Minuteman Day 2: All quiet along western border

AZ GRAMMY

Inactive
Minuteman Day 2: All quiet along western border

By: EDWARD SIFUENTES - Staff Writer

NACO, ARIZ. ---- On the second day of the controversial border watch, Minuteman Project participants began taking their positions along the Arizona-Mexico border Saturday to deter illegal immigrants from entering the United States.

Hundreds of Minuteman supporters, including several Californians from North San Diego County and Southwest Riverside County, also staged rallies in front of the Naco and Douglas offices of the U.S. Border Patrol. In neighboring Mexican towns, human- and immigrant-rights activists staged a vigil and rally.

Under the attentive eyes of the advocates of human rights, Minuteman Project volunteers began their watch along a desolate stretch of the border east of the dusty town of Naco.

"Everybody's watching each other, and there's very little happening," said Larry Morgan of Long Beach, a Minuteman participant.

Morgan was among the first of dozens of people stationed a few hundred yards from the border. But Morgan said that during his four-hour shift, he had only seen legal observers trained by the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona to make sure that illegal immigrants' rights were not violated.

Organizers have been guarded about disclosing the exact number of Minuteman Project volunteers who had arrived. Jim Gilchrist, a retired accountant from Orange County who helped recruit the participants through a Web site, said Friday that the group had registered more than 600 volunteers in Tombstone in the last two weeks.

Activists, many from San Diego County who traveled to the area to oppose the Minutemen, have said they are concerned because some participants are carrying guns, which is legal in Arizona. They have said they are also concerned that the effort may attract violent, racist people.

A short distance away, in the dry heat of the desert, two observers peered at neighboring Minuteman posts with binoculars.

"There is a history of vigilante violence," said Scott Kerr of Douglas, a civil rights observers. He added that he had not seen any violations of the law.

In fact, neither the participants nor the legal observers had seen any illegal immigrants by the afternoon in that area of the border, where the barbed-wire fence is a mere 4 feet tall.

"It's been pretty boring," said Luke Roske of Tucson, another ACLU observer.

Nevertheless, organizers of the Minuteman Project plan a monthlong stakeout. They have said that their main interest is to make a statement about the porous nature of the border and the need for more resources there.

Chris Simcox, one of the organizers, said that he expects people to cross the border to test the group's resolve. But he rejects rights activists' claim that his organization is racist and violent.

"There are groups that are going to cross on purpose to test us," Simcox told volunteers at an orientation meeting before sending a group to watch the border. "Fine, then the world will see who we really are, and they'll stop branding us with all of these negative labels."

U.S. Border Patrol officials, however, have said that they neither need nor want the help of civilians. They said the Minuteman Project could put civilians who aren't trained in law enforcement in harm's way.

"The Border Patrol does not encourage, does not support, this organization," said Jose Garza, a spokesman for the agency's Tucson sector, which covers the area where the Minutemen will operate.

"We'd rather that the job of patrolling our borders be left in the hands of our agents," he said.

Arizona, which has become the main gate for illegal immigrants, expects to receive 500 more agents this year. About 200 of those agents were deployed shortly before the start of the Minuteman Project.

Garza said the deployment was not related to the start of the project. But many of the organizers have taken credit for the increase in enforcement efforts.

Jim Chase of Oceanside, one of the organizers of the Minuteman Project, said Saturday that at least one illegal immigrant had been arrested with the group's help.

He said the illegal immigrant entered the Miracle Valley Bible College complex, where he and dozens of volunteers are staying. Chase said the man arrived tired and hungry, and his group helped him and then turned him over to Border Patrol agents.

Chase has said that he hopes to replicate the Minuteman Project in California later this year.

At the Minuteman support rally outside the Naco Border Patrol station, a handful of Riverside County residents waved flags and chanted slogans, such as, "Close the border now!"

"What we hope this will accomplish is that our message will get back to (President) Bush that the American public wants our immigration laws enforced and our borders secured," said Arne Chandler of Temecula, while participating in the rally.

"Our word to him is that we are being vigilant, which is watchful," Chandler added. "We're doing the job that he is not doing and that he is not letting our Border Patrol do."

http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2005/04/03/news/top_stories/42_05212750.txt
 

Onebyone

Inactive
You mean not one illegal came over the border last night in that area? Amazing what a few good men and women can do. We should take up a fund and pay people to stand there every 500 feet. Then we will accomplish what Bush has not been able or willing to do.
 

Spear

Contributing Member
That's what impressed me about the article too. Noone tried crossing because of the presence of resistance. With little to no enforcement there usually of course the area is an "open door". All it would take would be a little more manpower on the part of the government to solve this problem.
 

Onebyone

Inactive
Yeah Spear maybe we don't need a large fence but guard stations every 500 feet. They could be little pavillions with a shared outdoor potty every 1000 ft. or so. They could take bottled water, their lunch, a cell phone and radio, field glasses and nightvision for night and have a chair there built in. I am sure there are many folks who would take a job like that. Then if someone does dare to come up they call the physically fit, armed border patrol to come get them. This could really work, would be inexpensive to operate and give some retired or other folks who would like the work a job.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
I know that well meaning people can cause grief to law enforcement. We had a Neighborhood Watch active in one of my communities. Some of them would park next to the police car or shine their lights on the car. That is a no no. Finaly, we had a fight on main street at New Years and the NW car kept driving back and forth right in the middle of it. The cops had enough to do with trying to defuse the fight and the NW put themselves in jeopardy so the cops had to look out for them too.

We disbanded that NW.

When I ride with the cops on a ride along. I always ask for refresher on the protocols and I always try to act predictably. I hope the MM received similar training and follow it.
 
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