Texas Sends Armed Troops to Defend the Border

sheskunk

Well-Known Member
Mexican law enforcement accused of firing on U.S. border agents

A Mexican law enforcement helicopter crossed into U.S. airspace and fired two shots, just missing American Border Patrol agents and prompting a quick apology from Mexican authorities in what is the second incursion this year of Mexican forces into United States territory, U.S. law enforcement officials said Friday.

The incident, now the subject of an FBI criminal investigation, occurred about 5:45 a.m. Thursday in southern Arizona, about 100 yards north of the U.S.-Mexico border, as Mexican law enforcement officers were chasing kidnapping suspects trying to escape into the United States, U.S. officials said.

No one was injured, U.S. officials said, but gunfire came within 15 yards of two U.S. Border Patrol agents and their vehicle near the town of San Miguel, Ariz.

According to U.S. agents, Mexican authorities immediately apologized and said the shots were a mistake. But Mexican officials disputed the American version of events, saying their officers had not fired and that the gunshots had come from the suspects.

In a similar incursion in January, two heavily armed Mexican soldiers crossed into Arizona near the same spot and drew their weapons on U.S. Border Patrol officers. No one was injured in that incident either, and Mexican soldiers retreated back across the border.

Mexican authorities called the January incident an “isolated and unintended occurrence,” saying soldiers simply didn't see signs marking the border crossing. They also said that U.S. officials occasionally cross into Mexico as well.

In the latest incident, Tomas Zeron, director of criminal investigations division of Mexico's federal attorney general's office in Mexico City, denied that shots were fired from the helicopter and that instead the aircraft was fired upon by Mexican smugglers on the ground.

“I don't think we crossed the border because we had our navigators along,” Zeron said at a news conference. “There were only shots fired by the detained suspects.” He said those who fired were subsequently arrested.

Zeron said the Mexican federal police and the army were involved in an operation near the Arizona border to rescue 39 migrants who had been kidnapped by drug cartel operatives. The operation took place at a ranch called La Sierrita, in the town of Altar in Sonora state, about 150 yards from the border, Zeron said.

FBI agents in Arizona have launched a criminal investigation to determine why the shots were fired so close to the U.S. agents, a U.S. official said.

The official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the investigation, added that U.S. border agents were aware at the time that a Mexican law enforcement operation was underway.

“This is certainly not a situation where we were fearful this was a Mexican cartel trying to take out some of our guys,” he said. “We know this is a situation where they were Mexican law enforcement conducting an operation. We had units there in an unmarked vehicle close to the international boundary.”

After the shots were fired, the official said, “there was a verbal exchange between our federal law enforcement and the Mexican agents, and there was an apology.”

With border tensions rising sharply this year and thousands of Mexican and Central American minors crossing into the U.S., some experts predict more such international incidents.

“It's becoming more than normal,” said James Phelps, a border and domestic security professor at Angelo State University in San Angelo, Texas, adding that such incursions usually happen only once every two or four years.

He said sometimes Mexican police simply get lost. “We all have GPS systems here, but not all members of the Mexican military have high-quality cellphones,” he said. “So it does happen. They cross the border inadvertently.”

A more ominous explanation, however, according to Phelps, would be that some Mexican law enforcement officials are secretly working for drug cartels in Mexico, helping smugglers enter safely into the U.S. “They are essentially a subcontracted armed force that works for the cartels,” he said.
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
Mexican law enforcement accused of firing on U.S. border agents

A Mexican law enforcement helicopter crossed into U.S. airspace and fired two shots, just missing American Border Patrol agents and prompting a quick apology from Mexican authorities in what is the second incursion this year of Mexican forces into United States territory, U.S. law enforcement officials said Friday.

The incident, now the subject of an FBI criminal investigation, occurred about 5:45 a.m. Thursday in southern Arizona, about 100 yards north of the U.S.-Mexico border, as Mexican law enforcement officers were chasing kidnapping suspects trying to escape into the United States, U.S. officials said.

No one was injured, U.S. officials said, but gunfire came within 15 yards of two U.S. Border Patrol agents and their vehicle near the town of San Miguel, Ariz.

According to U.S. agents, Mexican authorities immediately apologized and said the shots were a mistake. But Mexican officials disputed the American version of events, saying their officers had not fired and that the gunshots had come from the suspects.

In a similar incursion in January, two heavily armed Mexican soldiers crossed into Arizona near the same spot and drew their weapons on U.S. Border Patrol officers. No one was injured in that incident either, and Mexican soldiers retreated back across the border.

Mexican authorities called the January incident an “isolated and unintended occurrence,” saying soldiers simply didn't see signs marking the border crossing. They also said that U.S. officials occasionally cross into Mexico as well.

In the latest incident, Tomas Zeron, director of criminal investigations division of Mexico's federal attorney general's office in Mexico City, denied that shots were fired from the helicopter and that instead the aircraft was fired upon by Mexican smugglers on the ground.

“I don't think we crossed the border because we had our navigators along,” Zeron said at a news conference. “There were only shots fired by the detained suspects.” He said those who fired were subsequently arrested.

Zeron said the Mexican federal police and the army were involved in an operation near the Arizona border to rescue 39 migrants who had been kidnapped by drug cartel operatives. The operation took place at a ranch called La Sierrita, in the town of Altar in Sonora state, about 150 yards from the border, Zeron said.

FBI agents in Arizona have launched a criminal investigation to determine why the shots were fired so close to the U.S. agents, a U.S. official said.

The official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the investigation, added that U.S. border agents were aware at the time that a Mexican law enforcement operation was underway.

“This is certainly not a situation where we were fearful this was a Mexican cartel trying to take out some of our guys,” he said. “We know this is a situation where they were Mexican law enforcement conducting an operation. We had units there in an unmarked vehicle close to the international boundary.”

After the shots were fired, the official said, “there was a verbal exchange between our federal law enforcement and the Mexican agents, and there was an apology.”

With border tensions rising sharply this year and thousands of Mexican and Central American minors crossing into the U.S., some experts predict more such international incidents.

“It's becoming more than normal,” said James Phelps, a border and domestic security professor at Angelo State University in San Angelo, Texas, adding that such incursions usually happen only once every two or four years.

He said sometimes Mexican police simply get lost. “We all have GPS systems here, but not all members of the Mexican military have high-quality cellphones,” he said. “So it does happen. They cross the border inadvertently.”

A more ominous explanation, however, according to Phelps, would be that some Mexican law enforcement officials are secretly working for drug cartels in Mexico, helping smugglers enter safely into the U.S. “They are essentially a subcontracted armed force that works for the cartels,” he said.
Mexico is trying to take over the Indian Reservation because Obama is so weak on foreign policy...
 

greenlikemoney

Well-Known Member
Just like those weapons that "Nobel Peace Ears" gave to ISIS in Syria?

America seems to like arming their enemies and then claiming they need to blow them up for self defense...
It keeps all of them in the pockets of the taxpayer, that's what government is all about, since they have no form of revenue except thru the people.
 

sheskunk

Well-Known Member
Obama to go it alone on immigration, pleasing few
Obama on collision course with GOP with go-it-alone strategy on immigration

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama's abrupt shift from seeking immigration legislation to pursuing a go-it-alone executive strategy raises expectations among immigration advocates that Obama may have trouble satisfying while setting up a clash with House Republicans who've already threatened to sue him.

Limited in his powers to ease deportations and under pressure to crack down on a tide of Central American children entering the U.S. without their parents, Obama has only so many options to tackle an immigration conundrum complicated by a midterm election that could cost him Democratic control of the Senate.

Obama on Monday blamed Republican resistance for the demise of sweeping immigration legislation and vowed to bypass Congress to patch up the system. "If Congress will not do their job, at least we can do ours," Obama said.

But seeking to slow deportations while simultaneously stemming the flow of young people across the U.S. Southern border presents Obama with a knotty set of policy choices.

He has asked Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and Attorney General Eric Holder for recommendations by the end of summer on the types of executive actions he could take to address some of the aims of a comprehensive bipartisan bill that passed the Senate last year. Among the steps he could consider would be to focus deportations on people with serious criminal records, something the administration has already tried to do, with mixed results.

For now, White House officials say he will refocus resources from the interior of the country to the border.

Many immigrant advocates want far broader changes that would shield millions of immigrants now here illegally from deportation by expanding a two-year-old program that granted work permits to certain immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children. It's uncertain how far the president will go to meet those demands.

Dropping by a White House gathering of immigration advocates who were meeting with his senior advisers Monday, Obama promised he would take "aggressive" steps, according to some participants, but cautioned that he could not match on his own what broader legislation would accomplish.

In his public remarks Monday, he conceded the limits of his own authority, noting that unlike an executive action that would last only as long as he is president, legislation would be permanent.

At the same time, Obama asked Congress for more money and additional authority to make it easier to deport recent border crossers, including the unaccompanied youths from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, and to hire more immigration judges and open more detention facilities. Those proposals found little support in the White House meeting, signaling to Obama and his aides the difficulty he could face managing the labor, business, religious and Hispanic coalition behind the push for an immigration overhaul.

Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees International Union, and Eliseo Medina, the union's secretary treasurer, were among those at the meeting and praised Obama's decision to move on his own in the absence of congressional action. But they urged caution on how to deal with the influx of young people.

"We also hope that as President Obama moves forward with administrative action, he will carefully and humanely address the urgent crisis of unaccompanied immigrant minors," the two said in a statement following the meeting. "Children — from whatever country they may come from — who are fleeing from violence or trying to reunite with their families obliges our country's leaders to act in the most compassionate and thoughtful way possible."

Secretary of State John Kerry flew to Panama, where he was to meet Tuesday with the country's new president. Kerry will also meet with the presidents of El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala to discuss what they can do jointly to get the young, unaccompanied border crossers back and to seek ways to prevent this situation from occurring in the future.

Republicans, who have blamed Obama policies for attracting youths over the border, argued Obama has overstepped his authority in the past and has been rebuked twice in four days by the Supreme Court.

"He wants a comprehensive immigration overhaul that's his way or the highway," Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said. "It's disturbing that this president believes he can be a one-man legislative branch when it comes to our immigration laws." House Speaker John Boehner has announced plans to pursue a lawsuit against Obama over his use of executive authority.

Obama's announcement came almost a year to the day after the Senate passed a historic immigration bill that would have spent billions to secure the border and offered a path to citizenship for many of the 11.5 million people now here illegally. Despite the efforts of an extraordinary coalition of businesses, unions, religious leaders, law enforcement officials and others, the GOP-led House never acted, as the most conservative lawmakers refused to heed calls from GOP leaders to back action to revive the party's standing with Latino voters.

Obama said Boehner, R-Ohio, informed him last week that the House would not be taking up immigration legislation this year. But the speaker blamed the president for the outcome.

"I told the president what I have been telling him for months: The American people and their elected officials don't trust him to enforce the law as written," he said. "Until that changes, it is going to be difficult to make progress on this issue."

Boehner called Obama's plan to go it alone "sad and disappointing."
 

beans davis

Well-Known Member
Hey check it out man the feds are sending the illegals from Texas to Cali ...

Looks like the feds are gonna be starting shit down Cali way too.

They don't want to stay here we got the militia that aint playin.

Welcome to club fed Cali homies

HOUSTON, Texas--As illegal immigrants continue to spill across the U.S.-Mexico border, federal authorities are attempting to relocate the migrants from South Texas to housing facilities in states across the nation. One such facility is located in Murrieta, California, where a large group of protesters recently blocked a bus full of migrants from arriving. The protesters remain there, adamant that illegal immigrants don't get dumped in their town. But soon the concerned citizens may be forced to step down--Breitbart Texas has learned that federal agents plan to arrive in Murrieta on Monday with riot gear to ensure that another busload makes it to the housing facility.

Jeremy Oliver, a resident of Temecula, California--a town that neighbors Murrieta--told Breitbart Texas that local police officers warned the protesters that "it's going to get ugly."

Oliver said, "The feds are pissed that they haven't been able to use this facility. Officers out there warned people that federal agents will be in Murrieta on Monday--they are going to get the next bus through no matter what. Riot gear and shields will be used to push the crowd back."

John Henry, a Murrieta resident since 1991, was told the same thing by local officers.

"We're being told that federal Marshals or ICE will be here in the next few days and that they are bringing riot gear," Henry said. "They're apparently going to be blocking off the street with concrete blockades so that no vehicles can get through. The River County Sheriff's Department showed up last night and brought a huge watch tower that shoots up into the air 35 feet."

On Friday, six protesters were arrested in Murrieta. One was apprehended for crossing "the yellow tape that blocked protesters from the Border Patrol station entrance," according to USA Today.

Henry expressed frustration at the fact that the illegal immigrants are being "rewarded" for breaking the law--after illegally crossing the border, they receive a slew of taxpayer subsidized benefits like housing, food, education, vocational training, and legal counsel. Most are then released onto U.S. soil.

When U.S. citizens break the law, on the other hand, they pay the price. "If any one of us were to roll through a stop sign, we'd be pulled over and ticketed," Henry noted.

On June 4th Breitbart Texas' Managing Director Brandon Darby broke the news that U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) would be relocating illegal immigrants from Texas to California. Within moments of that story being published, the official Twitter account of the San Diego CBP tweeted at Darby, insisting the report was “erroneous” and asking for it to be removed from the internet.

Days later the San Diego CBP deleted the tweet from their official account. Subsequent reports, outlining plans to fly immigrants to Southern California, proved CBP had indeed planned the relocation all along.

It is unclear how the border crisis will be handled moving forward, especially given that many U.S. citizens oppose the migrants being shipped by the hundreds to their communities.
 
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