CRIME NEWS:

·         Illegal Mining Behind Mercury Contamination Harming Colombia’s Indigenous

·         Landmark US Drug Trial Leaves Bloody Trail in Honduras

·         Senior Police Linked to Family Drug Clans in Peru’s VRAEM

·         Tankers Go Dark to Help Venezuela Evade Oil Sanctions

·         Jade: New Crown Jewel for Crime Groups in Guatemala

·         Butterflies, Beetles and Spiders: Costa Rica’s Smaller Eco-trafficking Targets

·         Gulf of Mexico Oil Industry Reeling From Hundreds of Pirate Attacks in 2019

·         Mexico’s Former Top Security Official Indicted on US Drug Charges

·         InSight Crime Conference Talks Trends, Perspectives on LatAm Organized Crime

 


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Archive

Fast and Furious

All--

See below article, forwarded to me by a friend.

Thanks,

Ron C.

*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***

The deadly-but-forgotten government gun-running scandal known as “Fast and Furious” has lain dormant for years, thanks to White House stonewalling and media compliance. But newly uncovered emails have reopened the case, exposing the anatomy of a coverup by an administration that promised to be the most transparent in history.

At least 20 other deaths or violent crimes have been linked to Fast and Furious-trafficked guns.

A federal judge has forced the release of more than 20,000 pages of emails and memos previously locked up under President Obama’s phony executive-privilege claim. A preliminary review shows top Obama officials deliberately obstructing congressional probes into the border gun-running operation.

Fast and Furious was a Justice Department program that allowed assault weapons — including .50-caliber rifles powerful enough to take down a helicopter — to be sold to Mexican drug cartels allegedly as a way to track them. But internal documents later revealed the real goal was to gin up a crisis requiring a crackdown on guns in America. Fast and Furious was merely a pretext for imposing stricter gun laws.

Only the scheme backfired when Justice agents lost track of the nearly 2,000 guns sold through the program and they started turning up at murder scenes on both sides of the border — including one that claimed the life of US Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.

While then-Attorney General Eric Holder was focused on politics, people were dying. At least 20 other deaths or violent crimes have been linked to Fast and Furious-trafficked guns.

The program came to light only after Terry’s 2010 death at the hands of Mexican bandits, who shot him in the back with government-issued semiautomatic weapons. Caught red-handed, “the most transparent administration in history” flat-out lied about the program to Congress, denying it ever even existed.

Then Team Obama conspired to derail investigations into who was responsible by first withholding documents under subpoena — for which Holder earned a contempt-of-Congress citation — and later claiming executive privilege to keep evidence sealed.READ

MORE:  https://nypost.com/2016/05/21/the-scandal-in-washington-no-one-is-talking-about/

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We Say it Often, Numbers Count. And Here's An Example of Why
With reduction in migration flow, agents return focus to border crime
DHS ‘Reprograms’ Budgets as More Illegal Aliens Go Free
The Fiscal Burden of Illegal Immigration on United States Taxpayers
The United States Loses $150 Billion Annually in Remittances
A shifting border policy
The Real Cost of 'Free' Health Insurance for Illegal Immigrants

American-Made .50-Caliber Rifles Help Fuel Mexican Cartel Violence
Where does Mexico really get its guns?
 
Flores Settlement Agreement

What Ending the Flores Agreement on Detention of Immigrant Children Really Means
California, 18 Other States, and D.C. Sue over Flores Regulation: My take: Insufferable, politically motivated, taxpayer-funded bloviation
Finally, a Final Rule to Fix the Flores Loophole: But there are hurdles ahead
Why Trump wants to detain immigrant children longer
FAIR Applauds Trump Administration on Closing Flores Loophole
Flores Settlement Agreement

How Can Congress Address the Current Border Crisis?

20 Times Breitbart Reported on Migrant Deaths During Obama-Biden Years and No One Cared
The Other Border Crisis
Release of Illegal Aliens into U.S. Drops 65 Percent Since Trump-Mexico Deal
Report: Fewer Illegals Will Cross the Border in June. But the Invasion Will Continue
100K Illegals Got Away From Border Agents
Illegal immigrants learn a trick to sneak in: Dress like drug smugglers
Mexico Sends Almost 15,000 Troops to US-Mexico Border to Curb Illegal Immigration
Mexico says it has deployed 15,000 forces in the north to halt U.S.-bound migration

Agents confront challenging border dynamics
Tucson Border Patrol Agents Confront Challenging Border Dynamics

Lessons From The Border’s Volatile History.
Trump admin program sends asylum-seekers to await claims in Mexico, despite fears of violence: report
Migrants rush to enter Mexico ahead of security crackdown demanded by Trump
Deal Or Not, Mexico Can’t Stop The Border Crisis On Its Own
At Mexico’s southern border, migrants feel the pinch of a crackdown spurred by U.S.
House Republicans: DHS Failed to Implement Available Border Fixes

How Can Congress Address the Current Border Crisis ?
What’s behind the spike in immigrants at the border
Illegal Aliens Are Caught — Then Released Into U.S. Interior
5 facts about illegal immigration in the U.S.
 
A Growing Border Crisis: A report from Arizona
What's It Gonna Be...A Welfare State or Open Borders?
Americans Clueless About Border Invasion, Illegals Dumped Into the Heartland

What a real border crisis looks like, in a chart

Understanding Trump's Mexico Tariffs: A Reader's Digest Of 9 Important Points On The Border Crisis

Explainer: How does the situation on the U.S.-Mexico border compare with the past?
Remittances Key to Central American Economies: Incentivizing the departure of their nationals?

In the Era of Split-Screen Views of the Border, Each Side Has Its Story, and the Political Implications Are Enormous

The Conservative Hispanic army that’s fighting hard for President Trump

Ninth Circuit Hands Trump a Win on 'Return to Mexico: The court still misses a major point
Appeals Court Rules Trump Administration Can Keep Sending Asylum-Seekers To Mexico

Appeals court: Trump can make asylum seekers wait in Mexico
Border Patrol chief warns of more releases of migrant families into communities
Rising cost of migrant health care is straining charities, Border Patrol
YOUR questions answered by Center for Immigration Studies
Why US Aid Cuts to Central America Will Help Organized Crime
US Corruption List Highlights Northern Triangle Presidents’ Criminal Ties

Talking Points Suggest E-Verify Is Part of the President’s New Immigration Plan: The key that shuts off the jobs magnet
What’s to Fear About Social Security’s No-Match Letters?
Radio ads offer to 'help out' migrants trying to enter US, Border Patrol official says
Why Immigrants Who Overstay U.S. Visas Are So Difficult To Track
2019 Border Tour Videos

Government Releasing Sick Illegals in American Communities
Illegal-alien Invasion Crisis Not Just at the Border
A Bipartisan Panel Reports Alarming Findings on the Border Crisis
Expand Expedited Removal, Mr. President
Can the President Shut Down the Border?
Buttressing The Border – On Both Sides
History of U.S. Immigration
The History of the Flores Settlement: How a 1997 agreement cracked open our detention laws

Cannabis Effects

Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
New Books
Our 50-State Border Crisis by Howard G. Buffett
also see:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/our-50-state-border-crisis-howard-buffett/1127331052
https://www.amazon.com/Our-50-State-Border-Crisis-Epidemic-ebook/dp/B074M6FT8F
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/howard-g-buffett/our-50-state-border-crisis/
Books

Double Wide
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The following was excerpted from: Breitbart News  See: https://www.breitbart.com/border/2019/01/08/29-facts-about-the-border-and-mexican-cartels-you-need-to-know/

29 Facts About the Border and Mexican Cartels You Need to Know

As the debate about the construction of a wall and other border security issues, here are 29 facts that you need to know. The topics came up during the most recent episode of “Coffee with Scott Adams.” Brandon Darby, the Managing Editor for Breitbart’s Border and Cartel Chronicles, sat down with the famed creator of the Dilbert comics to discuss the intricacies of border security.

1) No one is proposing a wall between all of Mexico and the U.S.—the U.S. southern border is approximately 2,000 miles. The discussion is about 1,000 miles of physical barriers in regions that are heavily controlled by drug cartels.

2) The Texas border is about 1,200 miles of the approximately 2,000 miles of the total southern border. Most of that border is the Rio Grande, a river which varies in intensity with respect to currents.

3) Mexico has numerous states under the direct influence of drug cartels that have standing armies with access to RPGs, armored vehicles, artillery, and explosives. Most of Mexico has military forces patrolling streets to deal with cartel paramilitary forces.

4) The most violent drug cartels operate south of the Texas border. Factions of Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel routinely allow their violence to spill over to the average person.

5) The border city of Tijuana has some of the highest murder statistics in all of Mexico. Despite record-setting figures, most of the victims tend to be tied to drug trafficking.

6) Border cities south of Texas like Reynosa, Tamaulipas, have much lower murder rates than Tijuana. Despite the difference, average citizens are often touched by cartels including shootouts, kidnappings, and other violent activities.

7) Most of the efforts by drug cartels to control migration happens South of the Texas border. Criminal organizations like the Reynosa faction of the Gulf Cartel profit more from human smuggling than drug trafficking.

8) The majority of tunnels are found on the Arizona and California borders. The tunnels are generally discovered in areas where there are population centers on both sides of the border and a wall or fence is already in place. Few have been found in Texas, where there is a river.

9) Most tunnels are discovered thanks to informants; law enforcement technology has rarely been successful in locating border tunnels.

10) Most of the border does not have a drug tunnel problem. They are typically found in Douglas and Nogales, Arizona, as well as Mexicali, San Diego/San Isidro, California.

11) Cartels spend a lot of money building a tunnel–only to be discovered shortly after.

12) Claims by Democrats about the low crime rates in El Paso are an example of walls working. In areas with considerable border barriers such as El Paso, the regional criminal groups turn more professional and shy away from illegal immigration to traffic harder drugs through ports of entry.

13) The presence of physical barriers in cities like El Paso has led to fewer people coming over the border to commit petty crimes or bring loads of drugs on their backs. The criminal organizations in the area shifted toward corrupting U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials to smuggle harder drugs.

14) A partially secured border is more deadly than an open or well-secured one. Previous administrations put barriers south of most cities in Arizona and California to funnel illicit traffic into areas that were easier to manage or too desolate to cross. This led to a spike in deaths since the desire of people to reach the U.S. pushes them to more remote and dangerous areas

15) Human smuggling and illegal immigration will continue to be a problem until economic opportunities improve in Mexico and in Central America.

16) Mexican transnational criminal groups and their leaders have grown beyond the size and power of the American mafia from Prohibition Era and Al Capone. Cartels are integrated into the Mexican political culture and bureaucracy. Legalization would not stop them.

17) The decriminalization of marijuana and the production of higher quality plants in the U.S. versus Mexico had a series of unspoken consequences. After marijuana from Mexico was not able to compete with U.S.-grown plants, some cartels shifted their model more toward human smuggling–becoming a factor in the 2014 migrant crisis and the current one at the U.S. border.

18) After marijuana decriminalization in the U.S., cartels shifted to increase their cultivation of poppies and the production of black tar heroin. In order to compete with the Asian product, cartels use fentanyl–playing a role in the current opioid overdose epidemic.

19) The U.S. State Department influences how hard authorities crack down on cartels. U.S. agencies have been told to “measure their law enforcement priorities with the State Department’s diplomatic concerns.”

20) A cartel’s power in Mexico comes not from kingpins, but from politicians, financiers, lawyers, and money launderers. U.S. authorities and diplomats routinely focus on kingpins such as “El Chapo” and his lieutenants, but never go after the rest of the circle.

21) The state of Tamaulipas, directly south of Texas, has two former governors currently indicted for their alleged roles in helping cartels. One remains in Mexico, while the other is in U.S. custody awaiting trial.

22) U.S. diplomats are negotiating and playing along with the same Mexican politicians that protect cartels, in the interest of trade and diplomacy.

23) Certain factions of drug cartels have crossed the line into terrorism and should classified as such. The designation would change the way the U.S. alienates them from banks, financial resources, and politicians. Other cartels would be forced to tone down their actions or risk similar consequences.

24) Worries of Middle Eastern terrorists crossing the southwestern border are at times mitigated by cartel members who are informants for U.S. agencies that enjoy handsome incentives to turn people in.

25) The more likely scenario for terrorism deals with people flying into Canada and then entering the U.S. with visas. Most people on the terror watch list who try to enter the U.S. across the southern border are Somalis or Kurds.

26) Certain organizations like Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel present more of an imminent threat than foreign terrorists entering through the southern border.

27) Mexico’s ongoing cartel violence and drug war has led to more murders and disappearances than some international wars. Mexico has suffered more than 250,000 homicides and at least 30,000 disappearances since 2009.

28) Up to 70 percent of the women and girls from Central America who come through Mexico to the U.S. are sexually assaulted en route. Most women who leave Central America for the U.S. have the expectation of facing multiple abuses at the hands of cartel-connected human smugglers.

29) The State Department keeps U.S. law enforcement from being more aggressive against cartels. The State Department has everything to do with how law enforcement and intelligence agencies operate in Mexico–and any effort to secure the border without addressing the Department’s timidity in Mexico will likely fail or be less successful than it otherwise could be.

Ildefonso Ortiz is an award-winning journalist with Breitbart Texas. He co-founded the Cartel Chronicles project with Brandon Darby and Stephen K. Bannon.  You can follow him on Twitter and on Facebook. He can be contacted at Iortiz@breitbart.com.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

From ICE Acting Director Homan:

Excerpt from: https://www.numbersusa.com/blog/blame-congress-rapid-rise-illegal-border-crossings

REFORM THE TRAFFICKING VICTIMS PROTECTION REAUTHORIZATION ACT (TVPRA) -- Commonly referred to as the William Wilberforce Act, TVPRA prohibits Border Patrol from quickly removing unaccompanied children from non-contiguous countries who attempt to cross the border illegally. UACs from Mexico and Canada can be quickly returned once Border Patrol is able to determine that they're not victims of human trafficking. But for minors from countries outside of Mexico and Canada, minors must be turned over to Health and Human Services, allowing them to stay in the country indefinitely.

REFORM THE ASYLUM PROCESS -- Under existing law, anyone apprehended at the border who makes a credible fear claim that passes the initial screening is released. Since 2008, there's been a 1700% spike in the number of credible fear claims made at the Southern border, and 80% pass the credible fear screening. However, only 20% of those who pass the credible fear screening are granted asylum by a federal judge.

MANDATE E-VERIFY -- Foreign nationals cross the border illegally because they can obtain jobs in the U.S. Homan said requiring all employers to use E-Verify would discourage most illegal immigration to the United States and dramatically reduce the number of illegal border crossings.

END SANCTUARY CITIES -- At last count, more than 300 sanctuary jurisdictions exist across the country, including California which recently passed legislation making it a sanctuary state. Jurisdictions that protect illegal aliens from removal encourages illegal border crossings because illegal aliens know they have hundreds of safe-havens to choose from once they get here.

TERMINATE FLORES AGREEMENT -- The spike in the apprehension of family units is a result of the Flores Agreement, which restricts the period of time that Border Patrol can detain family units. The Flores Agreement encourages illegal border crossers to cross with children, knowing that Border Patrol has to release them after a certain period of time. If BP were able to hold family units until their court date, family units would be less likely to cross the border illegally.

All of Homan's policy recommendations are included in Rep. Bob Goodlatte's H.R. 4760, the Securing America's Future Act, but not surprisingly, none are part of the ongoing DACA amnesty negotiations between House Republicans.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Mexico
Here’s How Mexico Treats Illegal Immigrants

Authored by: Matt Palumbo

While combating illegal immigration has long been a bipartisan issue, the so-called anti-Trump “resistance” has decided that guilt tripping anyone who supports a sensible immigration policy is a viable political strategy. We’ve all heard the arguments; that opposing illegal immigration is preventing people from “just looking for a better life,” or over the past few months, is “separating families.” And of course there’s the most common insult, that enforcing immigration laws is “racist.”

But are America’s immigration laws, or our treatment of illegal immigrants uniquely awful?

To answer that question, let’s examine the situation in another nation: Mexico.

Mexico Rejects More Asylum Requests than the U.S. 

Speaking of the rise in asylum request rejections under Trump, a writer at the American-Statesman noted a “dramatic” change. They write, “Immigration judges, who are employed by the Justice Department and not the judicial branch like other federal judges, rejected 61.8 percent of asylum cases decided in 2017, the highest denial rate since 2005.”

Meanwhile in Mexico, nearly 90 percent of asylum requests are denied (and the figures are similarly high for other Latin American countries, such as El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala).

Mexico Regulates Immigration Based on Race

I only bring this up, because for all the rhetoric about Trump’s supposed racism or disdain for certain immigrants, there is one country that does regulate their immigration flows by race, and that’s the country Trump is most accused of being racist against.

In Article 37 of Mexico’s General Law of Population, we learn that their Department of the Interior shall be able to deny foreigners entry into Mexico, if, among other reasons, they may disrupt the “domestic demographic equilibrium.” Additionally, Article 37 also states that immigrants can be removed if they’re detrimental to “economic or national interests.”

Mexico Deports More Central American Illegal Immigrants than the United States

In July 2014, former Mexican president, Enrique Peña Nieto and former president of Guatemala Otto Pérez Molina, announced the start of a migration security project called Plan Frontera Sur (Southern Border Plan). The U.S. has committed at least $100 million towards this plan to help aid Mexican border security, because it’s mutually beneficial. Both Mexico and the U.S. want to keep out Central American illegal immigrants (and they have to pass through Mexico to reach the U.S.)..

Since Plan Frontera Sur, Mexico has deported more central American illegal immigrants than we have in the U.S. Even CNN had to acknowledge that:

According to statistics from the US and Mexican governments compiled by the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute, Mexico in 2015 apprehended tens of thousands more Central Americans in its country than the US did at its border, and in 2015 and 2016 it deported roughly twice as many Central Americans as the US did.Since migrant children are the hot-button topic in the American immigration debate currently; In 2014 there were 18,169 migrant children were deported from Mexico, and 8,350 deported to Central America the year before. From January 2015 to July 2016, 39,751 unaccompanied minors were put in the custody of Mexican authorities.

A report this year from Amnesty International concluded that “Mexican migration authorities are routinely turning back thousands of people from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala to their countries without considering the risk to their life and security upon return, in many cases violating international and domestic law by doing so.”

Mexico Has Their Own Southern Border – and Invisible Wall

For us much as Donald Trump is criticized by the political class in Mexico for wanting to beef up security on the U.S.-Mexico border, as previously mentioned, Mexico has accepted our help in enforcing their immigration laws on their own southern border with Guatemala. While they don’t have a literal border fence, they do have checkpoints, patrols, raids, etc. According to NPR:

Rather than amassing troops on its border with Guatemala, Mexico stations migration agents, local and federal police, soldiers and marines to create a kind of containment zone in Chiapas state. With roving checkpoints and raids, Mexican migration agents have formed a formidable deportation force.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

14 killed in shooting attacks in Mexican border city

Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/64717234.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_cam____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
In Homan's conversation with CIS's Jessica Vaughan, he identified five actions that Congress can take to end the surge of illegal border crossings.


===============================================================================================================================================================================

The Current "Wall" Images

========================================================================================================================================================

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NEW BOOK by Judicial Watch's Tom Fitton: Clean House: Exposing Our Government's Secrets and Lies

Judicial Watch: Open Records Laws and Resources ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Leo Banks is a Tucson-based reporter who covers border-related issues.

New Book
Double Wide
A novel by Leo W Banks

=================================================================================================================================================================================

Excerpt from CIS: https://cis.org/Fact-Sheet/Asylum-Removal-and-Immigration-Courts

Asylum

Definition:

An applicant for asylum has the burden to demonstrate that he or she is eligible for that protection. To satisfy that burden, the applicant must prove that he or she is a refugee. A “refugee” is a person outside of his or her country of nationality or habitual residence who is “unable or unwilling” to return to that country “because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.”

Talking Points:

Expedited Removal

Definition:

The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) allows immigration officers — rather than judges — to order the deportation of arriving aliens who are inadmissible because of fraud or misrepresentation, because they have no documentation (like a passport or a visa) that would allow them to be admitted, or because they entered illegally and are apprehended within 100 miles of the border and 14 days of entry.

Talking Point:

Credible Fear

Definition:

If an alien in expedited removal asserts a fear of persecution, the arresting officer will refer the alien to an asylum officer for a “credible fear interview”. If the asylum officer determines that the alien has a credible fear, the alien is placed in removal proceedings before an immigration judge, where the alien can file his or her application for asylum. Under the INA, the term “‘credible fear of persecution’ means that there is a significant possibility, taking into account the credibility of the statements made by the alien in support of the alien’s claim and such other facts as are known to the officer, that the alien could establish eligibility for asylum under section 208.” This is a very low standard, and credible fear is found in 75 to 90 percent of all cases in which an alien claims credible fear.

Talking Points:

Bond

Definition:

“Bond” is the term used in immigration for the release of an alien pending removal proceedings or removal. Aliens can be released on their own recognizance, or on a minimum bond of $1,500. Bond can be granted by either an immigration judge or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Parole

Definition:

“Parole” is the term used in immigration for the release of an arriving alien. It can only be granted by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Again, DHS can release an alien on parole on his or her own recognizance, or for a sum of money as bond.

Unaccompanied Alien Child (UAC)

Definition:

An alien under the age of 18 who enters the United States or is apprehended by DHS who does not have a parent or guardian in the United States. Under section 462 of the Homeland Security Act (2002), UACs must be turned over to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), not DHS, for detention.

Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA)

Definition:

Modified the rules governing the detention of unaccompanied alien children (UACs). Under the TVPRA, UACs must be turned over to HHS within 48 hours of detention by DHS, or identification as a UAC, and “promptly placed in the least restrictive setting that is in the best interest of the child,” generally meaning release to a family member or friend.

Talking Point:

Flores Settlement Agreement

Definition:

An agreement between the then-Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and a class of alien minors in 1997, which is currently overseen by Judge Dolly Gee of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. In 2016, it was read to create a presumption in favor of the release of all alien minors, even those alien minors who arrive with their parents.

Talking Points:

Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR)

Definition:

Agency of the Department of Justice (DOJ) with jurisdiction over the immigration courts and the Board of immigration appeals (BIA).

Immigration Courts

Definition:

Courts with primary jurisdiction over removal proceedings. Immigration judges in these courts determine removability, set bond where they have jurisdiction, and can adjudicate applications for relief from removal, including asylum.

Talking Point:

Backlog

Definition:

Cases that have been pending before the immigration courts for more than one year. The backlog more than doubled from FYs 2006 through 2015, primarily due to declining numbers of cases completed per year. There were 437,000 pending cases at the start of FY 2015, when the median pending time was 404 days.

Talking Points:

Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA)

Definition:

 Appellate tribunal with jurisdiction over appeals from immigration courts. Most aliens have a right to appeal immigration court decisions to the BIA.

Topics: Immigration Courts, Asylum

Fact Sheet
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Southwest Border Tour, Spring 2019: Hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies
Read Accounts and View Pictures of Past Tours:
Unrest in the Rio Grande Valley
Diligence on a Changing Canadian Border
Constant Activity on the California Border
Holding Steady in West Texas
A Washington Narrative Meets Reality
Sunshine, Saguaros, and Smugglers
Reflections from the Border

End of 12/21/2019 BORDER NEWS WATCH SPECIAL EDITION

 

 

 

12/28/2019 BORDER NEWS WATCH SPECIAL EDITION

 

Breitbart News
Judicial Watch
ICE Most Wanted List
CBP Website
ICE Website
FOX News on Immigration
Borderland Beat
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Fast and Furious

Mexican authorities arrest suspect in killing of a U.S. Border Patrol agent
Operation Fast and Furious: The Forgotten History of the ATF’s Notorious Gunwalking Scandal

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Mexican Mormon Massacre
Police Chief from Mexican Border State Charged in Cartel Massacre of U.S. Mormon Family
Mexican police chief arrested in connection with slaying of 9 women and children with Utah ties
Police chief arrested in Mormon family massacre
Mexican police chief arrested in connection to Mormon family killings

Mexico's cartel crisis – and ours

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Opinion
Tom Homan: 2020 Dems making promises to illegals 'guaranteeing' Trump win
How to Eliminate the Visa Waiting Lists Without a Massive Influx of New Aliens

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
US Congress
Congress Passes Funding Bills: Weaken Enforcement and Increase Visas
Both sides left wanting by 2020 budget’s $1.375 billion for border wall
Bill classifies seven Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations

Congress Passes Funding Bills: Weaken Enforcement and Increase Visas
The Impact of Immigration on the Apportionment in the U.S. House in 2020
Congressman: On tackling security, López Obrador has ‘failed miserably’
A bipartisan immigration bill that will help farmers

Apparently Washington is Never Too Divided to Capitulate to the Demands of Big Ag
House Approves Amnesty & Indentured Servitude for Illegal Farm Workers
Massive Farmworker Amnesty Proposed in House
Apparently Washington is Never Too Divided to Capitulate to the Demands of Big Ag
New Farm Bill: Good for Ag Employers and Illegal Aliens, Bad for American Workers
The Farm Workforce Modernization act

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The 'Wall'
Both sides left wanting by 2020 budget’s $1.375 billion for border wall

Air Force hero reveals international organization allows access to illegal aliens across southern border
EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Yes, Physical Barriers Matter on the Border, Says JTFW Director
Exclusive Video: Border Is ‘Matter of National Security,’ Says JTFW Director
Sharyl Attkisson: Has Trump Kept Promise About Border Wall? Is There A Way To Quantify What's Been Done?

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DHS
Trump Administration Seeks to Bar Convicted Immigrants From Asylum
Border Apprehensions Dropped for 6th Consecutive Month, per DHS Data
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Border Patrol
Border agents rescue family of three near Lukeville
US Customs and Border Protection Patrol Agents, Rescue Beacons Save Lives

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
ICE
2,500 murder arrests? New ICE report reveals massive illegal alien crime wave
Faculty, student protests of ICE lead to cancellation of medical contracts to help illegal immigrants

U.S. Interior Immigration Arrests Fell Despite Admin Push
Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Workplace Immigration Investigations Quadruple Under Trump

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
FBI: BPA Nick Ivie
Border Patrol Agent Nick Ivie Was Killed By Smugglers, Not Friendly Fire
   
https://www.amazon.com/Shot-Nick-Ivie-Huey-Freeman/dp/1734295104
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
DOS

'DO NOT TRAVEL:Mexico danger map updated as US warns of ‘widespread’ crime amid rise in murders, kidnappings, carjackings and robberies

U.S. issues Mexico travel advisory due to crime and kidnapping
Visiting Mexico Includes Expanded Risks

U.S. says Americans shouldn't travel to these 5 Mexican states
Parts of Mexico Still as Dangerous as Middle East War Zones for Travel, Say Feds

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Ignoring ICE Detainers: Alien Arrests Followed by Release
Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction

Declined Detainer Outcome Report
What Is the Law, and Why Should It Be Followed?

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Border Perspective and Immigration Trends
Smugglers Look for New Populations to Bring Across US Border
2019 in Review: Border Crisis Peak, Mexico Cooperation, Judicial Wrangling
20 Of The Most Unusual Things Security Had To Deal With At The US/ Mexico Border
Trump, "Terrorist" Cartels And The True Roots Of Mexico's Violence

Report: Crackdown puts smugglers back in control of migrant flow to U.S. border
What crackdown? Migrant smuggling business adapts, thrives
Illegal immigration declines 85%, but cartels seek other ways to enter US
Takeaways from ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Report: Not a pretty picture
Interior Enforcement Slumps Due to Border Crisis, Lack of Resources, Sanctuaries, and Systemic Dysfunction

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Africans
Del Rio Sector Sees Increase of African Migrants ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Illegal Immigration: MPP Policy
Remain in Mexico Demonstrates Lack of Legit Asylum Claims

Official: President Trump's "Diplomatic Persistence" Has Let to Sharp Declines in Illegal Migrants
 “Migrant Protection Protocol” requires migrants to wait in Mexico while their asylum claims are being adjudicated

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Asylum
Asylum seekers still released in Tucson, despite new border program
Frustrated and cold, Mexicans displaced by drug violence give up on US asylum claim

Trump Admin Seeks to Bar Convicted Aliens from Asylum
Asylum Seekers Sent to Guatemala Preferring to Return to Home Countries
Mexican children shiver in tents at U.S. border as temperature freezes

Lots of Useful Information in the Refugee Report to Congress
Trump orders overhaul of asylum system, would force applicants to pay fees

Asylum Explained
Mexico’s Refugees
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Sanctuaries
The Supreme Court Could End Sanctuary Policies Nationwide
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartel Terrorism
Bill classifies seven Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations

Part IV: Five Ways America Should Secure the Border Against European-Style Terrorist Infiltration
Read Part I, "A New Terror Travel Tactic is Born; Part II; “New Study Explains Why Islamic Terrorists Have Not Attacked Through America’s Southern Border; and Part III, “Like in Europe, America’s Broken Asylum System Enables Terrorist Infiltration Over U.S.-Mexico Border

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Cartels as Mexican Terrorists
Exclusive: After Cabinet opposed Mexican cartel policy, Trump forged ahead

Call Mexico’s Cartels What They Are: Terrorists
U.S. Senators File Bill Targeting Mexican Cartels with Sanctions Similar to Terrorist Designation
Bill Would Designate Mexican Cartels as Something Other Than Terrorists
Yes, Mexico's drug cartels count as terrorists
Why Trump Should Hit Pause On Designating Mexican Cartels As Terrorists
Trump's Plan to Define Mexican Drug Cartels as Terror Groups Is Problematic
Why designating Mexican drug cartels terrorists might not be the way to fight organized crime
Mary Beth Sheridan: Five reasons Mexico objects to Trump's plan to designate its cartels as terror groups
Trump plan to label Mexican cartels as terrorists may backfire, Mexico, experts warn
Families of Mexico massacre victims suffer backlash over cartel row
DEA agent who caught El Chapo: Trump labeling Mexican cartels 'terrorists' would be 'game-changer'

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
American Green Cards
How to Eliminate the Visa Waiting Lists Without a Massive Influx of New Aliens

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Judicial
The Supreme Court Could End Sanctuary Policies Nationwide
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Pima County, Arizona
Huckelberry: Feds reject county’s request to use Operation Stonegarden funds for humanitarian aid
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Canada
U.S.-Canadian border is long, vast and calm. But is it 'forgotten?'
 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Politics
What DEM Presidential Hopefuls said during December Debate
Jill Biden visits refugees in Mexico, “It’s not who we are”
Exclusive: After Cabinet opposed Mexican cartel policy, Trump forged ahead

Tom Homan: 2020 Dems making promises to illegals 'guaranteeing' Trump win

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
GOM
They elected a leftist. Now they don't like the result...

Upset at Trump, Mexico voices ‘worry and irritation‘ to U.S. envoys
Mexico won’t accept foreign deportees, US must assume responsibility – FM Videgaray
Mexican president: US military not allowed to fight drug cartels in Mexico
Why can't Mexico control the cartels? Some blame America

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Mexico
 ‘Not promoting illegality’? Mexico invests $50mn in legal aid centers at its US consulates
Official: Mexico rejected US plan on 3rd-country deportees
‘Tuberculosis out of control:’ cases have soared 140% this year

There are no short cuts in resolving Mexico’s spiraling violence
Mexico Needs A New Strategy For Fighting Crime
Murder And Mayhem In Mexico

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartels
Videos Show Armed Gulf Cartel Paramilitaries Patrolling in Mexico near Texas Border
Mexico's cartel crisis – and ours

US, Mexican lawmen going after border’s ‘most wanted’ criminals

Borderland Beat
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cartels: Judicial Watch
Mexican Drug Cartels: How Far Is Their Reach? | Chris Farrell
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Drug Smuggling to Spain
Europe's First Narcosub: 26 days crossing America to Europe in a narco submarine

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Selected Incidents
Previously Deported Child Sex Predator Arrested By Border Patrol Near Sonoita
Two Smugglers, 15 Migrants Arrested After High-Speed Border Patrol Pursuits
U.S. Citizen Killed in Mexico While Waiting to Cross Port of Entry into Texas
Mexican Authorities Downplay Murder of U.S. Citizen at Port of Entry to Texas
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
New York: 'Green Light' Law
WATCH: Hundreds of illegal immigrants flood New York DMVs for driver's licenses
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Breitbart News
Judicial Watch
ICE Most Wanted List
CBP Website
ICE Website
FOX News on Immigration
Borderland Beat
USInc
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

  • INSIGHT CRIME NEWS:

·         What Fate Awaits MACCIH in Honduras?

·         Jamaica Can’t Shake Status As US’ Top Marijuana Provider

·         The Ecuador Fishermen Snatched Away by US Drug Warriors

 


____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Archive

Fast and Furious

All--

See below article, forwarded to me by a friend.

Thanks,

Ron C.

*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***

The deadly-but-forgotten government gun-running scandal known as “Fast and Furious” has lain dormant for years, thanks to White House stonewalling and media compliance. But newly uncovered emails have reopened the case, exposing the anatomy of a coverup by an administration that promised to be the most transparent in history.

At least 20 other deaths or violent crimes have been linked to Fast and Furious-trafficked guns.

A federal judge has forced the release of more than 20,000 pages of emails and memos previously locked up under President Obama’s phony executive-privilege claim. A preliminary review shows top Obama officials deliberately obstructing congressional probes into the border gun-running operation.

Fast and Furious was a Justice Department program that allowed assault weapons — including .50-caliber rifles powerful enough to take down a helicopter — to be sold to Mexican drug cartels allegedly as a way to track them. But internal documents later revealed the real goal was to gin up a crisis requiring a crackdown on guns in America. Fast and Furious was merely a pretext for imposing stricter gun laws.

Only the scheme backfired when Justice agents lost track of the nearly 2,000 guns sold through the program and they started turning up at murder scenes on both sides of the border — including one that claimed the life of US Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.

While then-Attorney General Eric Holder was focused on politics, people were dying. At least 20 other deaths or violent crimes have been linked to Fast and Furious-trafficked guns.

The program came to light only after Terry’s 2010 death at the hands of Mexican bandits, who shot him in the back with government-issued semiautomatic weapons. Caught red-handed, “the most transparent administration in history” flat-out lied about the program to Congress, denying it ever even existed.

Then Team Obama conspired to derail investigations into who was responsible by first withholding documents under subpoena — for which Holder earned a contempt-of-Congress citation — and later claiming executive privilege to keep evidence sealed.READ

MORE:  https://nypost.com/2016/05/21/the-scandal-in-washington-no-one-is-talking-about/

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Birth Tourism
372,000 Born to Illegal Aliens and Visitors Every Year, 33,000 to 'Birth Tourists'

We Say it Often, Numbers Count. And Here's An Example of Why
With reduction in migration flow, agents return focus to border crime
DHS ‘Reprograms’ Budgets as More Illegal Aliens Go Free
The Fiscal Burden of Illegal Immigration on United States Taxpayers
The United States Loses $150 Billion Annually in Remittances
A shifting border policy
The Real Cost of 'Free' Health Insurance for Illegal Immigrants
American-Made .50-Caliber Rifles Help Fuel Mexican Cartel Violence
Where does Mexico really get its guns?
 
Flores Settlement Agreement

What Ending the Flores Agreement on Detention of Immigrant Children Really Means
California, 18 Other States, and D.C. Sue over Flores Regulation: My take: Insufferable, politically motivated, taxpayer-funded bloviation
Finally, a Final Rule to Fix the Flores Loophole: But there are hurdles ahead
Why Trump wants to detain immigrant children longer
FAIR Applauds Trump Administration on Closing Flores Loophole
Flores Settlement Agreement
How Can Congress Address the Current Border Crisis?

20 Times Breitbart Reported on Migrant Deaths During Obama-Biden Years and No One Cared
The Other Border Crisis
Release of Illegal Aliens into U.S. Drops 65 Percent Since Trump-Mexico Deal
Report: Fewer Illegals Will Cross the Border in June. But the Invasion Will Continue
100K Illegals Got Away From Border Agents
Illegal immigrants learn a trick to sneak in: Dress like drug smugglers
Mexico Sends Almost 15,000 Troops to US-Mexico Border to Curb Illegal Immigration
Mexico says it has deployed 15,000 forces in the north to halt U.S.-bound migration
Agents confront challenging border dynamics
Tucson Border Patrol Agents Confront Challenging Border Dynamics
Lessons From The Border’s Volatile History.
Trump admin program sends asylum-seekers to await claims in Mexico, despite fears of violence: report
Migrants rush to enter Mexico ahead of security crackdown demanded by Trump
Deal Or Not, Mexico Can’t Stop The Border Crisis On Its Own
At Mexico’s southern border, migrants feel the pinch of a crackdown spurred by U.S.
House Republicans: DHS Failed to Implement Available Border Fixes

How Can Congress Address the Current Border Crisis ?
What’s behind the spike in immigrants at the border
Illegal Aliens Are Caught — Then Released Into U.S. Interior
5 facts about illegal immigration in the U.S. 
A Growing Border Crisis: A report from Arizona
What's It Gonna Be...A Welfare State or Open Borders?
Americans Clueless About Border Invasion, Illegals Dumped Into the Heartland
What a real border crisis looks like, in a chart

Understanding Trump's Mexico Tariffs: A Reader's Digest Of 9 Important Points On The Border Crisis

Explainer: How does the situation on the U.S.-Mexico border compare with the past?
Remittances Key to Central American Economies: Incentivizing the departure of their nationals?
In the Era of Split-Screen Views of the Border, Each Side Has Its Story, and the Political Implications Are Enormous
The Conservative Hispanic army that’s fighting hard for President Trump
Ninth Circuit Hands Trump a Win on 'Return to Mexico: The court still misses a major point
Appeals Court Rules Trump Administration Can Keep Sending Asylum-Seekers To Mexico
Appeals court: Trump can make asylum seekers wait in Mexico
Border Patrol chief warns of more releases of migrant families into communities
Rising cost of migrant health care is straining charities, Border Patrol
YOUR questions answered by Center for Immigration Studies
Why US Aid Cuts to Central America Will Help Organized Crime
US Corruption List Highlights Northern Triangle Presidents’ Criminal Ties

Talking Points Suggest E-Verify Is Part of the President’s New Immigration Plan: The key that shuts off the jobs magnet
What’s to Fear About Social Security’s No-Match Letters?
Radio ads offer to 'help out' migrants trying to enter US, Border Patrol official says
Why Immigrants Who Overstay U.S. Visas Are So Difficult To Track
2019 Border Tour Videos
Government Releasing Sick Illegals in American Communities
Illegal-alien Invasion Crisis Not Just at the Border
A Bipartisan Panel Reports Alarming Findings on the Border Crisis
Expand Expedited Removal, Mr. President
Can the President Shut Down the Border?
Buttressing The Border – On Both Sides
History of U.S. Immigration
The History of the Flores Settlement: How a 1997 agreement cracked open our detention laws

Cannabis Effects

Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
New Books
Our 50-State Border Crisis by Howard G. Buffett
also see:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/our-50-state-border-crisis-howard-buffett/1127331052
https://www.amazon.com/Our-50-State-Border-Crisis-Epidemic-ebook/dp/B074M6FT8F
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/howard-g-buffett/our-50-state-border-crisis/Books

Double Wide
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The following was excerpted from: Breitbart News  See: https://www.breitbart.com/border/2019/01/08/29-facts-about-the-border-and-mexican-cartels-you-need-to-know/

29 Facts About the Border and Mexican Cartels You Need to Know

As the debate about the construction of a wall and other border security issues, here are 29 facts that you need to know. The topics came up during the most recent episode of “Coffee with Scott Adams.” Brandon Darby, the Managing Editor for Breitbart’s Border and Cartel Chronicles, sat down with the famed creator of the Dilbert comics to discuss the intricacies of border security.

1) No one is proposing a wall between all of Mexico and the U.S.—the U.S. southern border is approximately 2,000 miles. The discussion is about 1,000 miles of physical barriers in regions that are heavily controlled by drug cartels.

2) The Texas border is about 1,200 miles of the approximately 2,000 miles of the total southern border. Most of that border is the Rio Grande, a river which varies in intensity with respect to currents.

3) Mexico has numerous states under the direct influence of drug cartels that have standing armies with access to RPGs, armored vehicles, artillery, and explosives. Most of Mexico has military forces patrolling streets to deal with cartel paramilitary forces.

4) The most violent drug cartels operate south of the Texas border. Factions of Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel routinely allow their violence to spill over to the average person.

5) The border city of Tijuana has some of the highest murder statistics in all of Mexico. Despite record-setting figures, most of the victims tend to be tied to drug trafficking.

6) Border cities south of Texas like Reynosa, Tamaulipas, have much lower murder rates than Tijuana. Despite the difference, average citizens are often touched by cartels including shootouts, kidnappings, and other violent activities.

7) Most of the efforts by drug cartels to control migration happens South of the Texas border. Criminal organizations like the Reynosa faction of the Gulf Cartel profit more from human smuggling than drug trafficking.

8) The majority of tunnels are found on the Arizona and California borders. The tunnels are generally discovered in areas where there are population centers on both sides of the border and a wall or fence is already in place. Few have been found in Texas, where there is a river.

9) Most tunnels are discovered thanks to informants; law enforcement technology has rarely been successful in locating border tunnels.

10) Most of the border does not have a drug tunnel problem. They are typically found in Douglas and Nogales, Arizona, as well as Mexicali, San Diego/San Isidro, California.

11) Cartels spend a lot of money building a tunnel–only to be discovered shortly after.

12) Claims by Democrats about the low crime rates in El Paso are an example of walls working. In areas with considerable border barriers such as El Paso, the regional criminal groups turn more professional and shy away from illegal immigration to traffic harder drugs through ports of entry.

13) The presence of physical barriers in cities like El Paso has led to fewer people coming over the border to commit petty crimes or bring loads of drugs on their backs. The criminal organizations in the area shifted toward corrupting U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials to smuggle harder drugs.

14) A partially secured border is more deadly than an open or well-secured one. Previous administrations put barriers south of most cities in Arizona and California to funnel illicit traffic into areas that were easier to manage or too desolate to cross. This led to a spike in deaths since the desire of people to reach the U.S. pushes them to more remote and dangerous areas

15) Human smuggling and illegal immigration will continue to be a problem until economic opportunities improve in Mexico and in Central America.

16) Mexican transnational criminal groups and their leaders have grown beyond the size and power of the American mafia from Prohibition Era and Al Capone. Cartels are integrated into the Mexican political culture and bureaucracy. Legalization would not stop them.

17) The decriminalization of marijuana and the production of higher quality plants in the U.S. versus Mexico had a series of unspoken consequences. After marijuana from Mexico was not able to compete with U.S.-grown plants, some cartels shifted their model more toward human smuggling–becoming a factor in the 2014 migrant crisis and the current one at the U.S. border.

18) After marijuana decriminalization in the U.S., cartels shifted to increase their cultivation of poppies and the production of black tar heroin. In order to compete with the Asian product, cartels use fentanyl–playing a role in the current opioid overdose epidemic.

19) The U.S. State Department influences how hard authorities crack down on cartels. U.S. agencies have been told to “measure their law enforcement priorities with the State Department’s diplomatic concerns.”

20) A cartel’s power in Mexico comes not from kingpins, but from politicians, financiers, lawyers, and money launderers. U.S. authorities and diplomats routinely focus on kingpins such as “El Chapo” and his lieutenants, but never go after the rest of the circle.

21) The state of Tamaulipas, directly south of Texas, has two former governors currently indicted for their alleged roles in helping cartels. One remains in Mexico, while the other is in U.S. custody awaiting trial.

22) U.S. diplomats are negotiating and playing along with the same Mexican politicians that protect cartels, in the interest of trade and diplomacy.

23) Certain factions of drug cartels have crossed the line into terrorism and should classified as such. The designation would change the way the U.S. alienates them from banks, financial resources, and politicians. Other cartels would be forced to tone down their actions or risk similar consequences.

24) Worries of Middle Eastern terrorists crossing the southwestern border are at times mitigated by cartel members who are informants for U.S. agencies that enjoy handsome incentives to turn people in.

25) The more likely scenario for terrorism deals with people flying into Canada and then entering the U.S. with visas. Most people on the terror watch list who try to enter the U.S. across the southern border are Somalis or Kurds.

26) Certain organizations like Los Zetas and the Gulf Cartel present more of an imminent threat than foreign terrorists entering through the southern border.

27) Mexico’s ongoing cartel violence and drug war has led to more murders and disappearances than some international wars. Mexico has suffered more than 250,000 homicides and at least 30,000 disappearances since 2009.

28) Up to 70 percent of the women and girls from Central America who come through Mexico to the U.S. are sexually assaulted en route. Most women who leave Central America for the U.S. have the expectation of facing multiple abuses at the hands of cartel-connected human smugglers.

29) The State Department keeps U.S. law enforcement from being more aggressive against cartels. The State Department has everything to do with how law enforcement and intelligence agencies operate in Mexico–and any effort to secure the border without addressing the Department’s timidity in Mexico will likely fail or be less successful than it otherwise could be.

Ildefonso Ortiz is an award-winning journalist with Breitbart Texas. He co-founded the Cartel Chronicles project with Brandon Darby and Stephen K. Bannon.  You can follow him on Twitter and on Facebook. He can be contacted at Iortiz@breitbart.com.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

From ICE Acting Director Homan:

Excerpt from:
https://www.numbersusa.com/blog/blame-congress-rapid-rise-illegal-border-crossings

REFORM THE TRAFFICKING VICTIMS PROTECTION REAUTHORIZATION ACT (TVPRA) -- Commonly referred to as the William Wilberforce Act, TVPRA prohibits Border Patrol from quickly removing unaccompanied children from non-contiguous countries who attempt to cross the border illegally. UACs from Mexico and Canada can be quickly returned once Border Patrol is able to determine that they're not victims of human trafficking. But for minors from countries outside of Mexico and Canada, minors must be turned over to Health and Human Services, allowing them to stay in the country indefinitely.

REFORM THE ASYLUM PROCESS -- Under existing law, anyone apprehended at the border who makes a credible fear claim that passes the initial screening is released. Since 2008, there's been a 1700% spike in the number of credible fear claims made at the Southern border, and 80% pass the credible fear screening. However, only 20% of those who pass the credible fear screening are granted asylum by a federal judge.

MANDATE E-VERIFY -- Foreign nationals cross the border illegally because they can obtain jobs in the U.S. Homan said requiring all employers to use E-Verify would discourage most illegal immigration to the United States and dramatically reduce the number of illegal border crossings.

END SANCTUARY CITIES -- At last count, more than 300 sanctuary jurisdictions exist across the country, including California which recently passed legislation making it a sanctuary state. Jurisdictions that protect illegal aliens from removal encourages illegal border crossings because illegal aliens know they have hundreds of safe-havens to choose from once they get here.

TERMINATE FLORES AGREEMENT -- The spike in the apprehension of family units is a result of the Flores Agreement, which restricts the period of time that Border Patrol can detain family units. The Flores Agreement encourages illegal border crossers to cross with children, knowing that Border Patrol has to release them after a certain period of time. If BP were able to hold family units until their court date, family units would be less likely to cross the border illegally.

All of Homan's policy recommendations are included in Rep. Bob Goodlatte's H.R. 4760, the Securing America's Future Act, but not surprisingly, none are part of the ongoing DACA amnesty negotiations between House Republicans.

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Mexico
Here’s How Mexico Treats Illegal Immigrants

Authored by: Matt Palumbo

While combating illegal immigration has long been a bipartisan issue, the so-called anti-Trump “resistance” has decided that guilt tripping anyone who supports a sensible immigration policy is a viable political strategy. We’ve all heard the arguments; that opposing illegal immigration is preventing people from “just looking for a better life,” or over the past few months, is “separating families.” And of course there’s the most common insult, that enforcing immigration laws is “racist.”

But are America’s immigration laws, or our treatment of illegal immigrants uniquely awful?

To answer that question, let’s examine the situation in another nation: Mexico.

Mexico Rejects More Asylum Requests than the U.S. 

Speaking of the rise in asylum request rejections under Trump, a writer at the American-Statesman noted a “dramatic” change. They write, “Immigration judges, who are employed by the Justice Department and not the judicial branch like other federal judges, rejected 61.8 percent of asylum cases decided in 2017, the highest denial rate since 2005.”

Meanwhile in Mexico, nearly 90 percent of asylum requests are denied (and the figures are similarly high for other Latin American countries, such as El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala).

Mexico Regulates Immigration Based on Race

I only bring this up, because for all the rhetoric about Trump’s supposed racism or disdain for certain immigrants, there is one country that does regulate their immigration flows by race, and that’s the country Trump is most accused of being racist against.

In Article 37 of Mexico’s General Law of Population, we learn that their Department of the Interior shall be able to deny foreigners entry into Mexico, if, among other reasons, they may disrupt the “domestic demographic equilibrium.” Additionally, Article 37 also states that immigrants can be removed if they’re detrimental to “economic or national interests.”

Mexico Deports More Central American Illegal Immigrants than the United States

In July 2014, former Mexican president, Enrique Peña Nieto and former president of Guatemala Otto Pérez Molina, announced the start of a migration security project called Plan Frontera Sur (Southern Border Plan). The U.S. has committed at least $100 million towards this plan to help aid Mexican border security, because it’s mutually beneficial. Both Mexico and the U.S. want to keep out Central American illegal immigrants (and they have to pass through Mexico to reach the U.S.)..

Since Plan Frontera Sur, Mexico has deported more central American illegal immigrants than we have in the U.S. Even CNN had to acknowledge that:

According to statistics from the US and Mexican governments compiled by the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute, Mexico in 2015 apprehended tens of thousands more Central Americans in its country than the US did at its border, and in 2015 and 2016 it deported roughly twice as many Central Americans as the US did.Since migrant children are the hot-button topic in the American immigration debate currently; In 2014 there were 18,169 migrant children were deported from Mexico, and 8,350 deported to Central America the year before. From January 2015 to July 2016, 39,751 unaccompanied minors were put in the custody of Mexican authorities.

A report this year from Amnesty International concluded that “Mexican migration authorities are routinely turning back thousands of people from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala to their countries without considering the risk to their life and security upon return, in many cases violating international and domestic law by doing so.”

Mexico Has Their Own Southern Border – and Invisible Wall

For us much as Donald Trump is criticized by the political class in Mexico for wanting to beef up security on the U.S.-Mexico border, as previously mentioned, Mexico has accepted our help in enforcing their immigration laws on their own southern border with Guatemala. While they don’t have a literal border fence, they do have checkpoints, patrols, raids, etc. According to NPR:

Rather than amassing troops on its border with Guatemala, Mexico stations migration agents, local and federal police, soldiers and marines to create a kind of containment zone in Chiapas state. With roving checkpoints and raids, Mexican migration agents have formed a formidable deportation force.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

14 killed in shooting attacks in Mexican border city

Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/64717234.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_cam____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________In Homan's conversation with CIS's Jessica Vaughan, he identified five actions that Congress can take to end the surge of illegal border crossings.


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The Current "Wall" Images

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NEW BOOK by Judicial Watch's Tom Fitton: Clean House: Exposing Our Government's Secrets and Lies

Judicial Watch: Open Records Laws and Resources ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Leo Banks is a Tucson-based reporter who covers border-related issues.

New Book
Double Wide
A novel by
Leo W Banks

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Excerpt from CIS: https://cis.org/Fact-Sheet/Asylum-Removal-and-Immigration-Courts

Asylum

Definition:

An applicant for asylum has the burden to demonstrate that he or she is eligible for that protection. To satisfy that burden, the applicant must prove that he or she is a refugee. A “refugee” is a person outside of his or her country of nationality or habitual residence who is “unable or unwilling” to return to that country “because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.”

Talking Points:

Expedited Removal

Definition:

The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) allows immigration officers — rather than judges — to order the deportation of arriving aliens who are inadmissible because of fraud or misrepresentation, because they have no documentation (like a passport or a visa) that would allow them to be admitted, or because they entered illegally and are apprehended within 100 miles of the border and 14 days of entry.

Talking Point:

Credible Fear

Definition:

If an alien in expedited removal asserts a fear of persecution, the arresting officer will refer the alien to an asylum officer for a “credible fear interview”. If the asylum officer determines that the alien has a credible fear, the alien is placed in removal proceedings before an immigration judge, where the alien can file his or her application for asylum. Under the INA, the term “‘credible fear of persecution’ means that there is a significant possibility, taking into account the credibility of the statements made by the alien in support of the alien’s claim and such other facts as are known to the officer, that the alien could establish eligibility for asylum under section 208.” This is a very low standard, and credible fear is found in 75 to 90 percent of all cases in which an alien claims credible fear.

Talking Points:

Bond

Definition:

“Bond” is the term used in immigration for the release of an alien pending removal proceedings or removal. Aliens can be released on their own recognizance, or on a minimum bond of $1,500. Bond can be granted by either an immigration judge or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Parole

Definition:

“Parole” is the term used in immigration for the release of an arriving alien. It can only be granted by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Again, DHS can release an alien on parole on his or her own recognizance, or for a sum of money as bond.

Unaccompanied Alien Child (UAC)

Definition:

An alien under the age of 18 who enters the United States or is apprehended by DHS who does not have a parent or guardian in the United States. Under section 462 of the Homeland Security Act (2002), UACs must be turned over to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), not DHS, for detention.

Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA)

Definition:

Modified the rules governing the detention of unaccompanied alien children (UACs). Under the TVPRA, UACs must be turned over to HHS within 48 hours of detention by DHS, or identification as a UAC, and “promptly placed in the least restrictive setting that is in the best interest of the child,” generally meaning release to a family member or friend.

Talking Point:

Flores Settlement Agreement

Definition:

An agreement between the then-Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and a class of alien minors in 1997, which is currently overseen by Judge Dolly Gee of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. In 2016, it was read to create a presumption in favor of the release of all alien minors, even those alien minors who arrive with their parents.

Talking Points:

Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR)

Definition:

Agency of the Department of Justice (DOJ) with jurisdiction over the immigration courts and the Board of immigration appeals (BIA).

Immigration Courts

Definition:

Courts with primary jurisdiction over removal proceedings. Immigration judges in these courts determine removability, set bond where they have jurisdiction, and can adjudicate applications for relief from removal, including asylum.

Talking Point:

Backlog

Definition:

Cases that have been pending before the immigration courts for more than one year. The backlog more than doubled from FYs 2006 through 2015, primarily due to declining numbers of cases completed per year. There were 437,000 pending cases at the start of FY 2015, when the median pending time was 404 days.

Talking Points:

Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA)

Definition:

 Appellate tribunal with jurisdiction over appeals from immigration courts. Most aliens have a right to appeal immigration court decisions to the BIA.

Topics: Immigration Courts, Asylum

Fact Sheet
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Southwest Border Tour, Spring 2019: Hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies
Read Accounts and View Pictures of Past Tours:
Unrest in the Rio Grande Valley
Diligence on a Changing Canadian Border
Constant Activity on the California Border
Holding Steady in West Texas
A Washington Narrative Meets Reality
Sunshine, Saguaros, and Smugglers
Reflections from the Border

End of 12/28/2019 BORDER NEWS WATCH SPECIAL EDITION