Mexican police chiefs request US asylum - congress flummoxed

almost ready

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http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcon...xpolice_15int.ART.State.Edition2.464c466.html
As drug violence intensifies, some Mexican police chiefs seek asylum in U.S.

THIS IS STUNNING. PLEASE READ. THIS IS RIGHT NEXT DOOR! Calling Mr. Bush Calling Mr. Bush - oh he's over in the mideast again.



12:00 AM CDT on Thursday, May 15, 2008


By BRENDAN McKENNA / The Dallas Morning News
bmckenna@dallasnews.com / The Dallas Morning News
Alfredo Corchado contributed to this report.


WASHINGTON – Drug cartel attacks against Mexican police have become so violent and so common that some Mexican police chiefs are seeking safety in the United States.


The Associated Press
Federal police salute during a ceremony to honor officers recently killed in Mexico City. Three Mexican police chiefs are seeking asylum in the U.S., but there's no guarantee they'll be ruled eligible for refugee status.

Faced with cartel-sponsored assassinations that have claimed the lives of more than 25 officers since the start of May – including that of Edgar Millán Gómez, head of the federal police – and threats of further retaliation, some Mexican police are quitting their posts.

But three times in recent months, leaders of Mexican police have gone further, arriving at U.S. border crossings and applying for political asylum out of fear for their lives, according to Jayson Ahern, deputy commissioner of Customs and Border Protection.

"They're basically abandoned by their police officers or police departments in many cases," Mr. Ahern told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

A CBP spokesman confirmed the AP account to The Dallas Morning News on Wednesday but would not release further details.

The requests come as Congress considers whether to approve the Merida Initiative, the Bush administration's plan to provide Mexico up to $1.4 billion in military equipment, training and other resources over the next three years to help the country in its fight against drug cartels.


An initial installment of $500 million is included in the emergency spending bill to pay for combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

More than 300 Mexican police officers have been killed in the last year in the ongoing drug fight and more than 3,500 people have died in drug-related violence.

The violence throughout Mexico has dominated much of Mexican President Felipe Calderón's 17 months in office. Mr. Calderón has responded by mobilizing the Mexican military, sending 30,000 troops to hot spots throughout Mexico "in an effort to recapture territories lost to drug traffickers," he said.

Ricardo Alday, a spokesman for the Mexican Embassy in Washington, said he was only aware of one case of a police chief seeking asylum in the U.S. – that of Palomas Police Chief Emilio Pérez.

Mr. Pérez was threatened by phone after discovering two bodies, their hands tied behind their backs, at the entrance to his city, which is just across the border from Columbus, N.M. Within hours, his six remaining police officers quit their jobs, and Mr. Pérez drove across the border and asked for political asylum.

"We are concerned not only about this incident of the police officer coming across the border but also about the level of violence in certain areas of the border," Mr. Alday said.

The government, as part of a pre-existing plan to strengthen police presence along the border, responded by sending about 2,000 troops to the region.

"As the president has said from the outset ... this is the only way we can win the war on the drug lords and organized crime," he said. "He expected that more violence might come, that things might get worse before they got better."

Ominous message


To some in the U.S. Congress, the prospect of Mexican police seeking asylum in the United States could send an ominous message.

Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Tyler, a member of the House subcommittee that oversees immigration and asylum and the leading Republican on the panel on crime terrorism and homeland security, said he was sympathetic to those fleeing violence south of the border, but only to a point.

"These are law enforcement officials that are needed in Mexico," he said. "If those who are charged with protecting Mexican citizens and enforcing the law in Mexico can't afford to stay there, then the drug lords win and the United States loses."

Mr. Gohmert said the reports fuel his existing concerns about the Merida Initiative.

"I'm concerned at turning that over to a military and police that can't protect themselves and find it necessary to flee to the United States," he said, citing reports of U.S. military equipment falling into the hands of the cartels.


But Rep. Gene Green, D-Houston, said the murder and intimidation of police only underscores the need for U.S. assistance, in equipment, technology and training for Mexican efforts against the cartels.

"If Mexico seeks our help on something, like they did," he said, "we need to help them every way we can."

He added: "It's also in our interests. It's not just the interest of Mexico. If they lose that battle we will continue to lose the battle on our side of the border."

Mr. Green recognized the concerns about military equipment falling into the wrong hands

"Does that mean we're not supposed to help our neighbors try and control their own country?" he asked. "We'll just have to cross that bridge if some of that equipment gets to the dark side."

No guarantee


Despite the violence and threats faced by the three asylum-seeking police chiefs, there's no guarantee they'll be ruled eligible for refugee status in the United States.

The Citizenship and Immigration Services division of the Department of Homeland Security, which declined to comment on specifics of cases, said to qualify for asylum, applicants must have faced persecution "on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion," according to CIS documents.

Professor Huyen Phan, who teaches immigration law at Texas Wesleyan University, said that while a particular type of employment usually isn't protected, the police chiefs could argue that they are part of a "social group" of current and former law enforcement officials who are at risk.

"If they quit their jobs, would the drug cartels still go after them? That's one question the judge will ask," Ms. Phan said. "I don't think I'd rule out of hand that they wouldn't have an asylum claim."

In one of the latest killings, Juan Antonio Roman Garcia, second in command of the Ciudad Juárez police department, was shot more than 50 times Saturday as he parked his car outside his home.

Mr. Roman's name was first on a hit list left in January by drug traffickers who warned that the targets would face death unless they resigned their posts. Many heeded the message. Others kept working and were hunted down over the past weeks.

"Everyone who works at the Juárez police department is in mourning," Juárez police spokesman Jaime Torres said in a written statement Saturday. "But we reiterate our will and firm commitment to continue working toward maintaining order and social tranquility in our city."

However, granting the chiefs refugee status could pose an implicit insult to the Mexican government, Ms. Phan said, because persecution by groups other than the government is usually only grounds for asylum if the government can't or won't intervene to prevent it.

"We'd be saying we're giving asylum to your police chiefs because you're unable to control the drug cartels," she said.
 
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almost ready

Inactive
Maybe they could sneak in as AG workers

Feinstein Set to Push Amnesty for Illegal Ag Workers
(May 15) Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) is expected to try to add an amnesty for illegal-alien agricultural workers to the Iraq supplemental spending bill when that bill is marked up today in the Senate Appropriations Committee. At this point, the details of the amnesty are unknown. There is some chance she may try to slip it through by giving one or two million illegal ag workers a 5-year amnesty as opposed to a permanent legalization. However, that still allows them to work and live here while further sinking roots. The open-borders champions hope that the longer illegal aliens stay the more difficult it will ever be to deny them U.S. citizenship.

http://www.numbersusa.com/index

Seriously, though, we might see an influx such as came out of Cuba when Castro took over if we don't pay attention in a big way to what's happening now in MExico.

paging Mr. Bush

paging Mr. Bush

Anyone seen George lately?
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
This is important, almost ready, so I'll help ya in keeping it bumped. I'm sure I don't know the answer though, it's mind boggling the drug trafficing/cartel/ corruption in Mexico.

The answer certainly isn't amnesty, slicked on to the AG bills, I don't care what they call it, taking apart comprehensive "reform" that was loudly rejected and now inserting the same provisions into smaller chunks as if we've all forgotten.

I'm glad the mexican police are seeking asylum instead of just coming across illegally, they'll be dead if it's not granted, maybe dead if even it is.

More money isn't the answer, it's made the problem worse.
 

Laurane

Canadian Loonie
Maybe these Police chiefs......

can become consultants to Sheriff Joe in Maricopa Co.?? It would be an obvious answer - they probably have lots of information which can help - the Sheriff is always looking for hot tips.:whistle:

These men will be killed if they don't get refugee status. Don;t know how the US can turn them down - maybe put them in the witness protection program?
 
Using the U.S. military, invade and secure Mexico -- put Mexico under U.S. Military law and courts for 30 years, and put together a Marshall-style plan for economic recovery.

Finally, hunt down EVERY last one of the Mexican trouble-makers with shoot-to-kill orders -- just like we did in Germany when pursuing the Werewolves at the end of WWII -- no trials, just a quick military dispatch of the perps -- whether they are Mexican government or otherwise -- put the perps down -- this will lead to a restored peace, and interested capital investors/investments/inflows from the investor class interested in the building new/restoration and rebuilding of the Mexican infrastructures.


intothegoodnight
 

Desertrat

Inactive
I regularly see Mexican military in Ojinaga, across from Presidio, Texas. Most of them look like kids, agewise, and are small in stature. Southern Mexico origin, maybe? Don't know.

Anyhow, they don't really appear to have much training. I'm right at positive they don't get much pay. That's a bad mix when you're having to deal with opponents who have unlimited billfolds, inherently more meanness and equality or superiority in equipment.

'Rat
 

vestige

Deceased
Using the U.S. military, invade and secure Mexico -- put Mexico under U.S. Military law and courts for 30 years, and put together a Marshall-style plan for economic recovery.

Finally, hunt down EVERY last one of the Mexican trouble-makers with shoot-to-kill orders -- just like we did in Germany when pursuing the Werewolves at the end of WWII -- no trials, just a quick military dispatch of the perps -- whether they are Mexican government or otherwise -- put the perps down -- this will lead to a restored peace, and interested capital investors/investments/inflows from the investor class interested in the building new/restoration and rebuilding of the Mexican infrastructures.


intothegoodnight

This response seems radical at first glance but fills the bill.

If the folks south of the border (and remember... the friggin border is essentially wide open) cannot take care of their problems it falls upon the recipients (us) to take care of the problem for them.

It is the nature of that which is close by to "rub off" on neighbors.

Imperial America (meaning taking over for those less able) is a term that bothers me not in the least.

It will first be important to eliminate the scrub within our interior. There lies the problem. The scrub is prolific and increases with the graduation of every high school and college class.

It is not the time for gutless, politically correct *ssholes. Assimilating another country requires gonads. I believe at this time we have too much influence by those who have no gonads at all.

The future is dim as we have an array of gutless ones seeking the throne.

Persevere.
 

denfoote

Inactive
Talking about preps...

Some people in border states are quietly preparing to fight these bastids in our streets, whether it be roving Mexican gangs, drug thugs or rioting illegals!!

It's time to put Admiral Yamamoto's warning into practice!!!
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
The plot thickens:

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/headline/nation/5780470.html

May 14, 2008, 11:46PM

U.S.-trained forces reportedly helping Mexican cartels

By STEWART M. POWELL
Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — As many as 200 U.S.-trained Mexican security personnel have defected to drug cartels to carry out killings on both sides of the border and as far north as Dallas, Rep. Ted Poe, R-Humble, told Congress on Wednesday.

The renegade members of Mexico's elite counter-narcotics teams trained at Fort Benning, Ga., have switched sides, contributing to a wave of violence that has claimed some 6,000 victims over the past 30 months, including prominent law enforcement leaders, the Houston-area Republican told the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

The slaughter has gained urgency amid high-profile assassinations of law officers in Mexico since May 1, claiming six senior officers, five of them with the federal police.


Poe held aloft a dramatic, poster-board-size photograph that he said showed guerrilla-style commandos crossing into the United States.

He said the Department of Homeland Security had documented "over 250 incursions by suspected military forces" into the United States over the past decade.

"I was surprised to hear that the United States has trained Mexican forces and some of those have deserted and become the reason for these attacks," Poe said.

Officers 'switched sides'

The U.S.-trained Mexican security personnel have "switched sides and became assassins and recruiters for the Mexican drug cartels."

Poe, a former prosecutor and criminal court judge, issued the allegations in an unsuccessful effort to persuade the House Foreign Affairs Committee to revamp President Bush's Merida Initiative.


Bush's blueprint calls for $1.4 billion in training, equipment and law enforcement assistance to Mexico and Central America over three years.

Bush also is seeking $500 million in emergency assistance for Mexico this year as part of the supplemental war spending measure.

Democrats have included only $400 million of Bush's request in the $161 billion war spending measure.

Poe tried to require the Bush administration to evenly split spending between the United States and Mexico rather than sending the entire amount south of the border.

"It seems as though the United States has a history in some cases of giving support (to Mexico) and that support turns around and is used against the very people we're trying to protect, in this case, us," Poe said. "We have no assurance that the equipment we're sending to Mexico won't be turned over to the drug cartels and used against us."


Panel backs original plan

Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Austin, also tried to persuade the Democratic-controlled panel to shift part of the Mexico-bound spending to the United States to bolster law enforcement efforts on the border.

McCaul, a former federal prosecutor who specialized in counter-terrorism, called border drug violence "an imminent security threat right on our doorstep" that deserves the same effort as the war on terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The 50-member panel, led by Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., largely endorsed the Bush administration's version of the proposal, expanding assistance beyond Mexico and Central America to include the Caribbean nations of Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

Berman referred Poe's and McCaul's proposed changes to the House Judiciary Committee, saying their plans for greater spending by U.S. law enforcement along the border fell within that panel's jurisdiction.


stewart.powell@chron.com
 
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