Townhall...
Riding
in the Desert: Child Sexual
Exploitation, Drug Running, Human Smuggling and Violence
by Katie Pavlich
Dec 07, 2011
Pinal
County, Ariz.-This week I was
privileged to participate in a ride along with the Arizona Pinal County
Sheriff’s Office and got a first hand look at what deputies are dealing
with on
a daily basis. Although we didn’t get into any major cartel chases
during my
time with them, the education I received about a number of border
issues was
eye opening.
I
started off the day by driving to
Florence, Ariz. where the Pinal County Sheriff’s headquarters is
located. I met
with Chief James Kimble and he gave me a tour of the adult detention
center. He
explained to me that the Department of Homeland Security uses this
particular
detention center to house illegal aliens on a contract basis. According to Kimbell,
illegal alien inmates
are in the detention center on average 28-32 days, but some stay longer
based
on certain criteria. The Pinal County Sheriff’s Office doesn’t conduct
any
activity outside of arrest and detention for illegals, the rest is
handled by
I.C.E. including classification and making a decision to deport.
Illegal
aliens are classified three
ways by I.C.E.:
Level
1: Crime-illegal entry
Level
2: Dangerous with criminal
record but not repetitive
Level
3: Dangerous with a repetitive
criminal record
Let’s
just say taxpayers are shelling
out a good amount of money to keep these guys in the system and to
determine
whether they should or should not be deported.
(Side
note: The United States cannot
deport an illegal alien back to their country of origin unless the U.S.
has a
treaty with that country. If a person is in the United States illegally
from a
country like Somalia, a country which the U.S. doesn’t have a treaty
with,
I.C.E. must either let that person stay in the U.S. or find a country
that will
take them. )
After
touring the detention center, I
met up with Lieutenant Matthew Thomas who is a member of the Pinal
County SWAT
team. Thomas gave me a ride to my car in the parking lot so I could
follow him
to the city of Casa Grande, which is a hot spot for cartel activity.
I
hopped in his unmarked dusty Chevy
SUV and one of the first things he said was, “Sorry about the mess,
this is my
real office.”
To
which I responded, “Quite the
office! I’ll take it.”
Thomas’s
“office” was similar to a
typical police car, but way better. He had an AR-15 style long gun
rifle in a
rack on the roof just behind the driver and passenger seats, with a
multi-frequency
radio in the front.
After
I followed Thomas from Florence
to Casa Grande, I parked at the Border Patrol station there, hopped in
his
office and we were off. We started down Interstate 8, which runs east
to
Interstate 10 and west all the way to California, making it the perfect
freeway
for drug runners to get their dope into Phoenix, and then to mass
distribute to
the rest of the United States. I-8 is about 30 minutes south of Phoenix
by way
of I-10. The cities near this intersection, which used to be
predominantly
ranching and farming communities, are Casa Grande, Arizona City,
Maricopa,
Hidden Valley, Eloy and Stanfield.
Now,
although some farms still exist, this area is inundated with cartel
activity.
The bad guys, members of the Sinaloa cartel, live in these communities,
run
stash houses and have turned access roads, literally right next to
farms that
have been in operation for decades, into major smuggling routes. Thomas
called
this the “city problem.”
Nearby
is the infamous Vekol Valley,
the largest hot bed of drug and human smuggling in the United States
and where
a Pinal County Deputy was shot in April 2010. Vekol is surrounded by
nasty
mountain ranges on both sides. There is wide-open desert starting from
mile
marker 160 on I-8 and stretching all the way to Mexico. Because of the
terrain,
Vekol acts as a funnel. As we drove into the area, I could feel that it
just
wasn’t a safe place to be.
Cartels
also take advantage of the
Tohono O’odham Indian Reservation on the west side of Vekol Valley.
They use it
as an entry point, marry into Indian families so they can live on the
reservation and if a village is small enough, cartel members will
simply walk
in and take property to use for smuggling activity, threatening death
if
confronted.
While
we were driving near Vekol,
Thomas explained the “terrain” problem to me after pulling off the side
of the
road to show me the “Travel Caution: Smuggling and Illegal Immigration
May Be
Encountered in This Area,” sign provided by Homeland Security.
(Remember,
according to Janet Napolitano, the border is secure) He said the
cartels have a
vast intelligence network. Men know as “spotters,” sit up on the top of
hills
and mountains with cell phones and radios, calling drug running crews
in the
U.S. and Mexico about where Sheriff vehicles are located and where
Border
Patrol is cruising. As soon as Thomas shows up on patrol, most of the
time the
cartels are watching and know exactly where he is. For the spotters,
failing to
identify where U.S. authorities are located can result in a beating or
even
death. If a spotter calls into the boss in Mexico or down the road,
says that
they are clear to come through with a load, but then the authorities
show up
and seize the load, that spotter pays the price for the loss.
But
these cartels aren’t just
targeting Border Patrol. U.S. citizens travelling along I-8 who stop
for a
restroom break, often find themselves car jacked right off the road.
The area
can’t be used for camping, hiking or hunting as it used to be because
the area
is dangerous and drug and human smugglers are carrying high-powered
weapons
like AK-47s.
“If
you see too much you may get
killed out here because they [cartel members] don’t want witnesses,”
Thomas
said.
Throughout
the day, Thomas stressed to
me the issues the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office deals with on a daily
basis are
so much more than just an illegal immigration problem or an illegal
drug
problem. They’re dealing with the Sinaloa Cartel, a large and very
complex
organization.
Over
the past three years, Thomas has
seen cartel members become increasingly defiant to U.S. law enforcement
agents.
Smugglers have become bolder, more brazen; they’re running more drugs
and have
no regard for obeying or submitting to authority. Thomas used to be
able to
tell a group of illegal aliens to sit down and they would obey, but now
they
just run. Pursuits used to be occasional, but now they happen on a
daily basis
if not more than once a day, endangering the public. Deputies are also
finding
more high-powered weapons.
In
Mexico, cartel members have no
problem using roadside IEDs, killing women, killing children, peeling
off
peoples’ skin while they are still alive or beheading people while they
are
still alive so long as their dope arrives on time. Thomas describes
them as
sociopaths and narco-terrorists.
“These
guys are ready for a
confrontation,” Thomas said. “They have no issue directing violence
toward law
enforcement.”
On
top of the cartel, Thomas has to
deal with rip crews, groups of men who steal human and drug loads from
the
cartel in order to make a buck for free. For example, the Sinaloa
cartel is
smuggling both humans and drugs in the Vekol Valley on a daily basis,
which
deputies are combating. Then, deputies have to worry about rip crews
coming in
to the scene to steal human and drug loads, which often occur violently
with
shootings, rapes, robberies and extortions.
An
aspect of the cartel business that
is often overlooked is sexual exploitation. Sexual exploitation of both
women
and children is occurring at an alarming level.
Thomas
said sexual predators in the
U.S. will order children from Mexico through cartels; cartels then send
those
children along with a drug run through the desert after payment and
deliver
that child to their new owner for sexual use.
“They
[Americans] don’t understand how
much activity is going on,” Thomas said.
Cartel
activity in Vekol Valley has
also taken a huge toll on the environment. Smugglers are constantly
creating
new trails and driving all over the desert to avoid U.S. authorities.
The
Arizona Game and Fish Department reported 14 tons of trash were hauled
out of
the area last year. Wildlife habit and water tanks have been destroyed.
So
what is the solution to these
problems?
According
to Chief Kimble and
Lieutenant Thomas: Secure the border, build a double layer fence with a
paved
road in between and enforce the law. You can’t begin to heal if you
don’t stop
the bleeding.
“This
is not just an Arizona issue,
it’s a country issue,” Kimble said.
Logistically,
Thomas says the cartels
have the upper hand. They have more men, more money, bigger weapons and
more
time. When the public sees a single big bust on the news, that’s just
one of
many drug loads
coming across the border
everday. Once the Sheriff’s Department targets a specific area,
smugglers move
to another area; deputies follow, smugglers move again. The fence has
been
built, completed and is working in the Yuma Sector of the border, but
not the
Tucson sector, where Pinal County is located.
“The
problem has been solved in other
areas,” Thomas said.
See
link below to take a look at some
numbers.
Thomas
and Kimble also made it clear
border security is national security, and that with a porous border,
bad
people, including terrorsts like the ones who attacks us on 9/11, have
easy
access to the United States.
“We’re
screaming that something bad is
going to happen,” Thomas said.
Read
this with the charts, and other
columns, at Townhall
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