HIGHLY
GRAPHIC IMAGES OF AMERICA UNDER LA RAZA MEX OCCUPATION
This
is what America will look like with continued open borders with Narcomex. That
is the agenda of the Globalist Democrat party for endless hordes of ‘cheap’
labor.
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2013/10/america-la-raza-mexicos-wide-open.html
THE DEMOCRAT PARTY’S
BILLIONAIRES’ GLOBALIST EMPIRE requires someone as ruthlessly dishonest as
Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama to be puppet dictators.
New border wall forces smugglers to dig expensive tunnels and launch drones
SAN DIEGO — Top U.S. border officials expect cartels to build more
tunnels from Mexico to the United States and increasingly rely on drones for
surveillance operations as the 400 miles of new border wall makes it harder to
smuggle people and drugs into the country.
Transnational criminal organizations have long used tunnels
and drones at the southwest border, but senior Border Patrol officials across
the country are bracing for more activity as new 30-foot-tall barrier wall goes
up in areas that have long been easy for criminals to cross.
“Don't be fooled into thinking that the cartels and
smuggling organizations won't do whatever to try to adapt,” said Anthony
Porvaznik, chief of the Border Patrol’s Yuma sector in western Arizona. “We
fully expect to see more tunneling activity.”
“Smugglers are in the business to make money,” said Border
Patrol’s national chief, Rodney Scott, during a one-on-one tour with the Washington Examiner of the
Southern California region. “I definitely think they will, but again, we talk
about the wall system all the time … because it's a 30-year, enduring
investment that, without it, they wouldn't have to go to drones, they wouldn't
have to go to tunnels, they wouldn't even have to go to the port of entry. They
were just driving trucks across before, and the overhead expenses for them were
significantly lower to just drive across.”
Three types of tunnels are seen on the southern border:
rudimentary tunnels comparable to gopher holes that only go several feet deep;
those that connect into existing infrastructure systems, like a drainage
system; and sophisticated ones that can go as deep as 90 feet. Scott said
federal investigators typically learn very early on about the elaborate kind of
tunnels and intentionally do not bust them until they are almost complete.
“On average, it takes about a year for them to dig it. It
takes engineers, and it takes a lot of money, so if we can literally keep them
focused on pouring their money into a hole in the ground, we know about, we'll
let it go until right at the end,” said Scott. “We just want to make sure no
illegal substances or people get into the U.S.”
Despite Yuma’s recent bust, the San Diego region’s soil
composition makes it the most suitable for tunnel builders out of the nine
regions by which the Border Patrol divides the southwest border.
“Here, it's soft, so they have to actually line it with
wood and hold it up,” said Porvaznik, who is based in Arizona. “In San Diego,
they can dig it out, and it's more clay-like material, so it'll stay.”
In El Paso, where tunnels are less prevalent because of the
river and canal systems, agents constantly see drones flying over from Mexico.
“All day long — 24/7 in this area — there’s drones going up
and down,” said Border Patrol's El Paso division chief for operations, Walter
Slozar. “They’re not using them to smuggle things yet ... We can even tell like
when one goes up, ‘Oh, when that one goes up, that’s when something happens
over here.'”
Drones surveil agents on the ground and inform smugglers
when to send migrants over the border and when agents may be wrapped up
elsewhere.
The western Arizona and eastern California regions are also
seeing a heavy use of drones but for the smuggling of drugs over the wall.
Porvaznik said drones will make up to 30 trips back and forth each night,
carrying approximately a kilogram of drugs northbound.
Porvaznik points to a framed photograph in his office that
shows an “octocopter,” an eight-propeller unmanned aerial system that goes for
$16,000. Border Patrol’s aerial surveillance trucks detected it flying through
U.S. airspace near the border transporting 25 pounds of cocaine over the
border.
“It’s dark, and they’re silent,” said Porvaznik. “We've had
numerous instances of drones working in [the] San Luis area, bringing over load
after load, and they just keep making trips all night. At times, they overload
them, and they crash. And so, our agents have found them with dope strapped to
them."
Yuma agents have been able to track where some drugs are
dropped and then pursue drivers who transport it. Agents do not have a way to
force a drone and are still in the process of detecting them.
Mexican search group finds 59 bodies in clandestine pits
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