You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Politix
Along Part of the Border, A Zero-Tolerance Zone
2006-06-18
Tough Program Is Discouraging Illegal Crossings
By Sylvia Moreno
Washington Post Staff Writer

DEL RIO, Tex. -- On June 1, the three Ordaz-Valtierra brothers from Mexico illegally crossed the Rio Grande with the same dream that so many other Latin American immigrants have: head north from the border, get jobs and start sending money home.

Their journey, instead, ended in a federal courthouse here, where, dressed in orange prison jumpsuits, each was charged with the federal misdemeanor crime of entry without inspection. Each pleaded guilty and was sentenced by a U.S. magistrate judge to 15 days. Under guard of U.S. marshals, they were put in shackles and bused to a West Texas jail to serve their time and await deportation home.

"I'm sorry," Juan Carlos Ordaz-Valtierra, 27, said through an interpreter as he stood before U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis G. Green. "I didn't think it was this difficult to cross into your country."

It wasn't. But this year, a 190-mile stretch of riverbank that includes the small border cities of Eagle Pass and Del Rio became a "zero-tolerance zone." If apprehended by the U.S. Border Patrol, illegal immigrants are prosecuted by federal authorities for a misdemeanor, sent to jail for 15 to 180 days and then deported. If they are caught illegally entering the country a second time, they are eligible for a felony charge of illegal entry and as much as two years in federal prison.

"Catch and release" -- in which Mexican citizens are returned promptly to Mexico, but citizens of other countries are given a notice to appear in immigration court at a later date, set free and never tracked down by authorities -- would end here, said Department of Homeland Security officials at a Washington news conference this year. "Catch and remove" would start. And, officials predicted, as this tough policy became known, immigrants would be discouraged from crossing through this slice of southwest Texas.
Posted by:Slatle Chomotle5631

#10  heh nothin 'rong wid GREEN GUAETAMALOS!

Dip the corn Cheeeepss!
Posted by: RD   2006-06-18 21:02  

#9  green blogna snadwiches is better than whaT THEY EAT IN MEXICO ANS GUAETAMALO
Posted by: Greamp Elmavinter1163   2006-06-18 20:05  

#8  OOps started that comment a few hours ago, and only now hit enter.

Posting while drinking = not-so-good.

Im headed back to the drinking (Father's day - got a bottle of the good single malt stuff, now thats how to treat a dad right!).

Posted by: Oldspook   2006-06-18 16:43  

#7  Jail space tight?

Ask that guy in Arizona how to run a prison camp for these law breakers. He knows how.

The Guard has spare GP-Medium tents, hurricane fencing, barbed wire footing and concertina wire for making the perimeter, and the engineering know-how to build & man the guard towers.

No problem with jail space after that.
Posted by: Oldspook   2006-06-18 16:41  

#6  West Texas has a lot of open space, you don't need to be hauling their asses all over and back. Develop holding pens. Contact Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Phoenix, he'll set you straight.
Posted by: SOP35/Rat   2006-06-18 16:16  

#5  and lock up the "human rights" activists that facilitate the illegals by putting up aid and watering stations in the desert. Also, post Border Patrol folks at the stations to rescue (arrest) everyone who shows.
Posted by: RWV   2006-06-18 14:34  

#4  Joe Arpaio in AZ has been housing them under less-than-pleasant conditions (think green baloney sandwiches) for less than a couple dollars a day. Works there too....

Build the fence. Faster
Posted by: Frank G   2006-06-18 12:24  

#3  a few millions thrown at a few large jails will help with the logistics
Posted by: Omoluper Chert8271   2006-06-18 12:05  

#2  wow, now thats's tough.15 fucking days huh
in a jail that is nicer and the food better than where you came from
Posted by: Greamp Elmavinter1163   2006-06-18 12:04  

#1  But as with many border enforcement programs, the positive effects are often offset by negative consequences. "It's plugging one hole here and creating holes somewhere else," said one federal official who asked not to be identified because he is involved in enforcing the program. "If it's only done right here, everybody might go elsewhere."

I know this is a stunning idea, but maybe you should do it right everywhere.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2006-06-18 12:03  

00:00