smugglers smugglers are firing back

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wingman

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Robbed of their human contraband, smugglers are firing back at kidnappers in Phoenix

By David Kelly
Los Angeles Times

PHOENIX -- Moving with the cunning and cruelty of modern-day pirates, gangs of kidnappers are swooping down on Arizona highways, attacking smugglers transporting undocumented immigrants and stealing their human cargo.
The kidnappers stash the immigrants in hundreds of drop houses scattered around the city, using violence and threats to extort money from their relatives.
Now smugglers are fighting back, shooting it out with kidnappers on sidewalks and freeways in broad daylight.
A gunbattle last month between kidnappers and smugglers on Interstate 10 at the height of rush hour left four dead. Four others were killed this month in the desert near Phoenix; authorities blamed the deaths on violence between the two groups.
Kidnappers let smugglers take all the risks of getting immigrants into the country, then rob them once they get here. When they can't intercept smugglers on the road, they snatch migrants from houses where they are known to be hiding.
The new wave of violence has made this the deadliest year in Phoenix history with 247 homicides, edging out the previous high of 245 in 2001. Police say 60 percent of the city's crime is related to smuggling and kidnapping. "It's impacted the whole quality of life here," said police spokesman Sgt. Randy Force.
The increased crime is largely a result of tighter border restrictions in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, officials say. California and Texas are now considered too tough to penetrate, so illegal immigrants are flooding across Arizona's large, desert border. And the cost of the journey has skyrocketed from $200 to about $1,500. Immigrants are now considered as valuable as narcotics, and many kidnappers are former drug dealers.
The spiraling violence prompted the U.S. Department of Homeland Security last month to launch Operation Ice Storm, a campaign to regain control of the streets. Fifty new customs and immigration agents have come to Phoenix, the border patrol has stepped up activities along highways and criminal penalties for taking hostages now include life in prison.
"Phoenix is [the] epicenter of illegal smuggling of people and contraband," said Kyle Barnette, special agent in charge of the immigration- and customs-enforcement bureau in Phoenix. "And now these bandits are stealing each other's loads."
The victims are often sexually assaulted, pistol whipped or tortured until their relatives come up with the ransom, about $1,800 for Mexicans and as high as $10,000 for South Americans. Kidnappers figure those who travel farther are more desperate and worth more money to waiting families. Federal agents say immigrants, including children, are often raped while kidnappers are on the phone with their family demanding money. Many children travel alone to meet their parents.
"They let the family hear what is going on, they let them listen while they rape their mother or daughter," said Armando Garcia who heads the human smuggling division of the Phoenix immigration office.
In a recent case, kidnappers threatened to hack off the arm of a 9-year-old girl and send it to the family if they didn't pay up. Authorities tracked the calls and raided the house where they found the girl cowering in a bathroom about to be raped. Another woman was sexually assaulted so often she screamed whenever a man came near.
The attacks have become ever more brazen.
The Interstate 10 shooting happened outside Casa Grande near Phoenix. Kidnappers waited along the road for a van of illegal immigrants that informants said would be heading north. They spotted the vehicle, ran it off the road and forced the passengers into another van at gunpoint.
The smugglers, incensed over losing their cargo, called their boss in Phoenix who dispatched a team armed with Chinese SKS assault rifles to find the kidnappers. When they saw the van on the highway, the smugglers opened fire, killing four people inside.
While most of the violence has been by Mexicans nationals against other Mexicans, American Latinos have been mistaken for illegal immigrants.
"Earlier this year a van pulled up beside a family driving to California on vacation," said Force of the Phoenix police. "Guns were drawn, shots were fired." No one was seriously hurt.
Along with the carjackings, Phoenix has seen 300 home invasions this year, as armed kidnap gangs storm houses they think are holding illegal immigrants. People who look like recent immigrants have been abducted from their front yards.
"The immigrants are seen as vulnerable," Force said. "They are reluctant to call the police for fear they will be deported."
A customs agent with extensive experience in Latin America said the kidnappers are highly organized family members who number about 30 or 40 and work in 10- to 12-man cells. Many come from the city of Culiacan in Sinaloa, Mexico.
Using an intelligence network along the border, the gangs are alerted when a load of illegal immigrants is on the way.
"It's a target-rich environ- ment for them," said the agent, who works undercover and asked not to be identified. "These gangsters see the coyotes as prey."
Before leaving Mexico, migrants usually pay smugglers up front about $200 of the $1,500 tab. Their families pay the rest when the immigrant reaches Phoenix.
Authorities have found up to 100 people crammed in a single room. Kidnapping victims are often bound head to toe in duct tape with only a tiny opening to breathe through.
Despite the perils, Arizona is seen as the easiest gateway to the United States, though controls are tightening near border cities, pushing immigrants to cross farther out into the desert. From 1999 to 2001, one of the busiest crossing points was Douglas, where thousands hopped the fence daily.
The government reacted by boosting the number of border agents from 60 to 500. They erected a bigger fence, installed video monitors and built the country's biggest border patrol station there.
"We were once catching 1,000 people a shift, now we catch 100," said Thad Cleveland, supervisory agent with the Border Patrol in Douglas, about 200 miles southeast of Phoenix.
"These people are just trying to make a better life for themselves," he said of the immigrants. "It's hard to believe this barbed wire fence defines the difference between prosperity and poverty."
And yet it does.
 
Meanwhile, If one accidently forgets the military-style fingernail assault clipper in their pocket while traversing any US Airport security checkpoint there are 2 TSA screeners and 4 armed TSA officers standing ready to quell the threat to our nation's security.
 
"Earlier this year a van pulled up beside a family driving to California on vacation," said Force of the Phoenix police. "Guns were drawn, shots were fired." No one was seriously hurt.

Whose guns were drawn? Did the intended victims use a legal weapon to fight off the kidnappers? Seems to sound that way to me.
 
Illegal immigrants, smugglers of same, or kidnapers of Illegals being killed in gunfights over those same said Illegals?

Hmmm, unless some innocent American was killed I missed the part where we lose in this one? This is a win-win-win situation. Criminals fighting and/or killing other criminals who are hiding and transporting illegally other criminals seems to me to be a self fixing problem. Puts a big positive light on Legal immigration now doesn't it?

:neener:
 
llegal immigrants, smugglers of same, or kidnapers of Illegals being killed in gunfights over those same said Illegals?

Hmmm, unless some innocent American was killed I missed the part where we lose in this one? This is a win-win-win situation. Criminals fighting and/or killing other criminals who are hiding and transporting illegally other criminals seems to me to be a self fixing problem. Puts a big positive light on Legal immigration now doesn't it?

Yes, if the body count would get just a little bit higher. Like 1000X higher.
 
The situation in southern Arizona has gotten out of control. There are many illegal aliens trampling through the environment and the local government seems underpowered or overwhelmed - who knows...

The desert animals have started packing - here is actual footage:







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:neener:
 

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