Border Patrolmen: Failures as
Social Workers, Successes at Defending the Border
[Bryanna
Bevens] -
10/08/04
In 2004, Arizona Border Patrol apprehended 586,000
illegal immigrants crossing the border into the United
States. There was an increase of 184,000 over the
previous year—attributed in large part to the $28
million dollar aggressive enforcement initiative enacted
last March.
The ICE's Fact Sheet says that the basic mission of the
Arizona Border Control Initiative is to "achieve
operational control of the Arizona border." A
secondary mission is to "Decrease the rate of
violent crime and reduce the need for social
services in southern Arizona."
Protecting "potential illegal aliens" comes way
down the list, although they did assign 60 extra agents
for search and rescue.
However “humanitarian”
groups are claiming the $28 million was not
earmarked for enforcement but to reduce the number of
border crossing related deaths. In that sense, they
consider the initiative a complete failure.
"What
we've seen is the change in approach by the Border
Patrol has not reduced the deaths at all, it's simply
channeled the people to other, more dangerous paths,"
said Jim Sullivan, a spokesman for the
"Samaritan Patrol" whose members patrol the
border's desert regions with food, water and first aid
supplies looking of illegal immigrants to help.
[$28
million fails to slow deaths]
This
seemed to be news to the Border Patrol.
"If
you're going to say that the sole purpose of the Arizona
Border Control Initiative was to reduce the deaths, then
you can say that it was a failure,"
said Michael Nicley, chief of the
Border Patrol's Tucson sector.
The
Border Patrol in Arizona stopped 586,000 illegal aliens
from settling in the United States; flooding our
schools, abusing our government resources and
bankrupting our hospitals. [Nearly
600,000 entrants caught, Border Patrol says]
There
are some who want to call this a failure.
Yeah, the same people we can thank for the 8 to 10
million illegal aliens we already have.
This was a great success for Arizona—and a job well done
by the Border Patrol.
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