![]() |
|
FEATURE ARTICLE |
|
|
|
Permanent DHS Checkpoints Planned For Arizona Highways (special report - part 1)
Terry Bressi Website: Checkpoint USA Blog: Roadblock Revelations Date: 09-06-2009 Subject: Homeland Security As previously reported here,
on September 2, 2009 Congresswoman Giffords organized a community
meeting in Green Valley, Arizona to discuss the recent findings of a
GAO study regarding interior Border Patrol checkpoints. After reviewing the 147 page report
for myself and comparing it to Mr. Stana's presentation, several
discrepancies immediately popped out at me. First, Mr. Stana made it
clear that one of the primary reasons why interior Border Patrol
checkpoints are necessary is because agents at ports of entry
only attempt to interdict 30% of illegal activity crossing through
them. This 30% interdiction rate is by design. Otherwise Stana claims,
commerce, trade and vehicle traffic would be adversely affected at the
border. Additionally, the GAO report attempts to undermine
the actual numbers associated with illegal alien interdiction rates at
interior checkpoints. By studying the bar graphs available in the
report, it became apparent that even though ~10% of Tucson sector
Border Patrol agents are diverted to interior checkpoint operations
(300+ agents), the checkpoints only accounted for approximately 0.5% of Tucson sector interdictions in 2008 (roughly 1,750 out of 320,000): Additionally,
Mr. Stana misspoke regarding Border Patrol authority. He claimed the
Border Patrol has more authority to interrogate, search and seize at
interior checkpoints than the agency has at the actual border or its
functional equivalent. This is false as various Supreme Court rulings
have made amply clear. "Our prior cases have
limited significantly the reach of this congressional authorization,
requiring probable cause for any vehicle search in the interior and
reasonable suspicion for inquiry stops by roving patrols. Our holding
today, approving routine stops for brief questioning is confined to
permanent checkpoints. We understand, of course, that neither
longstanding congressional authorization nor widely prevailing practice
justifies a constitutional violation" - U.S. v Martinez-Fuerte In
summary, the GAO presentation was misleading from the beginning. It
ignored fundamental facts regarding alien interdiction rates inside the
country vs the actual border. It misrepresented Border Patrol legal
authority at interior checkpoints in comparison to the actual border.
And it brazenly claimed interior checkpoints are needed because ports
of entry are designed to be purposefully ineffective so as to not
overly burden border traffic and commerce. No where in the
presentation was any reference made to individual rights, border
corruption, violations of our right to travel, violations of our right
to be free from unreasonable search and seizure and violation of our
right to not be a witness against ourselves. I am appreciative
of Mr. Stana's honesty regarding ports of entry however. No longer can
the Border Patrol claim interior checkpoints are necessary to protect
us against illegal aliens, drug trafficking and terrorists when ports
of entry are purposefully limited in their effectiveness to 30% for the
convenience of the government. More to come in part 2...
|