Feral Jundi

Monday, May 24, 2010

Mexico: The Bajadores–Those That Prey On Smuggling Operations

   There is a great thread going on over at Tactical Forums that was the motivation for this post.  It is all about the ‘bajadores’ or rip-off crews along the border areas who basically prey on smugglers.  To me, this is land based piracy or basically stealing from other criminals and illegal immigrants, and these individuals are an interesting group.

   Now what is concerning with this is the advent of bajadores dressing up like Border Patrol or law enforcement and doing their deed.  Then you get a situation where smugglers arm themselves to protect against these types of forces, and they then view everyone as a threat.  Hence why the border is so dangerous for anyone to operate.

    The other issue I was thinking about is that we always think of these gangs floating around on the border as being hispanic.  But as this report indicates, law enforcement is aware that bajadores may also be ‘non-hispanic individuals’. My guess is that it is a small number, but as the border issue heats up and more acts of violence increase, we might actually see more citizens take the law into their own hands to combat this scourge. Good or bad, that is what happens when a government fails to do the job of protecting it’s citizenry or securing it’s borders.

   Let’s end this post with a different thought about this.  Imagine if what the bajadores was doing, was actually legal? Law enforcement seize the assets of criminals all the time during raids and arrests, and use that money to fund all sorts of toys and programs in their departments.  Citizens could also participate in this activity, and they could either work off seizing assets, a bounty system, or both. A prize court could be established in that particular state, citizens and companies could become licensed and bonded to do such an activity, and states or the feds could manage the program. In other words, I like the idea of capturing criminals and taking everything they own.  I also like getting a bounty for capturing them. Both of these acts would be called privateering and bounty hunting. –Matt

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Gangs are menacing ‘coyotes,’ immigrants Assaults, kidnapping are rampant

Daniel Gonzlez

Aug. 17, 2003Violent gangs have operated for years along the border, where they rob and kidnap immigrants and “coyotes” alike, usually at gunpoint.But authorities say the booming immigrant-smuggling trade has brought them northward and invaded the Phoenix area, bringing with them tactics common in drug trafficking – assaults, kidnapping and extortion – but previously uncommon in the smuggling business.

In Mexico, they are known as bajadores . In the United States, officials have dubbed those who prey on immigrant-smuggling operations “rip-off crews.”

The bajadores have been attracted by the lucrative smuggling trade, which has escalated in the Valley in recent years and grown even more profitable as the United States, by deploying more Border Patrol agents from California to Texas, has made it more difficult to cross into the country illegally, authorities say.

The enforcement buildup has turned the remote and deadly Arizona desert, where at least 127 immigrants have died this year, into the main gateway for illegal immigration into the United States.

The buildup also has made Phoenix the primary hub for transporting immigrants to other parts of the country.The bajadores prey on the smugglers by stealing the immigrants and then threatening to beat them up or kill them unless their families pay a ransom. The ransom isn’t cheap, and the bajadores often make good their threats. They typically demand $1,000 to $1,500, the price smugglers charge to transport undocumented immigrants from the border to Phoenix.  (more…)

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Industry Talk: DHS Pulls SBInet Funding

     She added that funds allocated to the program would be used to for proven technologies like mobile surveillance equipment, thermal imaging devices, ultra-light plane detection systems, mobile radios, cameras and laptop computers for Border Patrol vehicles.  

*****

   I guess the economy dictates, and this project has been killed.  It is kind of interesting that they would list ultra-light plane detection systems as something to be funded.  I wonder if that includes the Flat Top Paramotor Border Patrol para-gliders I brought up awhile back? If it does, I didn’t know that was considered ‘proven technologies’. –Matt

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DHS Pulls SBInet Funding

By Jack Mann

17 March, 2010

DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano

The Department of Homeland Security has pulled the plug on $50 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds for the “Virtual Border Fence,” meant to secure the U.S.’s border with Mexico.  The SBInet project would mesh security cameras, motion sensors, radar and other technologies into a high-tech detection system to defeat illegal border crossings.

“Effective immediately, the Department of Homeland Security will redeploy $50 million of Recovery Act funding originally allocated for the SBInet … to other tested, commercially available security technology along the Southwest border,” said Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. She added that funds allocated to the program would be used to for proven technologies like mobile surveillance equipment, thermal imaging devices, ultra-light plane detection systems, mobile radios, cameras and laptop computers for Border Patrol vehicles.  She said that DHS has also frozen all funding beyond SBInet’s initial deployment to two areas south of Tucson and Ajo, Arizona, an assessment ordered in January.

Story here.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Aviation: Border Patrol Chooses The Flat Top Paramotor, 14 Million Dollar Contract

Filed under: Aviation,Video — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 12:12 AM

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

PMC 2.0: Armchair Deputies Patrol U.S. Border

   I posted a deal about this awhile back, and it is cool to finally get some statistics about the program.  I thought it was an awesome idea back then, and I still think it is good idea and deserves further study and use.

   Now some of you are probably wondering why this isn’t under law enforcement or technology?  I put it under PMC 2.0 because I think the lessons learned with this virtual border watch program, could easily be applied to other countries and border security contracts.  Especially countries where border control is a matter of life and death, where terrorists are looking to import their hate.

   Look at the Afghanistan and Pakistan border, or the Iraq borders, or the Saudi Arabia and Yemen border?  Crowd sourcing a border watch program could very well be the trend of future border security operations.  It also involves that Grandma in Michigan, if in fact she wanted to make  a difference in the war effort or with border enforcement here in the US. It is like a modern day version of the coastal lookouts that civilians participated in back during World War Two.

   By the way, these guys should turn this into a mobile application for smart phones, and make this something people can do while waiting in the doctor’s office before an appointment.  That would really increase the numbers if you know what I mean.-Matt

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Armchair deputies patrol US border

December 26, 2009

By Claire Prentice

When John Spears gets home from his sales job in New York, he sits down at his computer with a bottle of beer and starts patrolling the US border.

And to do it, he does not need to stir from his sofa.

He is one of tens of thousands of people around the world who are volunteering to patrol the 1250-mile long (2000 km) stretch between Texas and Mexico via the web.

The controversial $4m (£2.5m) Texas Virtual Border Watch Programme invites civilians to log on to Blueservo.net.

There they can monitor live feeds 24/7 from 21 hidden surveillance cameras placed at intervals along the border.

Supporters see the initiative as a step forward in US efforts to curb illegal immigration, drug smuggling and border violence.

Critics say it is encouraging vigilantism and stoking anti-immigrant feeling.

Value for money?

(more…)

Monday, January 19, 2009

Legal News: Bush Commutes Prison Sentences of 2 Ex-Border Agents

Filed under: Law Enforcement,Legal News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 2:27 PM

   This is fantastic news, although I would have liked to have seen a pardon for these guys instead of just commuting the sentences.  I am sure the families are happy, and this was still pretty cool.  –Matt 

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Bush Commutes Prison Sentences of 2 Ex-Border Agents 

By Roger Runningen and James Rowley

Jan. 19 (Bloomberg) — President George W. Bush, on the eve of leaving office, commuted the sentences of two former agents of the U.S. Border Patrol who were convicted of shooting an unarmed Mexican drug smuggler as he attempted to flee.

Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean were sentenced last November. Compean was given a 12-year term on charges including assault with a dangerous weapon and aiding and abetting a crime; Ramos was given a term of 11 years and one day on similar charges. The commutation reduces their prison terms to time- served as of March 20.

Their case became part of the debate over illegal immigration and attempts to rewrite U.S. immigration law.

They were convicted of assaulting an unarmed Mexican national, Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila, who was shot in the buttocks in 2005 as he attempted to flee back to Mexico after being stopped inside the U.S. border with a van loaded with marijuana, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

In a Sept. 11, 2008 statement about the case, U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton said the two agents “shot 15 times at an unarmed man who was running away and posed no threat.” The agents “lied about what happened, covered up the shooting and then proceeded to write up and file a false report,” he said.

Aldrete-Davila was sentenced to nine years and five months in prison for conspiracy to import more than 100 kilograms of marijuana and related charges.

(more…)

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