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Southern AZ: DHS Checkpoint - Day 2 Video
Terry Bressi Website: Checkpoint USA Blog: Roadblock Revelations Date: 01-10-2008 Subject: Police State As indicated in my earlier post,
the Homeland Security Checkpoint was up and running for a second day
near mile marker 146 on Southern Arizona's State Route 86 as I drove
back to Tucson. I arrived at the checkpoint and videotaped the encounter shortly after 4:00 pm. Unlike my previous encounter, the federal agent who stopped me took one look at my camera and waved me through without asking any questions. I guess knowing my citizenship today wasn't nearly as important to national security as it was yesterday. Another
difference I noted today was that the stopping agent was wearing a
legible nametag this time. This has been a problem in the past because
Homeland Security agents seem to be of the opinion they don't need to
identify themselves to the public. Of course the nametag appears to be
attached with velcro which means it's easy to remove and replace with
any name the agent chooses to use on any particular day. I
also noted that one of the trucks stopped ahead of me was quickly
diverted to secondary inspection by Agent 'Gonzalez'. In the video,
the partially obscured truck can be seen pulling out of the traffic
lane and into secondary inspection with three agents moving quickly
towards it. The
occupants of the vehicle get out shortly thereafter while the agents
show a fair amount of interest in them along with the bed of the truck.
I suppose the agents were hoping to find illegal aliens or narcotics
but instead only found roofing supplies, shingles and other tools of
the trade. I know this because I observed the truck's
occupants working off and on most of the day repairing several roofs
damaged by a recent wind storm on a nearby mountaintop. The only reason
the truck and it occupants were cherry-picked out of the flow of
traffic by federal agents and given an extra special dose of Homeland Security love was because they looked and sounded hispanic. This
of course shows one of the fundamental failures of suspicionless
immigration checkpoints in the interior of the country. It's mostly
arbitrary guesswork. As such, Border Patrol agents have little more
than racial profiling to go on to decide who gets the full treatment
and who just gets harassed. As one Tucson Sector Border Patrol supervisor told me
several years ago, the Border Patrol doesn't keep records of the number
of stops agents make that don't result in a seizure. This means there's
no objective criteria to determine how effective any given operation
is, how effective any particular agent may be, or how many individuals
are being wrongfully targeted and harassed by overzealous federal
agents just trying to meet quota. Finally, I note how
interesting it is to see how quickly checkpoint operations change when
agents know they're being recorded. This is ultimately what vigilance
against government misconduct is all about. I don't know when
the next time I'll be traveling this route will be but it wont be that
far in the future. As such, I'll continue to document every encounter I
have at this or future checkpoint operations. Exposing the police state, one checkpoint at a time....
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