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Who Left the
Door Open?
By DONALD L. BARLETT & JAMES B. STEELE
Sept. 12, 2004 - Time Magazine
The following is a full text version of Time Magazine's investigative
report. Read, pass it on to all. Let your favorite GOPs and Dems know that
the jig is up.
Despite all the talk of homeland security, sneaking into the U.S. is
scandalously easy and on the rise. Millions of illegal aliens will pour
across the U.S.-Mexican border this year, many from countries hostile to
America. TIME looks at the damage, the dangers and the reasons the U.S.
fails to protect itself.
The next time you pass through an airport and have to produce a photo ID to
establish who you are and then must remove your shoes, take off your belt,
empty your pockets, prove your laptop is not an explosive device and send
your briefcase or purse through a machine to determine whether it holds
weapons, think about this: In a single day, more than 4,000 illegal aliens
will walk across the busiest unlawful gateway into the U.S., the 375-mile
border between Arizona and Mexico. No searches for weapons. No shoe
removal. No photo-ID checks. Before long, many will obtain phony
identification papers, including bogus Social Security numbers, to conceal
their true identities and mask their unlawful presence.
The influx is so great, the invaders seemingly trip over one another as
they walk through the old copper-mining town turned artist colony of Bisbee
(pop. 6,000), five miles from the border. Having eluded the U.S. border
patrol, they arrive in small groups of three or four, larger contingents of
more than a dozen and sometimes packs of a hundred. Worried citizens who
spot them keep the Bisbee police officers and Cochise County sheriff's
deputies busy tracking down all the trespassing aliens.
At night as many as 100 will take over a vacant house. Some crowd into
motel rooms, even storage-compartment rental units. During the day, they
congregate on school playgrounds, roam through backyards and pass in and
out of apartment buildings. Some assemble at the Burger King, waiting for
their assigned drivers to appear. Sometimes stolen cars are waiting for
them, keys on the floor. But most
continue walking to designated pickup points beyond Bisbee, where they will
ride in thousands of stolen vehicles, often with the seats ripped out to
accommodate more human cargo, on the next leg of their journey to big
cities and small towns from California to North Carolina.
The U.S.'s borders, rather than becoming more secure since 9/11, have grown
even more porous. And the trend has accelerated in the past year. It's fair
to estimate, based on a Time investigation, that the number of illegal
aliens flooding into the U.S. this year will total 3 million enough to fill
22,000 Boeing 737-700 airliners, or
60 flights every day for a year. It will be the largest wave since 2001 and
roughly triple the number of immigrants who will come to the U.S. by legal
means. (No one knows how many illegals are living in the U.S., but
estimates run as high as 15 million.)
Who are these new arrivals?
Who are these new arrivals? While the vast majority are Mexicans, a small
but sharply growing number come from other countries, including those with
large populations hostile to the U.S. From Oct. 1 of last year until Aug.
25, along the southwest border, the border patrol estimates that it
apprehended 55,890 people who fall into the category described officially
as other than Mexicans, or otms. With
five weeks remaining in the fiscal year, the number is nearly double the
28,048 apprehended in all of 2002.
But that's just how many were caught. TIME estimates, based on longtime
government formulas for calculating how many elude capture, that as many as
190,000 illegals from countries other than Mexico have melted into the U.S.
population so far this year.
The border patrol, which is run by the Department of Homeland Security,
refuses to break down otms by country. But local law officers, ranchers and
others who confront the issue daily tell TIME they have encountered not
only a wide variety of Latin Americans (from Guatemala, El Salvador,
Brazil, Nicaragua and Venezuela) but
also intruders from Afghanistan, Bulgaria, Russia and China as well as
Egypt, Iran and Iraq. Law-enforcement authorities believe the mass movement
of illegals, wherever they are from, offers the perfect cover for
terrorists seeking to enter the U.S., especially since tighter controls
have been imposed at airports.
Who's to blame for all the intruders?
While the growing millions of illegal aliens cross the border on their own
two feet, the problem is one of the U.S.'s own making. The government
doesn't want to fix it, and politicians, as usual, are dodging the issue,
even though public-opinion polls show that Americans overwhelmingly favor a
crackdown on illegal immigration.
To be sure, many citizens quietly benefit from the flood of illegals
because the supply of cheap labor helps keep down the cost of many goods
and services, from chicken parts to lawn care. Many big companies, which
have an even clearer stake in cheap labor, aggressively fend off the
enforcement of laws that would shut down
their supply of illegal workers.
The argument is getting stronger, however, that this is a short-sighted
bargain for the U.S.
Beyond the terrorism risks, Washington's failure to control the nation's
borders has a painful impact on workers at the bottom of the ladder and,
increasingly, those further up the income scale. The system holds down the
pay of American workers and rewards the illegals and the businesses that
hire them. It breeds anger and
resentment among citizens who can't understand why illegal aliens often
receive government-funded health care, education benefits and subsidized
housing. In border communities, the masses of incoming illegals lay waste
to the landscape and create costly burdens for agencies trying to keep
public order. Moreover, the system makes a mockery of the U.S. tradition of
encouraging legal immigration. Increasingly, there is little incentive to
play by the rules.
In the aftermath of 9/11, illegal immigration slowed dramatically for two
years. Now it has turned up again. The chronic reason is a Mexican economy
unable to provide jobs with a living wage to a growing population. But those
who live and work along the border say there is another, more immediate cue
for the rush. In a speech on
immigration policy last January, George W. Bush proposed "a new
temporary-worker program that will match willing foreign workers with
willing American employers when no Americans can be found to fill the
jobs." The President said his program would give three-year, renewable work
visas "to the millions of undocumented men and women now employed in the
United States." In Mexico that statement was widely interpreted to mean
that once Mexican citizens cross illegally into the U.S., they would be
able to stay and eventually gain permanent residence. Even though the
legislation shows no signs of getting through Congress this year, a run to
the border has begun.
Ranchers, local law officers and others say that is the story they have
heard over and over from border crossers. Rancher George Morin, who
operates a 12,000-acre spread a few miles from the border, tells TIME, "All
these people say they are coming for the amnesty program. [They] have been
told if they get 10 miles off the border, they are home free."
The border patrol, by nature an earnest and hard-working corps, is no match
for the onslaught. From last October through Aug. 25, it apprehended nearly
1.1 million illegals in all its operations around the U.S. But for every
person it picks up, at least three make it into the country safely. The
number of agents assigned to the 1,951-
mile southern border has grown only somewhat, to more than 9,900 today, up
from 8,600 in 2000.
Given that the crisis of illegal immigration bridges the two main issues in
the presidential campaign the economy and national security one might think
that the candidates would pound their podiums with calls for change. But
that's not the case so far. Bush has reaffirmed his pledge for an
immigration policy that would provide worker's permits for aliens who find
jobs, and John Kerry has promised to propose legislation that would lead to
permanent residence for many illegal-alien workers. Neither candidate has
called for imposing serious fines on the people who encourage
illegal immigration: corporate employers.
On the Mexican side of the border, President Vicente Fox has actively
encouraged the migration. He made his goal clear in 2000 when he called for
a fully open border within 10 years, with "a free flow of people, workers"
moving between the two countries. When U.S. position to the proposal
intensified after 9/11, Fox sought the same goal through the back door. He
pushed U.S. businesses and city and state governments to accept as legal
identification a card called a matricula consular, issued by Mexican
consulates. That has allowed illegals to secure driver's licenses and other
forms of identification and open bank accounts.
Earlier this year Fox pushed U.S. bankers to make it easier for Mexicans
working here some of them legally but most illegally to ship U.S. dollars
back home. Because of the exploding illegal population, the money sent
back represents the third largest source of revenue in Mexico's economy,
trailing only oil and manufacturing.
That figure reached a record $13 billion last year.
The current border-enforcement system has fostered a culture of commuters
who come and go with some hardship but little if any risk of punishment.
Thousands cross the U.S.-Mexico border multiple times. Under immigration
law, they could be imprisoned after the second offense. But no one is. Nor
on the third, fourth or fifth. In fact, almost never. When asked whether
Homeland Security would initiate criminal proceedings against a person who,
say, is picked up on four
occasions coming into the country illegally, a border-patrol representative
said if it did, the immigration legal system would collapse. Said the
spokeswoman: "Because there's such a large influx of people coming across,
if we're to put the threshold at four and send them up [to Tucson, Ariz.,
or Phoenix, Ariz., for processing],
we'd be sending ... too many people, and it would overwhelm the immigration
system."
People who live and work on the Arizona border know all about being
overwhelmed.
Living in the War Zone
When the crowds cross the ranches along and near the border, they discard
backpacks, empty Gatorade and water bottles and soiled clothes. They turn
the land into a vast latrine, leaving behind revolting mounds of personal
refuse and enough discarded plastic bags to stock a Wal-Mart. Night after
night, they cut fences
intended to hold in cattle and horses. Cows that eat the bags must often be
killed because the plastic becomes lodged between the first and second
stomachs. The immigrants steal vehicles and saddles. They poison dogs to
quiet them. The illegal traffic is so heavy that some ranchers, because of
the disruptions and noise, get very little sleep at night.
John Ladd Jr., a thoughtful, soft-spoken rancher just outside Bisbee, gives
new meaning to the word stoic. He is forced to work the equivalent of
several weeks a year to repair, as best he can, all the damage done to his
property by never-ending swarms of illegal aliens. "Patience is my forte,"
he says, "but it's getting lower."
The 14,000-acre Ladd ranch, in his mother's family since the 1800s, is
right on the border. Ladd and his wife and three sons as well as his father
and mother have their homes there.
The largely flat, scrub-covered piece of real estate, with its occasional
groves of cottonwoods, spiny mesquite and clumps of sacaton grass and
desert broom, seems to offer few places to hide. But the land is laced with
arroyos in which scores of people can disappear from view. Ditches provide
trails from the border to Highway 92, a distance of about three miles. That
is the route that Ladd says 200 to 300 illegals take every night as they
enter the U.S. They punch holes in the barbed-wire border fence and then
tear up the many fences intended to separate the breeding
cattle Brahmin, Angus and Hereford that divide the Ladd land.
Ladd doesn't blame the border patrol, most of whose officers, he says, are
doing all they can under the circumstances. Indeed, apprehensions of
illegals in Arizona have soared from 9% of the nation's total in 1993 to
51% this year. "I have real heartache for the agents who are really
working," he says. "They track down the [smugglers], and the judges let
them off, and they get a free trip back to Mexico, where they can start all
over." The border-patrol agents, Ladd feels, "are responsible guys in a
hypocritical bureaucracy."
Border crossing at the Ladd ranch is so flagrant that sometimes the
illegals arrive by taxi. A dirt road parallels the border fence and the
Ladd property for several miles, in full view of border-patrol electronic
lookout posts that ceased functioning long ago. When drivers reach an
appropriate location, passengers pile out and run
through one of the many holes in the fence and make their way across the
ranch.
These gaps present their own special problem. On the other side are Mexican
ranches whose cattle wander onto Ladd's. "I'm up to 215 Mexican cows that
I've put back into Mexico," he says. "I've got a dual-citizen friend he's
Mexican and American works on this side for Phelps Dodge [Mining Co.], but
he's got a ranch over at the San Jose Mountain. So I call him, and then he
calls the Mexican cattle inspector. Then that guy meets me at the border
and then coordinates the cows getting back to the rightful owners in
Mexico." Ladd acknowledges that his do-it-yourself cattle diplomacy is
"breaking both countries' laws." How so? "[In] the United States, you're
supposed to quarantine any Mexican cattle for 30 days, and they test them
for disease and everything else. What the problem is, there isn't enough
cattle inspectors to do that, and then they don't have a holding corral
anymore to do that."
Why does he spend so much time returning strays? So his counterparts in
Mexico will return the favor because some of his cattle amble across the
border through the same holes. "The whole reason that I started doing this
for the Mexican ranchers was to show 'em, 'Yeah, I'm honest. I'm going to
give you yours back, so you give me mine.'
And it's worked. But the whole story is that I've spent money on
long-distance and talked to everybody from the Boundary Commission to usda
to border patrol to customs and everybody else, and I said, 'You need to do
something with your international fence.'" He's still waiting.
While the Department of Homeland Security seemingly lacks the money to
secure the border, it does have money to spend in quixotic ways. In a $13
million experimental program started in July, the border patrol will not
just drop illegal Mexican aliens at the border but actually fly them, at
taxpayer expense, into the heart of Mexico. The theory is that it will discourage them from making the trek north again.
But as one illegal, a Dallas construction worker who was among the 138
aboard the first flight, told a Los Angeles Times reporter, "I will be
going back in 15 days. I need to work. The jobs in Mexico don't pay
anything."
The plight of Jim Dickson, a hospital administrator in Bisbee, is summed up
with one image. It's an ambulance that pulls into tiny Copper Queen
Community Hospital and discharges illegal aliens injured in an auto
accident. The border-patrol officers on orders from Washington have refused
to take them onto the hospital property
after taking them into custody. Instead, the officers have called an
ambulance for the injured. If the officers were to arrive at the hospital
to make their drop-off, then the border patrol (make that the U.S.
government) would be responsible for paying the medical bill. And that's
something the Federal Government (make that
Congress) will not do. Instead, the government stiffs Dickson, 56, the
genial CEO of the Copper Queen, a hospital that dates back to the turn of
the previous century, when Bisbee was the largest town between San Diego
and St. Louis, Mo.
Dickson and his community hospital symbolize much of what has gone wrong
with the immigration policies of the U.S. and Mexico the irresponsibility,"
as Dickson puts it politely, of both governments. He figures he has another
three years, maybe a little longer, before he might be forced to shut down
the hospital. "We used to have 250 emergency-room visits a month. Now it's
500," says Dickson. They range from a lone man or woman rescued in the
desert, suffering from dehydration or a heart attack, to multiple victims
injured when vans jammed with 20 or more illegals crash during high-speed
chases. Along the way the hospital is seeing more and more tuberculosis,
aids and hepatitis. "We don't have to do disaster drills like other
hospitals," Dickson says. "We have enough real disasters every year."
Unlike big governments, small community hospitals cannot run deficits
forever. The Copper Queen's shortfall from treating illegal aliens
grows each year.
This year it will be about $450,000, bringing the total for the past few
years to $1.4 million. With each money-losing year, a tiny piece of the
14-bed hospital dies. When that happens, the entire community suffers.
Dickson's most agonizing decision came when he was forced to shutter the
long-term-care unit. "It was the only place the elderly could go," he says.
"If someone had dementia, we had a room for them." But no more. Now if
people who spent their life in Bisbee need elder care, they must leave the
area. "The more free care we give," Dickson says, "the more we have to
ration what's left."
Dickson emphasizes that not all the free care is going to illegal aliens
passing through on their way to other states. About half goes to Mexicans
who use the Copper Queen as their personal emergency-care facility. In
effect, the hospital, which performs general surgery, has become the trauma
center for that stretch of northern
Mexico. If an ambulance pulls up to the border-crossing point near Bisbee
and announces "compassionate entry," the border patrol waves it through,
and the Copper Queen is compelled to treat the patient.
It is one more program that Congress mandates but does not pay for. "If you
make me treat someone," says Dickson, "then you need to pay me. You can't
have unfunded mandates in a small hospital." Although the Medicare drug act
that passed last year provides for modest payments to hospitals that treat
illegal aliens, Dickson says there is a catch that the U.S. government has
yet to figure out. "How do I
document an undocumented alien? How am I going to prove I rendered that
care? They have no Social Security number, no driver's license."
The limits of compassion are also being tested on the Tohono O'odham Nation.
About twice the size of Delaware, the tribe's reservation shares 65 miles
of border with Mexico. Like the residents of the small Arizona towns just to
the east, the Native Americans, many of whom live without running water and
electricity, are overwhelmed. The Nation's hospital is often packed with
migrants who become dehydrated while crossing the scorching desert, where
summertime temperatures reach upwards of 110 degrees.
The undermanned tribal police force helps the border patrol round up as
many as 1,500 illegals a day. "If this were happening in any other city or
part of the country," says Vivian Juan-Saunders, Tohono O'odham chairwoman,
"it would be considered a crisis." Yet the highest levels of the U.S. and
Mexican governments have orchestrated this situation as a kind of dance:
Mexico sends its poor north to take jobs illegally, and the U.S. arrests
enough of the border crossers to create the illusion that it is enforcing
the immigration laws while allowing the great majority to get through.
Local lawmen like Jim Elkins and Larry Dever have learned the dance
firsthand, and their towns and counties have to
pay for it.
Elkins has been the police chief in Bisbee for 12 years, on the force for
30. Dever has been the sheriff of Cochise County which includes Bisbee and
encompasses an area almost the size of Connecticut and Rhode Island, with
84 miles along the Mexican
border for eight years and a deputy before that for 20 years. The two
lawmen handle the same kinds of citizen demands made on local
law-enforcement agencies everywhere from murder to drugs to reports of
abandoned cats. But never have they seen the likes of today's work, in
which their time is monopolized by relentless
reports of alien groups making their way through the area.
The entries from Bisbee police logs speak for themselves, these a sampling
from Friday, May 7:
9:05 a.m.: "[Caller] advised udas [undocumented aliens] on foot, west [of]
high school on dirt road. At least 10 in area. U.S. border patrol advised
of same. 38 udas turned over to U.S. border patrol."
4:31 p.m.: "[Officer] located three udas walking on Arizona and Congdon. All
three turned over to usbp [U.S. border patrol] Naco."
4:32 p.m.: "[Officer] copied a report of a silver-in-color van loaded with
approximately 30 udas left Warren. Later copied vehicle went disabled at
mile post 345 on Highway 80. Thirty to 35 udas were relocated with vehicle.
The udas were turned over to U.S. border patrol."
7:52 p.m.: "[Officer] located a group of udas in the area [of Blackknob and
Minder streets]. Fifteen udas turned over to BP."
10:02 p.m.: "Reported a group of udas gathering on the bridge on Blackknob
at Minder. Officers located six udas. tot [turned over to] usbp."
On and on it goes.
"Every day we deal with this," says Elkins. "People don't feel safe. The
smugglers are dangerous people ... I find it hard to believe we can get 80
to 100 people in our neighborhoods. They come across in droves."
Transporting them requires fleets of stolen cars, which explains why Arizona
ranks No. 1 in cars stolen per capita, with
56,000 ripped off last year. "This is a lot of work for us. We're a small
department," says Elkins, who has 15 officers. "So much of our time is
spent on federal issues. We should be getting money for this [from the
Federal Government]. But we don't."
The kinds of crime found in most communities are interwoven with the
illegal-alien traffic on the border. "Our methamphetamine problem is
alarming," Elkins tells TIME. "The last three homicides here were related
to meth. Kids doing meth will take a load of udas to Tucson or Phoenix for
a couple of hundred dollars."
Sheriff Dever says more than a quarter of his budget "is spent on
illegal-immigration activities," and he points to the ripple effect through
the criminal-justice system: "The illegal aliens can't make bond, so they
spend more time in jail. They're indigent, so they get a public defender.
If they have health problems, they have to be treated."
Dever feels overrun and doesn't mind who knows it. He relates a story about
a recent visit by a television crew that arrived in his office and asked
whether he was aware that a group of presumably illegal aliens was camped
out in a drainage ditch next to the sheriff's headquarters. Sensing a
story, the crew wondered if he was embarrassed by the aliens' presence. A
plainspoken man, Dever said he was not the least bit embarrassed. Their
presence, he said, illustrated quite pointedly just how pervasive the
problem was.
The people who probably should be a little embarrassed are the folks up the
road at Fort Huachuca, Ariz., home of the U.S. Army's top-secret
Intelligence Center. The facility, which trains and equips
military-intelligence professionals assigned around the world, also happens
to be a thoroughfare for illegal aliens and drug smugglers,
with mountains on the base providing a safe haven.
Using some of the same routes as the people smugglers, the drug runners are
well armed, equipped with high-tech surveillance equipment and don't
hesitate to use their weapons. That's what happened earlier this year, when
law-enforcement officers and Mexican drug runners engaged in a fire fight
at the border in front
of a detachment of Marines just back from Iraq, who were installing a steel
fence to prevent illegal aliens from driving through the flimsy barbed
wire. The Marines, unarmed, watched placidly. None were injured.
The situation across southern Arizona has spun so far out of control that
many on the border believe a day of reckoning is fast approaching, when an
incidental an accidental shooting, multiple auto fatalities, a
confrontation between drug and people smugglers will touch off a higher
level of violence. And the nightmare scenario: some resident frustrated by
the Federal Government's refusal to halt the onslaught will begin shooting
the border crossers on his or her property. As a rancher summed up the
situation: "If the law can't protect you, what do you do?" Everyone,
it seems, is armed, including nurses at the local hospital, who carry
sidearms on their way to work out of fear for their safety.
How Corporate America Thrives on Illegals
Popular belief has it that illegals are crossing the border in search of
work. In fact, many have their jobs lined up before they leave Mexico.
That's because corporate managers go so far as to place orders with
smugglers for a specific number of able bodies to be delivered.
For corporate America, employing illegal aliens at wages so low few
citizens could afford to take the jobs is great for profits and
stockholders. That's why the payrolls of so many businesses meat-packers,
poultry processors, landscape firms, construction companies,
office-cleaning firms and corner convenience stores, among others are
jammed with illegals. And companies are rarely, if ever, punished for it. A
single statistic attests to this. In 2002 the former Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) issued orders levying fines on only 13
employers for hiring illegal aliens, a minuscule portion of the thousands
of offenders.
Nonenforcement of employer sanctions, which is in keeping with the Federal
Government's nonenforcement of immigration laws across the board, has been
the equivalent of hanging out a help wanted sign for illegals. Says Steven
Camarota, research director for the Center for Immigration Studies, a
nonpartisan think tank on immigration issues: "They're telling people, 'If
you can run that border, we have a job
for you. You can get a driver's license. You can get a job. You'll be able
to send money home.' And in that context, you'd be stupid not to try. We
say, 'If you run the gauntlet, you're in.' That's the incentive they've
created."
For nearly 20 years, it has been a crime to hire illegal aliens. Amid an
earlier surge in illegal immigration, Congress passed the Immigration
Reform and Control Act of 1986, which provided that employers could be
fined up to $10,000 for every illegal alien they hired, and repeat
offenders could be sent to jail.
The act was a response to the widespread belief that employer sanctions
were the only way to stem the tide. "We need employer sanctions to reduce
the attraction of jobs in the U.S.," an INS spokesman declared as Congress
debated the bill. When President Ronald Reagan signed it, he called the
sanctions the "keystone" of the law. "It will remove the incentive for
illegal immigration by eliminating the job opportunities which draw illegal
aliens here," he said.
Making it a crime for a company to hire an illegal was seen as such a
dramatic step at the time that many worried over the consequences. Phil
Gramm, then a Republican Senator from Texas, said the legislation "holds
out great peril, peril that employers dealing in good faith could be
subject to criminal penalties and in fact go to jail for making a mistake
in hiring an illegal alien."
But companies had little to fear. Neither Reagan nor subsequent Presidents
or Congresses were eager to enforce the law. The fate of just one provision
in the 1986 act is revealing. As part of the enforcement effort, the law
called for a pilot program to establish a telephone-verification system
that employers could use when hiring
workers. It would allow employers to tap into a national data bank to
determine the legal status of a job applicant. Only those who had
legitimate documentation would be approved. With such a system, employers
could no longer use the excuse that they had no way to verify a potential
worker's legal status.
To this day 18 years after passage of the immigration-reform bill a
nationwide telephone-verification system has yet to be implemented. A
small-scale verification project was established in 1992, but it covered
only nine employers in five states. In 1996, Congress enacted yet another
immigration-reform bill, and it too provided for a telephone-verification
program.
Called Basic Pilot, it promised to provide employers with an easy way to
verify a prospective employee's status. An employer who signed up for the
system could call an 800 number and provide the name, Social Security
number or the alien ID number of a new hire. The employer would receive
either a confirmation that the number and name were valid or an indication
that called for further checking. The system is fatally flawed. Basic Pilot
is voluntary. Employers aren't required to sign up. Imagine what compliance
with tax laws would be if filing a 1040 were optional.
For all the rhetoric about the perils of illegal immigration, Congress
shows no interest in cracking down on employers. When the INS attempted in
the past to enforce the law, lawmakers slapped down the agency. In 1998 the
INS launched Operation Vanguard, a bold attempt to catch illegals in
Nebraska's meat-packing industry.
Rather than raid individual plants to round up undocumented workers, as it
had done for years, the INS aimed Operation Vanguard at the heart of
illicit hiring practices. The agency subpoenaed the employment records of
packing houses, then sought to match employee numbers with other data like
Social Security numbers.
The INS subpoenaed some 24,000 hiring records and identified 4,700 people
with discrepancies at 40 processing plants. It then called for further
documentation to verify the workers' status. Nebraska was seen as just the
first step. Plans were in the works to launch similar probes in other
states where large numbers of illegals were known to be employed in the
meat-packing industry.
But the INS never got the chance. A huge outcry in Nebraska from
meat-packers, Hispanic groups, farmers, community organizations, local
politicians and the state's congressional delegation forced the INS to back
off.
Not surprisingly, the INS's employer-sanctions program has all but
disappeared. Investigations targeting employers of illegal aliens dropped
more than 70%, from 7,053 in 1992 to 2,061 in 2002. Arrests on job sites
declined from 8,027 in 1992 to 451 in 2002. Perhaps the most dramatic
decline: the final orders levying fines for
immigration-law violations plunged 99%, from 1,063 in 1992 to 13 in 2002.
As might be expected, employers got the message, albeit one quite different
from that spelled out in the 1986 and '96 legislation. Now many corporate
managers feel emboldened to place orders for workers while the prospective
employees are still in Mexico, then assist them in obtaining phony
documentation and transport them hundreds, sometimes thousands of miles
from the interior of Mexico to a production line in an American factory.
This notion was supported by evidence introduced during an alien-smuggling
trial in 2003 involving Tyson Foods Inc., which describes itself as "the
world's largest processor and marketer of chicken, beef and pork." In this
secretly recorded conversation, a federal undercover agent posed as an
alien smuggler who was taking an order from the manager of a
chicken-processing plant in Monroe, N.C.:
FEDERAL AGENT: [After explaining that he was a friend of a mutual friend]
He said you wanted to talk to me?
CHICKEN-PLANT MANAGER: Yeah, about help ... Now I'm going to need quite a
few ... Starting on the 29th, a Monday, we are going to start. How many can
I get, and how often can you do it?
FEDERAL AGENT: Well, it's not a problem. I think [the mutual friend] told me
that you wanted 10?
CHICKEN-PLANT MANAGER: Well, 10 at a time. But over the period of the next
three or four months January, February, March, April, probably May, stuff
like that I'm going to replace somewhere between 300 and 400 people, maybe
500. I'm going to need a lot.
FEDERAL AGENT: ... I can give you what you need.
CHICKEN-PLANT MANAGER: Now let me ask you this. Do these people have a
photo ID and a Social Security card?
FEDERAL AGENT: No ... these people come from Mexico. I pick them up at Del
Rio. That's in Texas, after they cross the river, and then we take them
over there, and they get their cards. [The mutual friend] gets them their
cards, I guess.
CHICKEN-PLANT MANAGER: I need to talk to him about that.
FEDERAL AGENT: About the cards?
CHICKEN-PLANT MANAGER: Yes, some of them that's got the INS card, and if
they put it in a computer ... if it's not any good ... Something happens,
and we have to lay them off. But if they just have got a regular photo ID
from anywhere and a Social Security card, then we don't have to do that.
Securing phony paperwork was part of the scheme, and corporate plant
managers often knew in detail how the illegals got their papers. This was
apparent in the following exchange between the undercover federal agent
arranging for illegals and the manager of a Tyson facility in Glen Allen,
Va. The manager is talking about a go-between named Amador who had delivered workers in the past.
TYSON MANAGER: When I went to Tyson and I met Amador, we had very few
Spanish-speaking people. With Amador's help, in a couple of years, we went
from very few to 80%.
FEDERAL AGENT: My job ... is to get the people in Mexico to come to the
border. When they cross the river, I pick them up, and then I take them
to Amador. And he says he can get them, you know, their cards, their IDs
and their Social Security cards, and they can go to work that way.
TYSON MANAGER: Excellent. That's what we're needing.
Two Tyson managers later pleaded guilty to conspiring to hire illegal
aliens. Three other managers were acquitted of the charges, as was the
Tyson Corp. itself. The company insisted that it did not know that illegals
were being hired at some of its plants. A company spokesman said the
charges were "absolutely false. In reality, the
specific charges are limited to a few managers who were acting outside of
company policy at five of our 57 poultry-processing plants."
One of the arguments that is regularly advanced to justify hiring illegal
workers is that they are merely doing jobs American workers won't take.
President Bush echoed the theme earlier this year when he proposed the
immigration-law changes that would allow millions of illegals to live and
work in the U.S.: "I put forth what I think is a very reasonable proposal,
and a humane proposal, one that is not amnesty, but, in fact, recognizes
that there are good, honorable, hardworking people here doing jobs
Americans won't do."
While there is no doubt that many illegal aliens work long hours at dirty,
dangerous jobs, evidence suggests that it is low wage rates, not the type
of job, that American workers reject. That also surfaced in the Tyson case.
The two Tyson managers who pleaded guilty contended that they had been
forced to hire illegals because Tyson refused to pay wages that would let
them attract American workers. One of those two managers was Truley Ponder,
who worked at Tyson's processing plant in Shelbyville, Tenn. In documents
filed as part of Ponder's guilty plea, the U.S.
Attorney's office noted, "Ponder would have preferred for the plant to hire
'local people,' but this was not feasible in light of the low wages that
Tyson paid, the low unemployment rate in the area from which the plant drew
its work force, and the general undesirability of poultry processing work
when there were numerous other employment opportunities for unskilled and
low-skilled employees.
"Ponder made numerous requests for pay increases in Shelbyville above and
beyond what the company routinely allowed, but Tyson's corporate management
in Springdale rejected his requests for wage increases for production
workers. This refusal to pay wages sufficient to enable Tyson to compete for
legal laborers, plus the limited work
force in the local area, dictated Ponder's need to bring workers in to meet
Tyson's production demands." Needless to say, hiring illegals had benefits
for Tyson. A government consultant estimated that the company saved
millions of dollars in wages, benefits and other costs.
When asked whether the company has any illegals on its payroll today, a
Tyson spokesman said, "We have a zero tolerance for the hiring of
individuals who are not authorized to work in the U.S. Unfortunately, the
reality for businesses across the country is that it is becoming
increasingly difficult to determine just who has proper
authorization.
The tangle of laws and the increasing sophistication of those providing
false documentation puts employers in a very tough position ... Given the
scope of undocumented immigration to the U.S., we and countless other
American businesses face a very difficult task in trying to figure out who
is eligible to work."
The impact of the below-market wage earners tends to fall hardest on
unskilled workers at the bottom of the wage pyramid. "Any sizable increase
in the number of immigrants will inevitably lower wages for some American
workers," says George Borjas, a professor at the Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard. Borjas calculates that all immigration, by
increasing the labor supply from 1980 to 2000,
"reduced the average annual earnings of native-born men by an estimated
$1,700, or roughly 4%." Borjas says African Americans and native-born
Hispanics pay the steepest price because they are more often in direct
competition with immigrants for jobs.
Why Alien Criminals Are at Large in the U.S.
Perhaps the most alarming aspect of having 15 million illegals at large in
society is Congress's failure to insist that federal agencies separate
those who pose a threat from those who don't. The open borders, for
example, allow illegals to come into the country, commit crimes and return
home with little fear of arrest or punishment.
From Oct. 1, 2003, until July 20, 2004, the border patrol's Tucson sector
stopped 9,051 persons crossing into the country illegally who had criminal
records in the U.S., meaning they committed crimes here, returned to
Mexico, then were trying to re-enter the country. Among them: 378 with
active warrants for their arrest. In one week, said border-patrol
spokeswoman Andrea Zortman, there were two with outstanding "warrants for
homicide."
And those were just the illegals the border patrol determined had arrest
records. Most go undetected. Reason: the border patrol's electronic
fingerprint-identification system, which allows officers to determine how
many times an alien has been caught sneaking into the U.S., has only a
limited amount of criminal-background data.
The FBI maintains a separate electronic fingerprint-identification system
that covers everyone ever charged with a crime. In true bureaucratic
fashion, the two computer systems do not talk to each other. In the 1990s,
the two agencies were directed to integrate their systems. They are still
working at it. The most optimistic completion date is 2008. Until then,
illegals picked up at the border may have any number of criminal charges
pending, but the arresting officers will never know and will allow the
intruders to return home.
In any event, the numbers suggest that tens of thousands of criminals,
quite possibly hundreds of thousands, treat the southern border as a
revolving door to crimes of opportunity. The situation is so out of control
that of the 400,000 illegal aliens who have been ordered to be deported,
80,000 have criminal records and the agency in charge, the Homeland
Security Department, does not have a clue as to the whereabouts of any of
them, criminal or non-criminal, including those from countries that support
terrorism.
What's more, those figures are growing. Every day, prisons across the U.S.
release alien convicts who have completed their court-ordered sentences. In
many cases, the INS has filed detainers, meaning the prisons are obliged to
hold the individuals until they can be picked up by immigration agents and
returned to their native countries. But state law-enforcement authorities
are not permitted to keep prisoners beyond their original sentence.
When Homeland Security agents fail to show up promptly, which is often, the
alien convicts are released back into the community. In addition to all
these, at least 4 million people who arrived in the U.S. legally on work,
tourist or education visas have decided to ignore immigration laws and stay
permanently. Again,
Homeland Security does not have the slightest idea where these visa
scofflaws are.
The government's record in dealing with the 400,000 people it has ordered to
be deported is dismal. A sampling of cases last year by the Justice
Department's Office of Inspector General (oig) found that of illegal aliens
from countries supporting terrorism who had been ordered to be deported,
only 6% of those not already in custody were actually removed. Of 114
Iranians with final orders for removal, just 11 could be found and were
deported. Of 67 Sudanese with final-removal orders, only one was deported.
And of 46 Iraqis with final-removal orders, only four were sent packing.
All the rest, presumably, were living with impunity somewhere in the U.S.
Those statistics tell only part of the story. Most people charged with an
immigration-law violation do not even bother to show up for a court
hearing. Imagine for a moment a majority of people charged with a crime in
state or federal courts flouting the indictment or charge and refusing to
appear in court. They would be swiftly
arrested.
But immigration law marches to a different drummer. Most illegals, including
those with arrest records, are not jailed while awaiting a hearing. That's
because Congress has failed to appropriate enough money to build sufficient
holding facilities. Rather, the immigrants are released on their promise to
return. They don't. And the odds
are they won't be found. The oig investigation revealed that of 204 aliens
ordered to be removed in absentia, only 14 were eventually located and
shipped out.
The situation is even worse when it comes to those aliens whose requests for
asylum are rejected and who are ordered to be deported. The oig study found
that only 3% of those seeking asylum who were ordered removed were
ultimately located and deported. That pattern, like failed immigration-law
enforcement across the board, bodes well for potential terrorists. In the
1990s, half a dozen aliens applied for asylum before committing terrorist
acts. Among them:
Ahmad Ajaj and Ramzi Yousef, who entered the country in 1991 and 1992,
respectively, seeking asylum. According to the oig, Ajaj left the U.S. and
returned in 1992 with a phony passport. He was convicted of passport fraud.
Yousef completed the required paperwork and was given a date for his asylum
hearing. In the meantime, in 1993, the two men helped commit the first
World Trade Center attack,
for which they were convicted and imprisoned. At the time, Yousef's
application for asylum was still pending.
So what does the failed immigration system mean for ordinary people? Just
ask Sister Helen Lynn Chaska. Actually, you can't. You will have to ask her
family and friends.
It's the waning days of summer in 2002 in Klamath Falls, Ore., a city of
about 19,000 on the eastern edge of the Cascade Mountains. Two nuns who
belonged to the Order of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Bellevue, Wash.,
had made one of their periodic trips to Klamath Falls to carry out
missionary work. As they had in the past, Sister
Helena Maria (her church name), 53, and Sister Mary Louise, 52, checked
into a Best Western motel. On Saturday, Aug. 31, they spent the evening
proselytizing and selling religious items outside an Albertsons
supermarket.
After returning to the motel, the two set out on their ritual prayer walk
shortly after midnight. They were dressed in the blue habits they always
wore as they walked on a darkened bike path behind the motel, reciting
their rosaries. As they reached the midway point in their prayers and
turned back toward the motel, they heard a bicycle
coming up behind them. A Hispanic male in his 30s or 40s got off, grabbed
both women and began kissing them. The more they resisted, the angrier he
became. He finally punched Sister Mary Louise in the right eye so hard that
she fell and hit her head on a rock, leaving her dazed.
While holding Sister Helena Maria so tightly by the rosary knotted around
her neck that she gasped for breath, he raped her first and then raped and
sodomized Sister Mary Louise and raped Sister Helena Maria a second time.
The man pulled the veil over Sister Mary Louise, told her not to move or he
would kill her, climbed back on
his MTB Super Crown bike and pedaled off. Sister Helena Maria was dead. The
rosary had been wound so tightly, its marks were embedded in her neck.
Later that day, police tracked a suspect to another motel, where they began
questioning him. He gave his name as Jesus Franco Flores, which turned out
to be one of many names he used. In the end, he confessed to beating and
raping both nuns. He was not supposed to be in the U.S.; he had been
deported at least three times. By his account, his unlawful entries into
the U.S. began in 1986 at the age
of 17.
Under the name Victor Manuel Batres-Martinez, which may have been his legal
name, he found his way to Oregon, where he was arrested for unauthorized
use of a motor vehicle. His sentence to a juvenile facility was suspended,
with the understanding that the INS would deport him. The agency did so and
in May 1987 granted him a
voluntary return to Mexico, with a notation on government records that
"subject has many good productive years ahead of him."
Assuming he went as the INS promised, he didn't stay long. In September
that year, he was arrested and convicted of theft and shoplifting in
Wenatchee, Wash., under the name Manuel Martinez. Two months later, he was
convicted of felony sales of marijuana and hashish in Los Angeles and sent
to jail for 60 days. In March 1988
he was arrested in Los Angeles, once for robbery, once for possession of a
controlled substance. Another possession arrest followed in April. In
August he was arrested in Los Angeles for robbery. In December he was sent
to prison in California for second-
degree robbery and kidnapping. While there, he was treated for what was
deemed to be "a significant psychiatric disorder."
In January 1992, after his release, the INS sent him back to Mexico by way
of Nogales, Ariz. Six months later, he was back again, spotted by
border-patrol officers as he attempted to come back into the U.S. near El
Paso, Texas. When agents tried to stop him, he ran into rush-hour traffic on
Interstate 10, "narrowly avoiding
collision with several cars," according to immigration records. He
subsequently was arrested, that time under the name Mateo Jimenez, nd
ordered to be returned to Mexico. It didn't stick. In November he was
arrested by Portland, Ore., police for possession and delivery of a
controlled substance. He never showed up for court
appearances.
On two occasions in January 2002, border-patrol agents again apprehended him
as he tried to re-enter the U.S. Both times they returned him to Mexico. If
the border patrol's electronic fingerprint-identification system had been in
synch with the FBI's,
the agents would have discovered Batres-Martinez's extensive criminal
record. Given his prior deportations, Batres-Martinez could have been
charged with re-entry after deportation, a felony that carries a
substantial prison sentence.
In any event, Batres-Martinez told police in Klamath Falls that he entered
the U.S. on Aug. 11, 2002, that time coming through New Mexico. He said he
hopped a freight train for San Bernardino, Calif., and looked for work,
without success, from Los Angeles to Stockton. When he heard that he might
have better luck in Portland,
he hopped another train but got mixed up in a freight yard and ended up in
Klamath Falls.
To avoid the death penalty, Batres-Martinez pleaded guilty to the murder of
Sister Helena Maria, attempted aggravated murder of Sister Mary Louise and
rape of both nuns. He was sentenced to life in prison without the
possibility of parole.
As for U.S. immigration authorities, they were characteristically
ineffectual. On Sept. 5, four days after the murder, the INS faxed an
immigration detainer to the Klamath County jail, concerning Maximiliano
Silerio Esparza, also known as Victor Batres-Martinez: "You are advised
that the action below has been taken by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service concerning the above-named inmate of your institution:
Investigation has been initiated to determine whether this person is
subject to removal from the United States."
Both political parties and their candidates pay lip service to controlling
the borders. But neither President Bush nor Senator Kerry supports a system
that would end the incentives for border crossers by cracking down on the
employers of illegals. T.J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol
Council, a labor organization that represents 10,000 border-patrol
employees, believes the solution is obvious.
The U.S. government, he says, should "issue a single document that's
counterfeit proof, that has an embedded photograph, that says this person
has a right to work in the U.S. And that document is the Social Security
card. It's not a national ID card. It's a card that you have to carry when
you apply for a job and only then. The employers run it through a scanner,
and they get an answer in short order that says, Yes, you may hire, or No,
you may not. That would cut off 98% of all the traffic across the border.
With your work force of 10,000 border-patrol agents, you actually could
control the borders."
But Bonner doesn't see that happening anytime soon because of pressure from
corporate America. And all the available legislative evidence of the past
quarter-century supports that view. "All the politicians, it doesn't matter
which side of the aisle you're on, rely heavily on the donations from Big
Business," he says, "and
Big Business likes this system [of cheap illegal labor]. Unfortunately, in
the post-9/11 world, this system puts us in jeopardy."
In the 9/11 commission's final report, now on the best-seller lists, the
panel of investigators took note of the immigration breakdown in general,
saying that "two systemic weaknesses came together in our border system's
inability to contribute to an effective defense against the 9/11 attacks: a
lack of well-developed counterterrorism measures as a part of border
security and an immigration system not able to deliver on its basic
commitments, much less support counterterrorism. These weaknesses have been
reduced but are far from being overcome."
Folks on the border who must deal daily with the throngs of illegals are not
optimistic that the Federal Government will change its ways. As Cochise
County Sheriff Dever dryly observes, "People in Washington get up in the
morning, their laundry is done, their floors are cleaned, their meals are
cooked. Guess who's doing that?"
With reporting by Laura Karmatz and research by Joan Levinstein
"The number of illegal aliens flooding into the U.S. this year will total
3 million, enough to fill 22,000 Boeing 737-700 airliners, or 60 flights
EVERY DAY for a year.... Given that the crisis of illegal immigration
bridges the two main issues in the presidential campaign, "the economy and
national security," one might think that the
candidates would pound their podiums with calls for change. But that's not
the case..."
PS -- Take the Time Magazine Online Poll:
Do you think the U.S. is doing enough to secure its borders?
http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101040920/story.html |