Tuesday, February 1, 2011

NAPOLITANO'S LA RAZA PROGAGANDA: America Borders Are Secure From Mex Terroism!

MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com


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Go to http://www.MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com and read articles and comments from other Americans on what they’ve witnessed in their communities around the country. While most of the population of California is now ILLEGAL, the problems, costs, assault to our culture by Mexico is EVERYWHERE. copy and pass it to your friends.





OBAMA, AND HIS LA RAZA INFESTED ADMINISTRATION, HAS PROMISED ILLEGALS ENDLESS WAVES OF AMNESTY, OR AT THE VERY LEAST, CONTINUED NON-ENFORCEMENT.

OBAMA LIES TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE ABOUT BORDER SECURITY, LIKE HE LIED TO US ON THE SENATE FLOOR THAT HIS OBAMAcare DID NOT INCLUDE ILLEGALS. IT DOES!

OBAMA HAS PUSHED FOR OPEN BORDERS TO KEEP WAGES DEPRESSED FOR HIS CORPORATE PAYMASTERS, FROM HIS VERY FIRST DAYS OF LIES!

THERE IS A REASON WHY MOST OF THE FORTUNE 500 ARE GENEROUS DONORS TO THE MEXICAN FASCIST PARTY of LA RAZA! IT’S ALL ABOUT KEEPING WAGES DEPRESSED.



WHILE ILLEGALS ARE PAID MISERABLE WAGES IN THIS NATION, THESE WAGES ARE STILL EIGHT TIMES WHAT THEY WOULD HAVE BEEN PAID IN THE NASTY COUNTRY THEY WERE EXPORTED FROM.



ASK YOURSELF WHY LA RAZA NAPOLITANO CAME OUT TO PREACH FOR THE LA RAZA DEMS’ LAST “DREAM ACT”. WHAT DOES THE DREAM ACT PARTIAL AMNESTY HAVE TO DO WITH OUR NON-EXISTENT BORDER SECURITY???



IT’S ALL ABOUT AMNESTY! ANY FORM, ANY WAY… AND MEANWHILE, THOUSANDS OF ILLEGALS POUR OVER OUR BORDERS DAILY! OVER OUR BORDERS AND INTO OUR JOBS, WELFARE, AND “FREE” ANCHOR BABY BIRTHING CENTERS!



January 31, 2011

Napolitano Accuses Critics of Politicizing Border Issues

By JULIA PRESTON

Sharpening a confrontation with Republicans over Southwest border enforcement, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said on Monday that crime and illegal crossings had dropped sharply along the border, and she accused lawmakers who say violence is out of control there of trying to “score political points.”

One week after Republicans in the House of Representatives held the first of a series of hearings to criticize the Obama administration’s record on immigration enforcement, Ms. Napolitano fought back in a speech at the University of Texas at El Paso. She said that arrests by the Border Patrol, an indication of illegal crossings, had fallen 36 percent in two years and that crime rates in many border cities remained low despite surging drug violence in Mexico.

“None of us can stand silent when the public dialogue dishonors the memory and service” of Border Patrol agents, including one agent who was killed in December, “by misstating the facts and unfairly politicizing border issues,” Ms. Napolitano said.

Her speech came as Homeland Security Department officials were also fending off criticism that they were too tough on illegal immigrants. In a report, the Migration Policy Institute, a research organization in Washington, found that a national program of cooperation with state and local police was not meeting priorities set by the department to focus primarily on deporting immigrants who committed serious crimes.

The report, the first broad study by an independent group of a federal program known as 287(g), found that about half of the immigrants detained for deportation under the program had committed minor crimes or traffic violations. The official goal of the program is to identify and deport immigrants who commit the most serious felonies.

The report found that local sheriffs and county officials who signed up for the program were determining in practice whether immigrants would be detained selectively, according to the Department of Homeland Security’s priorities, or whether virtually every immigrant arrested by the local police would be questioned under the program. While Immigration and Customs Enforcement is in charge of ensuring that the program is carried out uniformly across the country, the institute’s report found wide variations.

“States and local authorities are setting the priorities for 287(g),” said Marc Rosenblum, a Migration Policy Institute researcher.

Obama administration immigration officials have struggled to find a balance between lawmakers in some states who argue that federal authorities have failed to secure the border, and immigrant groups who say the administration has carried out a tougher crackdown on illegal immigration than President George W. Bush’s.

Immigrant advocate organizations have strongly opposed the 287(g) program, arguing that illegal immigrants without criminal records are being deported for traffic and other minor violations, breaking up families long rooted in the United States.

Under the 287(g) program, which is named for the immigration statute that created it, immigrants are questioned about their legal status when they are booked into jails, and in a few places immigrants can also be detained by the police during street patrols.

In Cobb County, Ga., only 21 percent of immigrants detained for deportation under the program were suspected of serious or violent crimes. By contrast, in the Las Vegas metropolitan area, more than 70 percent of those detained had committed the most serious offenses.

The report found that Hispanic immigrants were particular targets of the 287(g) program. In Frederick County, Md., the Hispanic population declined by 61 percent after the county adopted the 287(g) program, while neighboring counties experienced an increase in Hispanics.

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DOES ANYONE REALLY THINK THAT THE MEX DRUG CARTELS, OR THE THOUSANDS OF MEXICANS THAT CLIMB OUR BORDERS DAILY FOR THE LOOTING OF OUR JOBS, “FREE” BIRTHING AND 18 YEARS OF WELFARE, AND FREE WHATEVER THE LA RAZA DEMS CAN DANGLE IN THEIR FACES FOR THEIR VOTES…. REALLY THINK OUR BORDERS ARE SECURE?



THE REASON OBAMA WANTED DALEY FOR HIS CHIEF OF STAFF, IS THAT HE’S A J.P. MORGAN BANKSTER, AND AN ADVOCATE FOR OPEN BORDERS LIKE NAPOLITANO!!!



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U.S. Alleges Mexican Drug Cartel Rented Apartments in U.S. to Recruit Young Americans

Friday, January 07, 2011

By Edwin Mora



A soldier guards packages containing marijuana as they are shown to reporters in the pouring rain in Tijuana, Mexico, on Monday, Jan. 3, 2011. (AP Photo/Guillermo Arias)

(CNSNews.com) - An assistant U.S. attorney told CNSNews.com that a federal judge will hear a criminal case later this month involving an offshoot of the Tijuana cartel that is believed to be setting up operations in the United States to recruit young Americans for drug trafficking.

The case shows that U.S. drug cartels are attempting to extend their operations into the United States.

Todd Robinson, the assistant U.S. attorney who will prosecute the alleged drug ring at the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of California, said he expects the federal judge who will hear the case on Jan. 26 to set a trial date on that day.

According to the 86-page indictment, Mexican drug cartels have rented apartments in the United States under a franchise scheme aimed at recruiting young Americans into their illicit activities, coordinating drug trafficking operations, as well as kidnapping and extortion on both sides of the southwest border.

The case to be heard stemmed from a long-term investigation dubbed “Operation Luz Verde” (green light), that began in November 2009. The probe was conducted by the multi-agency San Diego Cross Border Violence Task Force and it reportedly revealed state and federal crimes, including murder, kidnapping, firearms and drug trafficking.

Investigators used court-authorized wiretaps to capture 50,000 phone calls over a six-month period that led to a case against 43 suspects, including some Mexican police officers and top officials, such as Jesus Quinones Marquez, the director of International Liaison for the Baja California Attorney General’s Office.

In that position, Marquez is one of the primary Mexican liaison officials providing information to U.S. law enforcement officers. According to the investigation, Marquez used his position to provide the drug cartel Fernandez Sanchez Organization (FSO) with confidential law enforcement information. He also allegedly arranged the arrest of FSO rivals by Mexican authorities.

The Justice Department indictment was unsealed in late July 2010 and charges 43 defendants with taking part in a federal racketeering conspiracy (Title 18, U.S. Code, Section 1962(d)). In the complaint, the 43 alleged culprits are said to be members of the FSO, which is an offshoot of the Arellano-Felix drug trafficking ring based in Tijuana.

According to the complaint, FSO “is a transnational drug organization with integrated narcotics and enforcement operations in the United States and Mexico.”

It is described as a “powerful organization that controls drug distribution and other illegal activities in the U.S. and Mexico, and which has increasingly committed acts of violence in Tijuana, San Diego County, and the greater Los Angeles area to expand its influence.”

The hierarchy of command under the leadership of Fernando Sanchez Arellano is comprised of five distinct groups: lieutenants, underbosses, corrupt Mexican officials, crew leaders, and crew members.



A young man lies dead in a public park after being shot to death by unidentified assailants in the municipality of Apodaca on the outskirts of Monterrey, Mexico, Wednesday Dec. 1, 2010. The numbered tags mark bullets casings. (AP Photo/Carlos Jasso)

According to the wiretaps and secret informants, the Fernando Sanchez Organization was operating out of a San Diego apartment it referred to as “The Office.”

The criminal complaint states that Mexican drug cartels are recruiting young Americans in an effort to keep their drug trafficking operations under the radar, including using young women as drug mules to cross from Mexico into the United States.

These “mules” allegedly were paid $100 per trip to smuggle quarter-pound loads of methamphetamine across the border.

The San Diego criminal enterprise also was recruiting members of U.S.-based Latino street gangs, both illegal immigrants and U.S. citizens, and former Mexican police officers, according to the indictment.

Most of the gang members operating in the San Diego office of the accused Mexican cartel are Latino, some illegal aliens and others U.S. citizens, according to the criminal complaint.

The investigation found that the criminal group had safe houses, distributed illicit drugs, trafficked in guns and other weapons, laundered money, committed robberies, and collected drug debts. When debtors failed to pay, they were kidnapped or targeted with execution on both sides of the southwest border.

In one instance, according to the investigation, the accused drug enterprise “placed the defaced headstone of two murder victims in the victims’ family courtyard with a threatening message” in an effort to publicize its enforcement capabilities.

During this investigation, the U.S. Department of Justice for the first time used communication towers on the U.S. side of the border to capture and monitor phone and radio communications used by Mexican drug cartels in the border area and thus were able to show that Mexican drug cartels are moving to expand their grasp into U.S. territory



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