It was common to see kids and young adults swimming in the
Rio Grande. I recall the first time I saw kids swim within a few feet of the
U.S. and then turn around and swim back. “Look” my translator said as he
pointed to a camera on the U.S. side of the river. “The kids know that camera
is there. Everyone can see it. They know the Border Patrol seems them. They are
kids.”
Sometimes off the cuff remarks from law enforcement officers
addresses the practical day to day situations on the ground and may not
perfectly reflect the law and official policies. However, what actually happens
on the ground is important.
Gunfire erupted. A father of three died in the arms of his
9-year old daughter. The Border Patrol boat sped away. Later, the officers
admitted shooting into the crowd and said people were throwing rocks at them.
The story raised a few questions in this former law-enforcement officer’s mind.
·
First, would people throw rocks at the boat and
risk hitting the Mexican in the water?
·
Second, since the agents felt so threatened that
they fled the scene, why did they simply not do so without firing their
weapons?
·
Third, if they thought the man was swimming to
the USA, why not park their boat near the shoreline? It is likely that the man
would have turned around and went back to the Mexican side of the shore.
When the Border Patrol was doubled in size, many people in
the Border Patrol acknowledge that the rush to hire agents resulted in people
being accepted in the Border Patrol that are not suited to the job. Also,
pressure to increase arrests resulted in some over-zealousness on the part of
some agents. For example, I’ve witnessed Mexicans being arrested as they tried
to cross the International Bridge to return to Mexico. They could have easily
been checked for warrants and then be sent on their way. However, they became
part of the apprehension statistics. The arresting officers received the same
‘credit’ for these arrests as agents that chased down Mexicans in the desert.
An arrest is an arrest.
I recall in 2002 that sailboats in Lake Amistad cruised the
border. Thousands of Mexicans walked across the International Bridge, shopped
in Del Rio and then returned to Mexico.
I also recall when the Border Patrol instituted the OTM
policy. In response to political pressure, the Border Patrol arrested as many
Mexicans as possible. The focus on Mexicans was so strong that agents were told
not to waste time arresting people on U.S. soil without authorization, other
than Mexicans. (OTM stood for other than Mexicans). Unless an illegal alien was
from Mexico, Iran and a few other terrorist countries or unless the illegal
alien was wanted, the agents were told to give them a citation and to release
them. South American radio, television
and news outlets told their audiences, “If you travel to the United States
without papers and are stopped by immigration, do not lie and say you are from
Mexico. Tell the truth. They are only arresting Mexicans.”
Audiences thought these stories were an elaborate U.S. hoax.
People from Latin American would often tell the Border Patrol that they were
from Mexico, so they would be deported to a Mexican border city and not sent
all the way back home. This way, they could quickly cross the border again.
The very idea that the United States would only issue a
citation sounded ludicrous. However, as the policy was confirmed, more
unbelievable information came to light. “When an immigration officer catches
you, they check the computer to make sure you are not wanted for a crime or on
a terrorist watch list. The process can take several hours. They give you a
citation that orders you to appear in court, which everyone ignores. Keep that
citation! If you are ever stopped by immigration again you can show them your
citation. This tells the officers that you’ve already been run through the
system and they do not keep you for hours to run you again. It is almost like a
Green Card!”
Several Border Patrol Agents confirmed that all of this was
true. They all expressed frustration. “We are the pawns. The politicians decide
when to ignore Mexicans, when to focus on Mexicans and it makes us sick” said
one agent.
Instead of risking the anger of voters by initiating and
passing a comprehensive immigration law with a fair temporary work provision,
politicians use enforcement as a way of avoiding existing laws and to avoid
addressing the issue of illegal immigration. This is not new. It has been going
on for more than 50-years.
As the investigation into this most recent death on the
border is inevitable. What are not inevitable are changes to border patrol
policies and making those policies public. What is not inevitable is a
comprehensive immigration law that deals with all issues in a fair way.
After tomorrow there will be more deaths along the border.
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