Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Death of ICE Agent a "Game Changer" for Border Security

By James Schneider
Fox News
Less than three weeks after Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano declared the border was safer than ever, the killing of Immigrations and Customs Enforcement Special Agent Jaime Zapata is a "game changer." That's according to the Chairman of the Homeland Security Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee, Rep. Michael McCaul. R-Texas, who spoke to FOX News on Sunday.

McCaul says the ambush in the Mexican state of San Luis Potosi that left the 32-year-old agent dead and Special Agent Victor Avila wounded represents a change of tactics for the drug cartels, which demands a suitable American response. "What happened this week changes the rules of the game," McCaul told FOX's Jamie Colby. "And I believe the United States needs to respond in a very, very forceful manner to these dangerous drug cartels. These individuals need to be hunted down, extradited to the United States, and have swift justice."

Earlier this week, Napolitano made a statement indicating Zapata's killing won't change the U.S. commitment to supporting Mexico in its crackdown on organized crime. "Let me be clear: any act of violence against our ICE personnel, or any DHS personnel, is an attack against all those who serve our nation and put their lives at risk for our safety," Napolitano said. "We remain committed in our broader support for Mexico's efforts to combat violence within its borders."

The Obama administration has trumpeted its efforts along the border, highlighting particularly the hundreds of millions of dollars spent for new technology and its doubling the number of border agents since 2004. Government statistics show violent crimes at the border down 30 percent in the past 20 years, which Napolitano says are among the lowest in the nation. Even as Mexican violence has dramatically increased over the past decade, DHS figures show the crime rates were flat in Douglas, Nogales, Yuma and other Arizona border towns. Additionally, DHS has recently touted its seizure of 35 percent more illegal currency, 16 percent more illegal drugs, and 28 percent more weapons compared to the end of the Bush administration.

McCaul doesn't appear to be moved by the government's numbers or its use of taxpayer dollars. He told FOX that even President Obama's budget proposal, which adds $300 million to the border patrol budget, is "not enough." He blamed State Department bureaucracy for "bottlenecking this up," adding that only a quarter of the approved funds have gone where they were intended. He shared a personal anecdote to illustrate what he believes are the real dangers he has learned first-hand.

"Since 2006, when [Mexico's] President Calderon declared war, 35,000 people have been killed at the hands of the drug cartels," McCaul explained. "I personally went down to El Paso to the El Paso Intelligence Center, and I was not allowed to go into Juarez. I've been to Pakistan, to Afghanistan, and yet 6,000 people have been killed in Juarez. And I was told 'Congressman, it's not safe enough for you to go down there.'"

A manhunt is currently underway for as many as 10 gunmen believed to be involved in the attack. Reports suggest the attackers didn't necessarily know that the federal agents were in the vehicle that they ambushed. Nancy Davis, a Texas missionary, was shot to death last month in Mexico while driving a pickup truck, and authorities think the attackers wanted to steal the truck.

Zapata will be buried in Brownsville, Texas, on Tuesday, a week after his death.


Deaths of 3 federal agents highlight changing dangers

By Jerry Markon
Washington Post Staff Writer

The shooting deaths of two federal agents last week and three in two months highlight the heightened risk to federal investigators who are confronting increasingly violent fugitives, drug traffickers and other criminals, authorities said.

The killing of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Mexico on Tuesday was followed by the slaying of a deputy U.S. marshal in West Virginia on Wednesday, an unusual confluence of events that left officials deeply troubled. A Border Patrol agent was fatally shot in Arizona in December.

The killings, while not connected, come amid a broadening federal role in fighting violent crime that was once left mainly to state authorities, investigators said. Federal-state task forces on violent crime have multiplied since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, bringing federal agents in closer contact with dangerous criminals. And the government says it is pouring resources into fighting drug trafficking and other crimes along the border with Mexico.

"You're seeing feds playing a much more active role in fighting violent crime, and that's putting us in harm's way,'' said Jon Adler, president of the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association. "We're getting a lot more dangerous people off the street, but the more you do, the more you are exposed.''

Overall, deaths of officers in the line of duty are rising nationwide. About 160 died in 2010, a nearly 40 percent increase from the year before, according to the D.C.-based National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. The organization, which tracks law enforcement deaths, said 61 officers were killed by gunfire in 2010, up from 40 in 2008.

The overwhelming majority of officers killed were state and local police, and deaths of federal agents have remained relatively stable, rising from six in 2009 to eight last year. Experts say that law enforcement death rates bounce up and down, with the most dangerous period in the 1970s.

"We have these blips. Policing is always dangerous business,'' said David Klinger, a criminologist at the University of Missouri at St. Louis. The close proximity of the recent deaths of federal agents was "very unusual," he said, adding: "This could be the leading edge of an explosion of violence. But we need to track it over time.''

Officials from several of the affected agencies say their agents face growing danger on the streets. Even as FBI statistics show a decrease in violent crime in recent years, federal criminal caseloads have risen steadily, and agents are more likely to encounter suspects who will attack them with guns and other weapons.

"It's much more violent than in the past,'' said Mike Earp, assistant director of investigations for the U.S. Marshals Service, which arrests fugitives and works with state and local law enforcement on regional fugitive task forces that target violent offenders. "Many more of these people are armed, and they have an utter disregard for human life.''

Deputy U.S. Marshal Derek Hotsinpiller, 24, fell victim to that violence when he and several other deputy marshals and local police officers arrived at the home of Charles E. Smith on Wednesday in Elkins, W.Va. The officers were serving an arrest warrant on Smith, who was wanted on federal drug and weapons charges.

After the officers broke down the door, shotgun blasts rang out, officials said. The gunfire killed Hotsinpiller and wounded two others - Alex Neville, a supervisory deputy U.S. marshal, and Fred Frederick, a deputy U.S. marshal - who are recovering from their injuries.

Deputies returned fire and Smith was killed, officials said.

Hotsinpiller's death has had an "indescribable" effect on the Marshals Service, Earp said. "He was one of ours. It makes everyone stop, think, reflect and hug their families,'' he said.

A day earlier, two Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were shot by unknown assailants while driving between Mexico City and Monterrey, Mexico. The agents were returning to Mexico City from meetings with other U.S. personnel.

Special Agent Jaime Zapata, 32, died of his wounds. Special Agent Victor Avila Jr. was shot twice in the leg and is recovering.

"This is a difficult time for ICE,'' said John Morton, the agency's director. "This tragedy is a stark reminder of the risks confronted and the sacrifices made by our men and women every day.''

The governor of the Mexican state where the ambush occurred blamed drug cartel members.

Drug violence has killed more than 34,000 people in Mexico in the past four years. The departments of Justice and Homeland Security have established an FBI-led task force to work with Mexico in the investigation.

Drug-related violence along the Mexican border also may have played a role in the death of Border Patrol agent Brian A. Terry. He was gunned down Dec. 15 while tracking narcotics traffickers and searching for illegal immigrants near Rio Rico, Ariz.

The number of Border Patrol agents has doubled since 2004, and the danger they face when stopping potential illegal immigrants has increased "exponentially,'' said Mark Qualia, a spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

"In the 1990s, you'd be catching migrant workers, average Joes coming here to seek jobs,'' he said. "There was very, very rarely any altercation.''

Now, Qualia said, agents are more likely to encounter people with outstanding warrants for drug trafficking and other crimes.

"They are much more desperate, and they have a tendency to be a lot more combative,'' he said.

16 comments:

  1. We need to quit talkin about it and do something about it!!! Get all these damn Border Patrol Agents away from the bullshit assignments like workin in court, fixing cars, doin paperwork and send them down to Texas and shut down that border. Shutting it down will force these damn Zetas to cross their dope somewhere else away from Texas and these cartels can finally have an all out war over territory and weaken themselves out so the Mexican Government can get a handle on it. Sounds simple? It is.. Jus start by shutting down the Texas corridor and you will see the rats come out of their holes when the food is scarce and they can be stomped by the Mexican Military... Orrrrrrrr jus send in our troops!!!

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  2. How does two supposed agents being attacked have anything to do with the border not being secure? These agents were roaming around mexico(where they dont belong)not texas. This is suppose to be a game changer?what a flimsy excuse to invade mexico... and 300 billion is not enough? Keep lying to us about what really happened and just maybe the american taxpayer will swallow your lies...

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  3. I told you folks they were gonna use this story to justify taking over mexico and chapo and the boys cash cow....bend over american taxpayer....if they wanted to really stop this bloodshed they would actually seal the border like 11:27 stated...and so what 35,000 people have died. I could care less the cockroaches are exterminating themselves, my tears are shed for the innocent men, women, and children caught in the crossfire, the ones being victimized by the cartels, and by the mexican government that wont let them protect themselves, that is the number that should be touted..

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  4. Anybody going to see the agent. The family has decided to have a public viewing. They had said it was going to be held on Monday at the Brownsville Events Center. All BorderlandBeat readers should attend and meet up and pay our respects to this fallen hero. Write a double BB on your face or hand to identify yourself.

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  5. ...instead helping to dream up a way of actually do something about drug demand, your solution is an asinine dream of a full invasion?!?!


    How'd that "Iraqi-freedomy" thing work out for you?

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  6. Onother story on these guys?
    get over it already.
    Where is the story on Agent X or agent Y
    of the Federales?
    one american gets popped nowheres near the border on a secret CIA botch job and its on BB for days without end.

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  7. That Iraqui-Freedomy thing worked out pretty well. We hung the president and took over the country. Killed a few million people and got their atention. I wonder how Calderon would handle the last few moments before his hanging?

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  8. Napolitano is such a useless hand-wringer.

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  9. To the American flag wrapped bozo type, 'killed a few million people' is considered a success. One of these days though, the world will get itself together enough to come and put you freaks in a lunatic asylum where you belong.

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  10. lol America does not want to invade Mexico so chill out folks! This war will take many more years to finish, this corruption is very deep rooted and doesn't end overnight.

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  11. Id say that the "Iraqi-freedomy" thingy (as Sarah would say it) worked out just peachy: we've got our revered 43rd President canceling trips to Switzerland (of all places), held prizoner by his own official "mess-ups" done in the American people's names. So...how about another 4500 souls, just to shut some mouths up?

    You value being Right more than other's lives.

    ...or is it just a strategy to have Obama send troops to Mexico and mess up Hillary's run in 2016?

    ...ah...

    ...you sneaky conservatives almost got that one past me...

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  12. On the face of it, it's likely that even Zetas read the news, and know that just last month a CIA assassin murdered 2 Pakistani intelligence agents in Pakistan by shooting them both in the back, with neither of the dead even able to unholster their guns. Another innocent guy on a motorcycle was killed by his CIA buddies responding to help by driving on the wrong side of a divided road. After the fact, the buddies were whisked out of the country and the host country is trying to resist American pressure to release this CIA killer as a "diplomat". When you cry wolf enough times, eventually no one believes you, and when you learn about flagrant contract murders by CIA spooks, you'd better worry that he'll kill you in the back, too, without consequences, and the USA protect him. The assailants likely thought of USA operatives reputations, and perhaps thought of the poor Mexican kid killed at the border by the same administration for merely throwing a stone, and decided "screw it", it's better to be judged by 12 than carried by 6, and blew them away without further notice. Karma, what goes around comes around. When you walk around carrying a big stick and using it, one day you'll meet up with a bunch of pissed off guys carrying bigger sticks, it's the law of the jungle.

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  13. lol If nobody agrees here on a site of like minded people then just get used to this getting worse and worse. I can see a day when heads and body pieces will be rolling in the good ole USA.

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  14. Over a thousand attend memorial services..RIP Jaime..descanse en paz

    Funeral reports from the scene incl video:

    http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/funeral-123113-agent-ice.html

    http://video.foxnews.com/v/4549804/funeral-for-ice-agent-murdered-in-mexico/

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/chronicle/7440580.html

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  15. The thing here is that Zetas are ex military soldiers, which back in the day, were trained by The United States to combat drug trafficking and all that illegal shit. The United States trains all these people from all over the world in order for them to have a more secure country. When really what happens, these people use all that training against us. I live in a border town and have witnessed beheadings and all sorts of killings. If we really pay attention, high ranking Zetas are not stupid, they follow a chain of command and run their organizations like Adolf Hitlers holocaust. It is the messengers that mess everything up. To them they are known as "Alcones" or hawks in english. These are the eyes of the higer zetas. These are the people that stand by the our international bridges and stalk you for your vehicle or follow you to steal and even may kill you. So,in a few words, these people dont give a shit about anybody. If they have an order, they will execute that order, and it does not matter if they loose their life. To them they serve" El Señor" which is the boss.

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  16. It did not go down as reported on the news, I was behind them. The vehicles had been moved from their original positions and were about a quarter mile from the free highway and toll road intersection. No military dress, federal armored vehicle

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