Non-Mexican immigrants swamp Texas border city
Non-Mexican immigrants swamp Texas border city
Mon May 30, 2005 06:34 PM ET
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=WSI4SAV0ZGLRYCRBAELCFFA?type=domesticNews&storyID=8644283&pageNumber=1
By Tim ***nor
EAGLE PASS, Texas (Reuters) - The number of illegal immigrants from
Central America and Brazil caught crossing into this Texas border city
jumped threefold in the past year as they rush to exploit a legal
loophole, U.S. authorities said.
The U.S. Border Patrol has nabbed 15,195 non-Mexican migrants crossing
over the Rio Bravo around Eagle Pass in the past eight months, a rise
of almost 240 percent on the same period last year, officials said on
Monday.
Agents say what they call "OTMs" -- "other than Mexican migrants" --
now account for 90 percent of all migrant detentions in the sweltering
trade and ranching hub of 40,000 people. That is up from the 5 percent
to 10 percent nationwide normally recorded by the U.S. Bureau of
Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Officials in Eagle Pass attribute the dramatic spike to news filtering
out in countries in Central and South America that U.S. authorities are
unable to hold the influx of immigrants in swamped local detention
facilities.
"Word is out that we are unable to detain the other than Mexican
crossers, and they are exploiting a bottleneck in the system," Dennis
Smith, the Border Patrol's spokesman for the local Del Rio Sector, told
Reuters.
Whereas Mexican citizens are processed and swiftly deported,
non-Mexicans are either detained or let out on bail pending an
appearance before an immigration court.
Following a security and criminal background check, those not deemed a
security threat or found to have a criminal record, are released with a
notice to appear before an immigration judge within 30 days.
The immigration summons, dubbed "the diploma" by local residents in the
remote border community, allows them to travel on into the United
States legally, crossing Border Patrol road blocks set up to collar
illegal migrants in south Texas.
Agents say the rush to reach Eagle Pass has been boosted by good
communications links from cities in the Mexican interior, and they say
they can time immigrant arrivals from the city of Piedras Negras to the
south by using the Mexican bus schedule.
"You see them cross over the river together in a line and come round
like a snake to where the (patrol agent's) flash light is ... and just
give themselves up," said veteran agent Randy Clark.
STRAIN ON RESOURCES
Agents say they arrest between 100 and 200 non-Mexican immigrants each
night, many of them on a golf course in the city center, where they can
be easily seen by surveillance cameras.
The flow has increased so much in recent months that the Eagle Pass
Border Patrol station brings in a trailer of food for the detainees
each day and has built a new administrative module to deal with the
processing.
Agents say most of the immigrants are found not to be a security risk,
and are released onto the streets of the city within a few hours.
Once free, they follow a trail to the local convenience store to buy a
telephone card to call relatives. They then arrange a wire transfer of
funds to buy a bus ticket for their onward journey.
Clutching their diplomas as they take their first steps toward a new
life in the United States, Honduran sisters Jenny and Nancy, aged 20
and 24, told Reuters they planned to head to New York.
"Getting here was much easier than we thought," said Jenny with a broad
grin, scraping back her hair. "Now we just want to find work to help
our family in Honduras to get ahead."
The sisters -- who decided wading across the Rio Bravo was a better
option than trying to cross the Arizona desert -- said they planned to
follow up on the court summons, although authorities say few actually
keep the date.
end
Stop the madness. Put a tracking braclet or something up their asses.
:/
Halcitron
misc.survivalism
alt.politics.immigration,misc.survivalism,soc.cult ure.mexican.american,ca.politics
|