Saturday, August 12, 2023

BIDENOMICS - JOE'S BIGGEST LIE SINCE THE BIG ONE ON HOMELAND SECURITY - Fact Check: White House Says Bidenomics Is Working Because ‘Costs’ Are Going Down

 JOE BIDEN = FUKING LIAR AND THAT'S ALL HE HAS EVER BEEN!



Fact Check: White House Says Bidenomics Is Working Because ‘Costs’ Are Going Down

Karin Jean-Pierre
AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Claim: Bidenomics is working because prices are going down.

“Bidenomics is indeed working when – when we say that — you look at the data, right? Cost is going down, right? We think about inflation,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in an interview this week.

Verdict: False.

In general, products and services purchased by Americans do not cost less than they did in the past. The Labor Department said Thursday that the consumer price index was up 3.1 percent in July compared with a year earlier. Compared with the prior month, the index was up 0.2 percent. Core CPI, which is a measure that excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 0.2 percent for the month and 4.7 percent for the year.

Inflation is the rate of change of prices. When inflation declines, as it has in recent months, this does not mean costs are going down. It means the pace of price increases has slowed. Last summer, prices were rising at around nine percent per year. This summer, they are up just over three percent from a year ago. Costs are going up, not down.


Bidenflation Still Sticky: Producer Price Index Rises More Than Expected

Biden
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The prices charged by U.S. businesses for goods and services increased more than expected in July, a sign that the U.S. economy is not yet on a steady path to lower inflation.

The Labor Department’s producer price index, which is based on what U.S. businesses are paid for goods and services, rose 0.3 percent compared with a month earlier. Compared with a year ago, the producer price index (PPI) is up 0.8 percent.

Economists had been expecting the monthly figure would rise by 0.2 percent compared with June. The forecast for annual producer inflation was for a 0.7 percent climb.

The producer price index differs from the consumer price index, which tracks what U.S. households pay for goods and services purchased for consumption, because it includes sales to businesses, governments, nonprofits, and exports. It includes purchases of health care services, for example, that are made by employers and institutions. Sales taxes, which are included in CPI, are excluded from PPI because they are ultimately paid to government rather than producers.

Core PPI, which excludes food and energy prices, rose 0.3 percent, a tenth of a point higher than expected. For the year, core PPI is up 2.4 percent. So-called “core core” PPI, which also excludes trade services (a measure of margins for wholesalers and retailers), rose 0.2 percent compared with a month earlier and was up 2.7 percent over 12 months.


Breitbart Business Digest: Why Americans Are So Unhappy with Bidenomics

(iStock, Saul Loeb/Getty Images; BNN)
iStock, Saul Loeb/Getty Images; BNN

The Recession Obsession Has Faded

Let’s start with the good news.

For the first time in over a year, there is no longer a majority of Americans who say we are in a recession. The most recent poll from the Economist and YouGov indicates that just 44 percent of American adults think the U.S. economy is in a recession. This is a big change from a year ago, when 61 percent of Americans said the economy was in a recession.

As recently as the June survey, fifty-one percent of Americans said we were in a recession. That was lower than in the prior months, when the share saying we were in a recession bounced around the the mid-fifties. It was not until the July survey, when just 47 percent of Americans said the economy was in a recession, that this was not the majority position of Americans.

The survey only began asking the question “Are we in a recession?” in June of 2022, when fifty-five percent of respondents answered in the affirmative. So, for at least a year, the majority of Americans believed that the economy was in a recession. Possibly they thought that was true for even longer, but no one was asking them.

Was It a Recession?

What prompted the questioning was the contraction of the U.S. economy in the first quarter of 2022. When the economy contracted again in the second quarter, there was a very good argument that we were indeed in a recession because one of the rules of thumb for measuring a recession is the recording of two consecutive quarters in which the economy shrinks. And by that measure, we were in a recession.

The counter-argument was that even though gross domestic product was shrinking, the other markers of a recession were absent. Unemployment fell from four percent at the start of 2022 down to 3.6 percent at the end of the second quarter. Personal consumption expenditures kept rising throughout 2022. Even inflation-adjusted consumer spending kept climbing through most of the year after dipping at the end of 2021. Private-sector nonresidential fixed investment, a proxy for business investment, kept climbing.

The business cycle dating gurus at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) get the honor of declaring whether or not a recession has officially occurred or not. Given the strength in so much of the economy in 2022, it was unlikely that they were going to conclude that we were in a recession.

So, why was GDP shrinking in the first two quarters? In the first quarter, this was mainly due to the drag of inventories and a rising trade deficit. Business inventories continued to grow in the first quarter of 2022 but at a much slower rate than they had earlier. A big jump in imports pulled down GDP, and weak demand from faltering economies abroad made for weak exports. Government spending declined from the pandemic stimulus spree, also helping drag down growth.

In the second quarter, inventories were an even bigger drag. And it looks like a big part of the decline in inventories was not the usual story of businesses pulling back from investing in goods or liquidating stockpiles but supply-chain issues.

By the second half of 2022, the economy was not only not contracting, it was growing above trend. The economy grew at 3.2 percent annual rate in the third quarter and a 2.6 percent rate in the fourth quarter. The growth continued this year. GDP grew at a two percent annual rate in the first quarter and 2.4 percent annual rate in the second quarter.

Why Were People So Convinced We Were in a Recession?

Yet the perception that we were in a recession persisted for much longer. The best explanation for this is not that people are irrationally upset about the economy but that they use a definition that is neither the “technical” definition of two consecutive contractions nor the official definition in which a recession is whatever the NBER says it is. Instead, what we might call the popular but unarticulated definition is probably something simpler: a recession is just an economy that stinks.

It’s pretty clear what made the economy stink: inflation. Even worse, the costs of living were rising faster than wages, which meant that people were becoming poorer month after month. The price of what government officials call “food at home”—and the rest of us call groceries—were skyrocketing.

Food prices have a big impact on how people experience inflation because they are a large and somewhat inflexible portion of most household budgets. As an old English punk band Prole once sang, “You can’t feed your kids on self-respect, and your belts only go so tight.”

A clear sign of a recession for most folks is that the stuff they need is increasingly financially out of reach, and whether that’s because jobs are scarce or prices are soaring probably does not matter that much.

So, what changed? Well, for one thing, average hourly pay is now growing faster than inflation for the first time in two years. On a longer timeline, wages still badly lag behind prices. But at least in recent months, many Americans feel that they are no longer falling behind, and some are even beginning to catch up. So, fewer people are themselves depressed about their economic situation.

Americans Still Are Not Happy with the Economy

Do not get carried away with the good news. Although fewer Americans say we are in a recession, the number who say we are is still quite high. And the share saying we are not in a recession has risen to 31 percent from 26 percent at the start of the year—just a five-point improvement.

The share who say they are not sure has climbed from 23 percent in January to 25 percent now. So, there’s also been an increase in uncertainty about whether we are in a recession.

And the outlook is still pretty dismal. The Economist/YouGov survey asks those who say they aren’t sure or that we’re not in a recession whether we’ll be in one six months from now. Back in January, four percent said a recession is very likely and 21 percent said it was somewhat likely. In the last poll, three percent say it is very likely and 19 percent say it is somewhat likely. So, the share of those expecting a recession has barely budged.


Joe Biden Claims ‘Emergency’ to Get Funding for More Migration

MEXICALI, BAJA CALIFORNIA - MAY 13: Migrants attempt to climb over the border wall from Mexicali, Mexico to Calexico, USA, along the U.S.-Mexico border near the port of entry on Saturday, May 13, 2023 in Mexicali, Baja California. Title 42, a pandemic-era policy that allowed border agents to quickly turn …
Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

President Joe Biden’s deputies are asking Congress for at least $3.3 billion to help resettle millions of border-crossing migrants throughout the United States — plus another $21.6 billion to guard Ukraine’s border from Russians.

The funds for migration are being funneled through various agencies, including the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The agencies are used to funnel taxpayer dollars to various non-profit groups that transport, feed, house, and train millions of catch-and-release migrants for the jobs and housing that would otherwise go to Americans.

RollCall.com identified $3.2 billion to help migrants settle in the United States, plus $416 million for anti-drug measures along the southern border:

… $2.65 billion is for Homeland Security Department efforts, including border management as well as shelter and services for migrants released from custody. That [$2.65 billion request] includes $416 million to help stop the flow of fentanyl over the border with “non-intrusive inspection system deployment.”

The State Department would receive $800 million for its migration assistance programs, and another $159 million would be provided for child labor investigations and enforcement and for immigration judge teams.

The request also seeks $100 million to fly more Ukrainian migrants from peaceful Western Europe into the United States.

It further asks for $13.1 billion in military aid to Ukraine, which has now stopped the Russian advance, and $7.5 billion to support Ukraine’s economy. U.S. taxpayers have spent more than $100 billion to support Ukraine in the war, which has now turned into a high-casualty, no-negotiations stalemate.

More than 270,000 Ukrainians have already been admitted, despite European offers of homes and jobs.

The spending request was revealed by Punchbowl News, which posted a White House document that asks Congress for the $12 billion “for FEMA, to address ongoing disaster response and recovery efforts.”

At the same time, New York officials are asking for $12 billion to help them support at least 100,000 lower-wage illegal migrants who are now displacing less-skilled Americans from housing and jobs in New York City. The top Democrat legislators in the House and the Senate are both elected from New York.

Before Biden’s election, FEMA money was mostly used to help American communities recover from local disasters, such as floods, hurricanes, and tornadoes. Some of the $12 billion is likely earmarked for Hawaii, where the island of Maui was badly damaged by fires that have killed at least 55 people.

WATCH: Aerial Footage, Before & After Pictures Show Devastating Hawaii Wildfire

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The request is a political dilemma for GOP legislators who face rival pressure from voters and donors.

Polls show a growing majority of Americans and GOP voters oppose migration and military aid for a no-compromise war in Ukraine. But GOP donors support continued aid to Ukraine — partly because the money eventually flows back to investors in the United States.

The donors also strongly support the government-aided inflow of additional workers, consumers, and renters into the U.S. consumer economy.

Biden has already imported at least six million migrants for economic purposes in less than three years. That economic policy has helped investors by inflating real estate prices and reducing Americans’ wages. But it has helped legislators avoid dealing with difficult domestic problems, such as the human damage caused by imported drugs:

Migration — especially labor migration — is unpopular among GOP voters and swing voters. A 54 percent majority of Americans say Biden is allowing a southern border invasion, according to an August 2022 poll commissioned by the left-of-center National Public Radio (NPR). The 54 percent “invasion” majority included 76 percent of Republicans, 46 percent of independents, and even 40 percent of Democrats.

GAMER LYING LAWYER JOE BIDEN - Joe Biden Claims ‘Emergency’ to Get Funding for More Migration

 

Joe Biden Claims ‘Emergency’ to Get Funding for More Migration

MEXICALI, BAJA CALIFORNIA - MAY 13: Migrants attempt to climb over the border wall from Mexicali, Mexico to Calexico, USA, along the U.S.-Mexico border near the port of entry on Saturday, May 13, 2023 in Mexicali, Baja California. Title 42, a pandemic-era policy that allowed border agents to quickly turn …
Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

President Joe Biden’s deputies are asking Congress for at least $3.3 billion to help resettle millions of border-crossing migrants throughout the United States — plus another $21.6 billion to guard Ukraine’s border from Russians.

The funds for migration are being funneled through various agencies, including the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The agencies are used to funnel taxpayer dollars to various non-profit groups that transport, feed, house, and train millions of catch-and-release migrants for the jobs and housing that would otherwise go to Americans.

RollCall.com identified $3.2 billion to help migrants settle in the United States, plus $416 million for anti-drug measures along the southern border:

… $2.65 billion is for Homeland Security Department efforts, including border management as well as shelter and services for migrants released from custody. That [$2.65 billion request] includes $416 million to help stop the flow of fentanyl over the border with “non-intrusive inspection system deployment.”

The State Department would receive $800 million for its migration assistance programs, and another $159 million would be provided for child labor investigations and enforcement and for immigration judge teams.

The request also seeks $100 million to fly more Ukrainian migrants from peaceful Western Europe into the United States.

It further asks for $13.1 billion in military aid to Ukraine, which has now stopped the Russian advance, and $7.5 billion to support Ukraine’s economy. U.S. taxpayers have spent more than $100 billion to support Ukraine in the war, which has now turned into a high-casualty, no-negotiations stalemate.

More than 270,000 Ukrainians have already been admitted, despite European offers of homes and jobs.

The spending request was revealed by Punchbowl News, which posted a White House document that asks Congress for the $12 billion “for FEMA, to address ongoing disaster response and recovery efforts.”

At the same time, New York officials are asking for $12 billion to help them support at least 100,000 lower-wage illegal migrants who are now displacing less-skilled Americans from housing and jobs in New York City. The top Democrat legislators in the House and the Senate are both elected from New York.


Republicans Rip Joe Biden for Tying U.S. Disaster Relief to Ukraine Funding

Biden Zelensky Hawaii
PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP, SUSAN WALSH/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Republicans are ripping President Joe Biden for attempting to tie U.S. disaster relief to Ukraine funding, asserting that the president is holding Americans “hostage.”

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) is leading the charge, urging Congress to separate disaster relief in the U.S. from billions more in aid to Ukraine.

Biden this week was originally expected to request more aid for Ukraine, with a figure “north of $10 billion.” Indeed, according to the Associated Press (AP), Biden requested over $13 billion in “emergency defense aid to Ukraine and an additional $8 billion for humanitarian support through the end of the year.”

The $40-billion aid package includes $12 billion for disaster relief in the U.S. as well, triggering concerns among Republicans and prompting Rubio, who tends to support aid to Ukraine with more oversight, to take action.

“President Biden is holding Floridians and other Americans hostage by tying critical domestic disaster relief to foreign military aid,” Rubio stated on Thursday.

“While the Biden administration works with my colleagues in the House on what can actually pass, I urge prompt consideration of legislation to replenish the Disaster Relief Fund,” the Florida senator added, prompting agreement from fellow Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH).

“Marco and I don’t always agree on Ukraine policy, but he is absolutely right about this. We have just had horrible fires in Maui. Biden still hasn’t declared a disaster in East Palestine, and hurricane season is just around the corner,” Vance said.

“Do disaster aid, then we can debate Ukraine,” Vance added.

Despite Rubio’s general support of aiding Ukraine, he is among those calling for far more oversight, halting the status of writing a “blank check.”

Biden’s desire to tie U.S. disaster relief to Ukraine aid comes as the people of East Palestine, Ohio, continue to seek assistance and beg for help months after the toxic train derailment. The Biden administration, however, has largely ignored them.

“Man, are they suffering. That’s another place in the United States that’s been forgotten about, just like the border, the people down there,” John Rourke, the head of Blue Line Moving who delivered pallets of water from former President Donald Trump to East Palestine residents, told Breitbart News during a July interview at the Turning Point Action Conference.

“We have American citizens, some of them veterans, who can’t even get a decent roof over their head until they figure out what the hell is going on in this town, alright; I was there. I could smell it in the air. I could feel it on my skin. I actually spoke with people. ‘How are you doing?’ And they’re miserable. They don’t understand why Joe Biden has not come down there and help them,” Rourke said, highlighting that it was Trump — not Biden — who showed up.

CLASS ACT: Donald Trump Visits with Americans at East Palestine McDonalds, Fact-Checkers Go BERSERK

Alana Mastrangelo / Breitbart News
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“But guess who had to come? President Trump, right? He’s the one that came. How bad is that?” Rourke asked, adding that he is still getting calls from residents asking him to send a message to Trump.

WATCH — Trump to East Palestine Residents: “You Are Not Forgotten”

Alana Mastrangelo / Breitbart News
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“These poor people just need water. I’m getting calls from people; even as last week, someone reached out to me and said, ‘We’re running out of water. Could you get a message to President Trump? He said he would come back if the government didn’t act. Could you please get a message to him and tell him we need more water? We need help,’” he said.

“They still need help. I’m telling you, they’re reaching out to us on social media, saying, ‘Is there any way you can get a message to anyone to come help us?’ It’s just a forgotten land, just like the border, just like all of these inner cities that are deteriorating and rotting from inside,” Rourke added.

WATCH — John Rourke: East Palestine Residents Still Begging for Help as Biden Ignores Them

Jack Knudsen / Breitbart News
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Biden’s attempt to tie U.S. disaster relief to Ukraine aid also comes as Hawaii experiences what Hawaii Gov. Josh Green (D) has described as “likely the largest natural disaster in Hawaii’s state history” after wildfires engulfed the islands, killing at least 53, with the death toll rising. Notably, Biden approved the state’s disaster declaration request Thursday.

VIDEO — Aerial Footage, Before & After Pictures Show Devastating Hawaii Wildfire

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Honduran Asylum-Recipient Sentenced for Smuggling Migrants — For Third Time

53 Migrants found in McAllen, Texas, stash house. (Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Rio Grande Valley Sector)
File Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Rio Grande Valley Sector

A Honduran migrant will spend six and a half years in prison for his third conviction on human smuggling charges. The Honduran man had been smuggling migrants for more than nine years — some of that time while he was under asylum protection.

This week, 41-year-old Marlon Enrique “Gordo” Gallegos Rapalo appeared before Chief U.S. District Judge Randy Crane in McAllen, Texas. The judge sentenced him to six and a half years in prison. Gallegos pleaded guilty to human smuggling charges earlier this year following an arrest in July 2022.

According to information released by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas, Gallegos was living in the U.S. under asylum protection — meaning that he could not be deported at the time of his multiple offenses. Court documents show that he had been arrested several times and had been sent to prison two times before, once in 2015 and once in 2017, on human smuggling charges. During the sentencing hearing, Crane said Gallegos had “committed a serious abuse of the system” and ordered that he be deported after completing his sentence.

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According to prosecutors, Gallegos leased a house in McAllen and used it to house more than 200 migrants who were being moved into the country and on to the north. At the time of his arrest in July 2022, authorities found 35 migrants inside the stash house.

A criminal complaint from October 2014 revealed that Gallegos helped carry out a smuggling attempt where they used scouts and various vehicles to move migrants in and out of a stash house. After authorities raided that house, they found 15 migrants and learned that Gallegos had also been arrested in February 2014 but his charges had been “dropped.” Court documents do not reveal a reason for the dismissal of the charges. In the October 2014 case, Gallegos pleaded guilty and received a prison sentence of one year and four months.

In February 2017, federal authorities arrested Gallegos near McCook, Texas, where he was in charge of a stash house. Court documents revealed that Gallegos would bring food and water and coordinate the migrants being taken and removed from the house. In that case, Gallegos also pleaded guilty and received a prison sentence of two years and three months.

Ildefonso Ortiz is an award-winning journalist with Breitbart Texas. He co-founded Breitbart Texas’ Cartel Chronicles project with Brandon Darby and senior Breitbart management. You can follow him on Twitter and on Facebook. He can be contacted at Iortiz@breitbart.com

Brandon Darby is the managing director and editor-in-chief of Breitbart Texas. He co-founded Breitbart Texas’ Cartel Chronicles project with Ildefonso Ortiz and senior Breitbart management. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook. He can be contacted at bdarby@breitbart.com.     


4-Time Deported Migrant Pleads Not Guilty to Capital Murder of Honduran Migrants in East Texas

Francisco Oropeza pleads not guilty to Capital Murder in Coldspring, Texas. (Bob Price/Breitbart Texas)
Bob Price/Breitbart Texas

COLDSPRING, Texas — Francisco Torres Oropeza pleaded not guilty in an East Texas court on Capital Murder charges related to the alleged murder of five Honduran migrants. The Hondurans, including a young child, lived next door to Oropeza at the time of the reported shooting deaths.

Francisco Oropeza appeared before 411th District Court Judge John Wells III for arraignment on charges he murdered five Honduran migrants in April who lived next door to his house near Cleveland, Texas. The San Jacinto County grand jury indicted Oropeza on June 28 for the capital murder of two of the five alleged victims.

As Breitbart Texas watched, San Jacinto County District Attorney presented the Capital Murder indictment to the court and Oropeza on Thursday in Coldspring, Texas. Houston defense attorney Anthony Osso contested the spelling of the defendant’s name on the indictment. Mr. Oropeza spoke to the judge and indicated the spelling was “Oropeza” not “Oropesa.” The judge ordered the indictment to be amended to reflect the changed spelling.

Attorney Osso went on to request access to evidence regarding the dispatching records and the GPS locations of all deputies units that were on duty on the night of the alleged mass-murder. At one point, Osso appeared to indicate that the sheriff’s office could have kept the murders from happening if they had arrived sooner.

Osso said the timeline “raises some concerns from a defense standpoint.” “We have reason to believe,” Osso continued, “that this entire incident could have been averted or that action could have been taken to prevent this. It might become a mitigating factor.”

Family members of the five decedents sat in the jury box and watched the proceedings, Breitbart Texas learned from DA Dillon.

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A large contingent of law enforcement provided security inside and outside the courthouse. The contingent included the San Jacinto Sheriff’s Office tactical team and special agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives accompanied by K-9 teams.

During the discussions before the judge, Oropeza pleaded not guilty to the single count of Capital Murder. Judge Wells set the next court date for December 7, 2023.

ATF agents provide security outside San Jacinto County Court House during the arraignment of alleged capital murder suspect Francisco Oropeza. (Bob Price/Breitbart Texas)

ATF agents provide security outside San Jacinto County Court House during the arraignment of alleged capital murder suspect Francisco Oropeza. (Bob Price/Breitbart Texas)

Before the hearing, attorney Osso refused to speak with Breitbart Texas and expressed displeasure over the reporting of Oropeza’s immigration status. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials previously told Breitbart that Francisco Oropeza Perez-Torres had been deported from the U.S. on four separate occasions. The first order of removal came in March 2009. He was deported again in September 2009, January 2012, and July 2016.

Following the hearing, Osso spoke with ABC 13 who reported that Osso said there is a lot more to this case and they hope to use that information to avoid a trial. “Those facts become important when we talk to the state about maybe trying to resolve the case,” Osso said.

After an initial hearing in May, Osso told reporters that there was bad blood between his client and the neighbors he allegedly murdered.

“The initial story about asking him not to shoot his gun in the backyard because a baby was sleeping is probably not going to prove to be an accurate version of the events,” Osso said to the group of reporters, including Breitbart Texas. He said his client was initially friends with his Honduran neighbors, but things “started to go downhill” after the neighbor’s dogs went into Oropeza’s yard and killed his sheep and chickens.

San Jacinto County Sheriff Greg Capers escorts accused killer Francisco Oropeza from a hearing held on May 18 in the courthouse. (Bob Price/Breitbart Texas)

San Jacinto County Sheriff Greg Capers escorts accused killer Francisco Oropeza from a hearing held on May 18 in the courthouse. (Bob Price/Breitbart Texas)

San Jacinto County Sheriff Greg Capers led a multi-agency task force on a four-day manhunt for Oropeza for the alleged murders of five Honduran migrants who lived next door to him.

The victims of the alleged murders were previously identified by Sheriff Capers as:

  • Julisa Molina Rivera, age 31
  • Sonia Argentina Guzman, age 25
  • Diana Velazquez Alvarado, age 21
  • Jose Jonathan Casarez, age 18
  • Daniel Enrique Laso, age 9

The manhunt for Oropeza ended on May 2 with the arrest of Oropeza in a friend’s house in Cut & Shoot Texas, Breitbart reported.

Oropeza remains in custody in the San Jacinto County Jail, where he is being held without bond.

Bob Price is the Breitbart Texas-Border team’s associate editor and senior news contributor. He is an original member of the Breitbart Texas team. Price is a regular panelist on Fox 26 Houston’s What’s Your Point? Sunday-morning talk show. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX.


Mexican Cartel Weapons Found on Border Along Texas Bank of Rio Grande

U.S. Border Patrol/Texas Department of Public Safety
U.S. Border Patrol/Texas Department of Public Safety

Rio Grande Valley Sector Border Patrol agents found a small cache of Mexican cartel weapons on the Texas bank of the Rio Grande. This is the second suspected armed cartel incursion incident in the South Texas border town during the month of August.

As migrant apprehensions surge along the Texas border, law enforcement officers face a growing threat of Mexican Cartel violence in South Texas. Border Patrol officials reported the seizure of two cartel rifles and ammunition found Friday on the U.S. bank of the Rio Grande near Fronton, Texas. There were no arrests made in relation to the incident.

In a Friday morning post on “X,” formerly Twitter, Chief Patrol Agent Gloria Chavez of the Border Patrol’s Rio Grande Sector highlighted the seizure and stated, “Our U.S. Border Patrol Agents confront threats daily as they do their best to secure our border. Agents working jointly with our L.E. partners made a significant discovery of weapons and ammunition hidden by criminal organizations near Fronton, TX.”

The Border Patrol released photos of the weapons seizure of two rifles, several rifle magazines, and an ammunition carrier. The weapons appear to be an AR-15 style rifle and a Kalashnikov-style rifle. One photo shows the Kalashnikov rifle submerged in the river. The agency did not provide any other information regarding the multi-agency discovery other than to indicate no suspects were arrested in connection with the finding.

The small border town of Fronton, with a population of 167 residents, has been the scene of other cartel-related border activity in recent months. On Saturday, the images of three suspected Mexican cartel gunmen crossing the Rio Grande were captured by law enforcement cameras, according to Fox News report. One of the men depicted in the images on Saturday appeared to be wearing body armor. The three suspected Mexican cartel gunmen were not arrested despite a coordinated effort by the Border Patrol to locate them.

On Friday, an armed cartel gunmen crossed the Rio Grande with a group of migrants. He allegedly pointed the rifle at members of the Texas National Guard patrolling near the international railroad bridge in Eagle Pass, Texas, a law enforcement source told Breitbart Texas. A video shows the gunman returning to Mexico dragging a barrel and carrying the rifle.

In June, Department of Public Safety (DPS) Highway Patrol troopers working in the same area arrested five suspected Mexican cartel members and seized two AR-15 style rifles in the same area. In that incident, DPS Spokesperson Lieutenant Chris Olivarez told Breitbart Texas the men were believed to be connected to the Cartel Del Noreste faction of the Los Zetas cartel.

Olivarez told Breitbart Texas, “One of the men told CID special agents they came under fire from Mexican law enforcement and fled across the Rio Grande.” The men were wearing camouflage clothing, complicating the search to find them in the thick brush along the banks of the river.

In addition to the recent incursions by suspected Mexican cartel gunmen, law enforcement agencies are also dealing with a significant surge in migrant crossings in the area. Weekend migrant apprehension numbers provided by the Border Patrol for the Rio Grande Valley Sector show a nearly 200% increase over the last month.  A total of 1647 migrants were encountered during the weekend ending July 8. During the weekend ending August 6, the agency reported migrant encounters had climbed to 4,660.

During the first ten days of August, RGV agents apprehended more than 10,000 migrants, according to a confidential law enforcement source. During the same period, Del Rio Sector agents apprehended more than 6,000 migrants.

Randy Clark is a 32-year veteran of the United States Border Patrol.  Prior to his retirement, he served as the Division Chief for Law Enforcement Operations, directing operations for nine Border Patrol Stations within the Del Rio, Texas, Sector. Follow him on Twitter @RandyClarkBBTX.

Bob Price contributed to this report. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX.