Border Insecurity

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Pardon My Bailout

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

I’ve been pondering President Bush’s work toward bailing out lenders, auto makers and other low-rent purveyors of Made-in-USA crap.

For the record, these leading lights of free-market enterprise make Chinese producers of melamine-soaked and lead-covered products look like Swarovski crystal figurines for sale in a Paris salon.

And after much time spent on my recently-returned plastic-and-wood bench that sits out in front of my high-class Upper Valley hacienda, I have come to conclude that Bush is the greatest Presidential pardoner this country has ever seen.

He has, in fact, forgiven more — in terms of time served and monetary value, than all other Presidents combined, including Warren Hardinge, who pardoned “priests and prostitutes alike,” and the notorious Ulysseses Grant, who pardoned two turkeys right before Thanksgiving because he was sloshed and seeing double after cavorting with, well, prostitutes and priests.

Here in West Texas, a lot of cavorting goes on — some of it is fun and some of it is legal. But folks around here lack the high morals of Capitol Heights, the financial capital of fiscal Fred Flintstones, and the political wherewithal of party-centric wingnuts (both left and right) to really do it big. First off, you’ve got to put on a dull suit with a bright tie and head to DC to even get near the door of an Official Administration Pardoning. And the Men’s Wearhouse off Sunland Park Drive just doesn’t cut it with the elites.

Did you get that, Anthony Cobos? or any other of you get-the-vote-out by having your relatives shill for you on street corners near voting stations rednecks?

I mean, who wants to do all that expensive haircut, multiple suit-fittings, acne-reducing-medications-from-a-TV-ad stuff, when every house in the neighborhood is putting on tamales and posole for New Year’s, and the fridge on the back porch is full of Bud Light plus a 6-pack of that weird microbrew the egg-head son brought back from Austin?

Not me, not even if being in the political mix is valuable to a New York Times blogger who laments Obama’s break with tradition during his Hawai’i holiday. Heh — didja read that, Roy Ortega? An MSM icon has a regular blog — kinda like yours but, well, without the anti-blog attitude, though that MSM icon bitches about as much as you did recently, only with a better thesaurus.

Am I off-track already? Must be the wood splint in my backside from that bench. Need upgrade to varnish, I guess.

Now. I’m sitting here on one buttock and wondering where the bailout for unfairly-convicted and really unfairly-sentenced US Border Patrol Agents Ramos and Campeon is. I hope it’s not locked up in Committee, in some back-alley klaven Komittee led by our famous Border Patrol alum, US Congressman Sylvestre Reyes. If Reyes is weighing in on anything more than where Pitt players should go for good food in El Paso, then Ramos and Campeon are screwed. Hell, who knows what Reyes is up to these days. His “blog” (cue interest from Roy Ortega) is even worse than Ortega’s, but yet better, since he doesn’t slag off bloggers on a blog.

Reyes must be in a really bad place about Ramos’ and Compean’s convictions. On the one hand, he understands — better than anyone else on Capitol Hill — the pressures of the Border Patrol agent’s job, as well as the scum that USBP agents deal with every day. The lies, the drugs, the violence…

On the other hand, he has to have learned, by now, some rudimentary sense of politicking.

The man must be just torn apart by all this.

Or not. Silver knows who butters his bread (that’s anyone with a higher IQ than he has, which is about 434 other Congressmen), and he must know who won’t allow him sit on a plastic-and-wood bench in front of a high-class hacienda in the Upper Valley.

So we all make our choices, and so does he. Border Patrol Agents make choices every hour of every day they’re on duty. Reyes makes choices. His political handlers, the California idiot Pelosi and the California idiot Feinstein, call his shots more than he calls for shots at Acetunas.

Now. Is there a pardon out there for a New York Times MSM blogger who thinks he has the right to follow Obama all over the white sandy beaches of Hawai’i? Is there a pardon floating down for a guy in a bad suit hoofing it to Congress to ask for a few billion for his dumb American car company that makes cars Americans don’t want and who indirectly supports a golf club-owning union that car customers aren’t allowed to visit?

Hell, is there a pardon for a plastic-and-wood bench that sits outside a high-class hacienda in the Upper Valley, for sticking it (so to speak) to not only its owner but any politician who happens by? Is there a pardon for a politically-obsessed, under-performing, Border Patrol agent-prosecuting, wannabe up-and-comer attorney named Johnny Sutton, whose traditional resignation (as is traditional for all US Attorneys when a new Administration comes into office) should not only be accepted, but accompanied by a deportation order?

And mostly, is there a pardon for US Border Patrol Agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Compean, two of the most wrongfully-convicted and over-sentenced citizens, who got ten years for what should have been, at best, misdemeanors, or, more likely, administrative findings?

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Juarez Schools Under Violence Threat

Saturday, December 13th, 2008

The pressures exerted by the Government of Mexico take their toll on schoolchildren in Juarez.

Not much reporting on this, but it seems to have been going on for a few months.

It was the case in TJ that, when the Tijuana Cartel was being dismantled by government pressure and rival drug trafficking operations, that cartel members took to kidnappings-for-ransom and other “petty” crimes, in order to raise cash.

The Juarez school threats would seem to be a corollary. Perhaps the Juarez Cartel is under threat in the same way: by government pressure and rival drug trafficking organizations.

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“Silver” Brings Home Some Homeland Security Bacon, Pork-Style

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

Maybe some of it will go to diminish flooding in 79932. DHS owns FEMA, too. Rep. Reyes announces nearly $6 million in security grants for El Paso.

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El Paso: That City of Walls

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

Check out this cartoon. Then check out the landscape of El Paso. The cartoonist is so taken with the horror of the planned border fence (whether real or virtual) that s/he doesn’t see the irony in their own back yard.

El Paso is littered with rock walls. Practically every home has a wall surrounding its back yard. Businesses are divided by them. Streets and schools enjoy the coolness of the shadows they provide. FBI agents lurk behind them, looking for the next bribe-taking local yokel politician stumbling toward a wad of cash.

Fact is, El Paso is the embodiment of the sentiment expressed in this cartoon: it seems people think that some problems in El Paso can apparently be solved by building rock walls everywhere.

If they don’t think that, then why do they build so many of them?

–Walls to keep out news of suicidally-drunk underage teenage drivers screaming down Country Club at three in the morning.

–Walls to keep us from seeing the legion of abused and neglected pets in our unthinking neighbors’ yards.

–Walls to keep us from viewing the latest TAKS scores from our next generation of geniuses (or bribe-takers).

–Walls to hide us from the view of white and African-American beggars at street-corners, selling candy and bullshit at Airway & Montana, Fred Wilson & 54, or Redd & North Desert.

–Walls to keep out the latest bad news of the antics of the Commissioners Court.

And one more thing. The author of the article, listed as a Professor Emeritus at Sul Ross, should go back to school. His analogy to the Berlin Wall misses on a main point: it was East Germany that erected that wall, not West Germany. To bring his fantasy to reality, then, it would be Mexico building the wall on the Southwest Border, not the United States.

Well, “emeritus” means “retired” in academic circles, and for that, we can come out from around our own wall, and be thankful.

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Border Invaded Again and Again? Say It Ain’t So!

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

Michelle Malkin notes a recent recent Judicial Watch FOIA request on the number of Mexican military and police incursions into the US.

Noted. Still, it’s a fact that Mexican organized criminal enterprises routinely adopt the uniforms, weapons and vehicles of federal, state and local enforcement entities (including the Mexican military, which has an internal security role and targets drug traffickers). I doubt all of these incursions were by military or law enforcement members. The notorious Hudspeth County, TX, incident in 2006, which was widely reported, was likely such a situation, as corrupt Mexican soldiers are really a bit more sophisticated (yes, sophisticated) and wouldn’t so easily allow themselves to be so exposed. Some other incursions were by mistake — losing one’s bearings happens more than you might think along remote parts of the Southwest Border, and US law enforcement entities have done it as well (though certainly not as often as Mexican LE). The rest of the incursions? That’s the problem not sufficiently addressed by either the US or the government of Mexico.

Here’s the incursion report, courtesy of Judicial Watch.

Malkin notes that this candidate has a lot to say on immigration, little of it good or, well, even consistent. You might say it’s enough to make you cry. And that guacamole reference? Please, patronize Latinos some more, will ya?

One Malkin commenter argues for the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) to patrol the border. That’s a slow interagency process, held up by the public servants at the FAA. If Katrina can’t make the FAA move faster, what makes you think a little thing like national sovereignty will?

Border security is serious business, and government policies on immigration are complex, convoluted and sometimes out-of-date (think citizenship by birth), which is why this satire, and this one, hit home.

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The Southwest Border: Washington DC Intrudes Again — and Poorly, Again

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

This won’t end well. The previous genial cooperation between landowners and federal border security officials along the Southwest Border is to be dismantled by this heavy-handed DHS initiative. It’s a bad precedent that will cause hard feelings from the type of people who own land here.

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Drug Smuggler Aldrete-Davila Takes it in the Hiney Again

Friday, November 23rd, 2007

Remember Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila, the drug smuggler who was paid by the U.S. to help convict USBP agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean for shooting him in the ass when he was smuggling marijuana into the US in 2005?

He’s about as dumb as we thought he was back then.

El Paso Times notes his tearful family letting that Aldrete crossed into the US because he thought he was getting more money from the feds — for Christmas gifts.

You can’t make this stuff up. One hundred and twenty-nine other dummies just got rounded up in El Paso in the same way. High IQ is not highly-regarded among the criminal set along the border.

Aldrete, who lives in Juarez, from where he gazed lovingly at the William Beaumont Army Hospital in El Paso where he received ace medical attention, had said he’d never cross back into the US — with or without a load of dope, presumably.

I expect Aldrete will have a lot more worries about his backside in prison than the bullet lodged there a couple of years ago. While Ramos and Compean have suffered from inmates’ abuse, this celebrity trafficker will be (in)famous enough to learn about new ways to make his butt-ocks hurt. They really ought to get TVs out of prisons.

Patterico links to the news, and Johnny Sutton’s name turns up in the comments, like a chow chip under your boot.

Diggers Realm has more.

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Help Wanted: Illegal Immigrants–The FBI and CIA are Recruiting YOU!

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

According to TV, the FBI hired a deaf person — Sue Thomas, FB Eye, so why not hire an illegal alien and fraudster as well? Hell, why not make her marriage-fraud sister a Marine?

Nada Nadim Prouty is a name you ought to remember, especially if you’re an FBI or CIA recruiting officer looking to fill empty billets. Oh, wait, maybe it’s a name you ought to remember if you’re not from the FBI or CIA, because they’ve already messed up. Prouty was an illegal alien who apparently entered the US in a sham marriage scheme, rose to the rank of FBI special agent and CIA analyst… before being busted.

What’s really shocking is the nonchalant attitude of FBI and CIA spokespersons about the whole thing… as if immigration enforcement isn’t their job. Which it isn’t, I guess. And in that case, I know some great Spanish-speaking folks in the neighborhood who are clearly cut out for sensitive, clearance-holding jobs at these top-notch American institutions.

Michelle Malkin covers this story, and another… her sister is apparently in on the marriage scam thing as well… and became a USMC officer.

When it rains, it pours: The FBI will have to relook convictions based on a faulty forensics test.

Jihad Watch notes other instances of Federal slack.

Honestly, does anyone in Washington really give a tinker’s cuss about immigration enforcement? Doesn’t seem like it. It seems, instead, that arms of the federal government are actively at cross-purposes with each other — the one enforcing laws, the other dismissing them. And that would be OK — no one expects the government to actually be useful to the citizenry – but the waste of money is galling.

UPDATE: The EPA didn’t want to be left out of the illegal migrant with access to sensitive information news. (HT: Jihad Watch.)

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11 August 2007: Your Weekend RSS Update

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

Here we are with another roundup of items of interest, guaranteed to feed your RSS reader like a Porterhouse down the gullet of a high-heeled cowboy boot wearing bribe-taker. No. Please stay. The references are only as dumb as they sound.

EL PASO FBI CORRUPTION CASE:
Lawyer Martie Jobe’s got issues. [Hat Tip: Newspaper Tree.]

Former First Southwest Company’s Hector Zavaleta Jr, may have been working for the G-Men, sez someone from out of state. Ermm, OK. Next.

Did not know until last week that the El Paso Times has a players list and timelines of events in the corruption case. You can find it here.

From the Department of Non-story Departments, Ramon Bracamontes of the El Paso Times tells us that speculation and rumors abound at the El Paso County Courthouse after the May FBI raid. What — civil servants engaged in speculation and rumor, possibly on company time? Say it ain’t so, Ramon! What’s next, goofing off, watching TV, surfing the Internet and updating resumes???

EL PASO’S SPINNING WHEELS OF JUSTICE: District Clerk Gilbert Sanchez says the wheels of justice are running off the rails over at the County Attorney’s Office. That assumes that justice on the Border had wheels to begin with.

ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT KILLED IN EL PASO: He’d not been shot at the 28 previous times he unlawfully entered the US. Bonus: The loopy Border Network for Human Rights appears.

USBP AGENT CHARGED WITH MURDER IN ARIZONA: County Judge takes action against the Feds over there.

WELL, DUH: A Mexican narco linked to Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila of shot-in-the-butt-ocks fame has pleaded guilty to operating a Davila drug stash house. Limp-a-long Davila, of course, gained fame and free Army medical care when he got plugged in an incident with USBP Agents Ramos and Compean, who were notorious for their selfless service to the Constitution. US Attorney Johnny Sutton remains involved up to his butt-ocks in this continuing border scandal, in particular trying to sort out whether Davila took a drug load through a Port-of-Entry while he enjoyed his federally-granted status as a quasi-US citizen.

SOME DAY MEXICAN COPS MAY SHOOT ILLEGAL MEXICANS IN THE US: Santa Fe will hire Mexican nationals as law enforcement officers. Based on what goes on in Mexico with cops, that won’t end well. On the other hand, if you’re feeling insecure about wandering around Santa Fe, you’ll be able to hire a cop off his beat for about sixty bucks as your armed guard, same as in Juarez.

UNFORTUNATE: An immigration attorney teaching at West Point mischaracterizes what servicemembers fight for. It’s not the government they defend, but rather the Constitution. [Hat Tip: Bender’s Immigration Bulletin.

ASARCO STINKS IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE: Asarco, the once-and-future smelting plant on the West Side of El Paso, has spent thousands on local radio ads proclaiming how its operation will create four hundred or so jobs for the three-quarter million El Pasoans to choose from. Perhaps one of those jobs will be tax attorney.

AND THERE’S MORE THAN ONE WAY TO POLLUTE EL PASO: Don’t sneak away from the campfire just yet, Tigua Indians. If you paid your taxes, the State of Texas might be more lenient about your desperate desire to fleece grasping Hispanics and Gringos at that casino you so badly want.

IS IT XXXXXX RESTAURANT FOR BRIBE-ISTA BETTI FLORES? Someone said it is a BBQ place in town. I don’t know, even though a waitress in one well-known place offered me all the free Mountain Dew I want for 25 cents. And an extra half-rack of ribs for just a dollar. I keed. But honestly, $10k for a vote? That’s chump change, even in a burg where the median income is something like a thousand pesos, or something.

GOOD FENCES MAKE GOOD NEIGHBORS: Except on the Southwest Border. El Paso Times ran an article on Border Patrol workers who repair vandalized or destroyed fence portions along the border. Can’t find it now, but a simple fact for politicians to ponder remains: It takes far more resources to maintain an initiative than it does to implement it. Starting up something just to win an elections means you might have to slog throught the boring side of politics to keep it going, especially if it’s a Bill, say, or a bridge that has your first and last name on it.

HANDS ACROSS THE BORDER FENCE: Opponents of a border fence announced sixteen days of protests. El Paso mayor John Cook is joining forces with 4 Borders Pundit’s favorite loopy locals, the Border Network for Human Rights, to protest, umm, something. None of the participating groups have offered any concrete solutions, methinks, because none of those mentioned in the article seem to have any kind of overarching, holistic expertise on the intricacies of border life, to say nothing of figuring out what to do with those irksome illegals who go after Border Patrol agents with bolt-cutters and get shot to death for it.

HOW TO KILL OFF RESTAURANTS: Govern them to death. Business and liberal-left politics don’t mesh well, which leads to, well, hungry dining-outers with a Bay Area attitude. I keep saying, the bottom line trumps naively optimistic tulips-and-May Day dancing, every time. The two are as incompatible as Western boots and stiletto heels.

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14 July 2007: Your Weekend RSS Update

Saturday, July 14th, 2007

EL PASO FBI CORRUPTION CASE UPDATE: Things continue to percolate in the Border media, but little of substance came come to light this past week. Which means that scores of people are running around like chickens unindicted co-conspirators with their heads cut off,

Unnamed co-conspirators are fighting back, according to the El Paso Times. We already know ELP lawyer Martie Jobe is feeling a little defamed this time of month. District Clerk Gilbert Sanchez filed a criminal complaint over the odious implications of Ketner’s Complaint “information,” a document that laid it all out better than a corpse at the mortuary.

What’s a health benefits plan company gotta do these days to keep a contract? Apparently more than scandal-plagued Access HealthSource, which is linked to the ongoing investigation.

Nothing to see here: Thomason Hospital suits want to assure the public that the hospital kids are alright. Thomason is tangentially linked to the FBI ELP corruption case as related to a bond underwriting contract, as well as with recently-disgraced bribe-ista Betti Flores, who was involved in that contract.

No longer available: Not the El Paso Times article on Robert “Bob” Jones family violence allegation, or his services as CEO of NCED, which is linked to the ongoing corruption case. The now-unavailable article states Jones allegedly hit his wife in the chest during an argument. Ah, well, here’s a link to the El Paso Police Department mug shot of Jones.

El Paso lawyer Mary Stillinger’s a sharp egg. She’d like to represent three people implicated (I’m guessing through Ketner’s Complaint “information”: EPISD Trustee Charles Roark; YISD Trustee Milton Duntley; and former COO of NCED (now ReadyOne Industries) Ernie Lopez. But the US Attorney’s Office (at least, those who haven’t been fired by the White House) asked a US District Court to prevent her from doing this due to conflict(s) of interest. Turns out, the Feds goofed. Naturally, it was an underling who gets the blame. Ahh, inept civil servants. Can’t live with ‘em, can’t live with ‘em. I mean, the high-paid managers who fail to train said underlings.

MILITARY MATTERS: Don’t know whether these are true or not, but they sure are funny. 213 things Skippy learned not to do in the Army.

ON THE BORDER: The jail border, that is. The Senate is taking up the case of imprisoned USBP agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Compean. They’re the ones who shot a Darwin Candidate Mexican drug smuggler in the hiney. They messed up in trying to hide the evidence in a crude, GED-achieving, scared 11B Army infantryman kind of way, but the complaint against them is mitigated by the heinous activity of federal prosecutors, who coddled and variously cajoled, befriended, and sexed said sore-buttocks narco-Mexican trafficker into giving testimony. There’s a reason why talented federal prosecutors leave often and soon enough for private practice.

VAST DEMOCRATIC CONSPIRACY: Have they forgotten elections are coming up? The Dems are shooting too early and while it’s a certainty that election day is on the Blackberry of every Democratic clown and her aide, they all seem too stupid to care, in the manner of tactical geniuses who can’t comprehend strategic second-order effects. This week it’s impeachment chatter. Last week it was hundreds of investigations launched against — exclusively — Republicans. One of the most notorious: revival of the ironically-named Fairness Doctrine, which is fair only to a certain segment of the population who might be called Feinsteinian in their hatred of a radio market that doesn’t parrot their views; and, generally, launching sexist and elitist attacks against their constituents.

The Democrats have been looking for another Watergate since 1972, and a chance to impeach nearly as long as Bill Clinton has been looking for extracurricular booty.

Maybe this is the beginning of that chance. Bon chance, Le Dems!

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