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Posts Tagged ‘Drug Traffickers’

What will it take for our government to finally secure our nation’s borders, especially the border that is?

March 24th, 2011 3 comments

What will it take for our government to finally secure our nation’s borders, especially the border that is supposed to separate the United States from Mexico?
Forty-eight Americans were murdered in Mexico during the first six months of 2010 – a deadly pace that appears likely to exceed any previous year of homicides on record, according to a Houston Chronicle analysis of the U.S. State Department’s death registry.

The tally doesn’t include two Texans reported killed Sept. 30 in separate incidents in isolated areas of Tamaulipas, where the terrorist group known as the Zetas has been warring with their Gulf Cartel rivals in communities all along the southeast Texas border.

A college freshman from Brownsville, Jonathon William Torres Cazares, was shot and killed after authorities say his public bus got hijacked on a highway in Tamaulipas.

"He was 18 years old and traveling in Mexico visiting his family," according to a statement issued by Leticia "Letty" Fernandez, a spokeswoman for the University of Texas at Brownsville and Texas Southmost College. "Our thoughts go out to his family and friends."

Meanwhile, David Michael Hartley, 30, of McAllen, was reported to have been shot in the head by a boatload of armed men while jet skiing on the Mexican side of the binational Falcon Reservoir, shared by Texas and Tamaulipas. His body has not yet been recovered.

State Department data shows at least three other Americans were slain this year in Tamaulipas. But no details were available. In much of Tamaulipas, the news media are no longer reporting on crime because of threats and violence against journalists carried out by drug traffickers.

slayings rise steadily

American killings in Mexico have risen steadily since 2007, when drug violence began to rage out of control in border cities including Nuevo Laredo and Tijuana and later spread to Ciudad Juarez, now ranked as one of the most dangerous cities in the world.
http://azstarnet.com/news/local/border/article_66e4b7af-a5a2-5c29-963a-f667e49859dd.html
Mexican officials also also refused to permit American law enforcement officials to enter the Mexican side of the lake in order to search for Michael Hartley’s body.

However, when 6 citizens of Mexico were allegedly assaulted in New York City- Mexican officials took to the streets of Staten Island, New York to patrol New York City streets to protect their citizens and were not blocked from doing so by the local government.

U.S. Spending At Least $18.6 Million Per Day to Incarcerate Illegal Aliens; More Than 195,000 Illegal Aliens Deported in Fiscal 2010 Had Committed Crimes Here The cost per day for these prisoners is based on Justice Department incarceration cost estimates from 2001 and on the lower-end figure of 300,000 incarcerated deportable aliens, which means the actual expense today could be substantially higher than $18.6 million per day.http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/least-186-million-spent-daily-house-inca

It will take someone “important” such as a politician or a member of the demonrat’s media getting killed until they pay attention.
The violence doesn’t affect them and their loyalty is to the party first and foremost. They leave the little people to fend for ourselves and then sue and harrass border states that are trying to get the feds to enforce the existing border.The National Geographic HD Channel has an excellent series about the US/Mexican border. They do an excellent job of showing what our U.S. Border Patrol Agents and U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agents are up against.

Harvard Professor Gates was he racially profiled?

March 12th, 2010 4 comments

Well time for my story. I am not one of the 25 most influential Americans in the USA, I did not graduate from Yale, I am magna or summa cm laude…I am just a former SSGT that was racially profiled just like this famous and prominent African-American gentleman. I am not afraid to name one of the officers DC Roper remember his name. He and his co-hort who really was not at fault pulled me over because I was BLACK and I fit the profile of the Jamaican Drug traffickers they were looking to stop. I believe had I not let them search my car I would not be writing this. Since that time, my life has really spiralled out of control I cannot work anymore. I cannot find a job to support my family. I blame some on me but the rest on Milton County Florida on the Santa Rosa County Sheriffs Dept. On DC Roper and all connected who would not let us file a grievance against the police department by me SGT Rice and 2 of my white buddies one named Foxx who grew up in Milton and knows how racist it still is. This even happened tome in the late 1980’s I posted bond I was let out I was refused PTI (pretrial Intervention ) because I was married that disqualified me. Now I have to see a psychiatrist. For all the crap this little racist town put me through. If you have a similar story and especially if you are a person of color tell it now …now that one of the most influential and famous black Americans has been arrested by racial profiling. I was a SGT in the 919th Special operations Air Force police. I had never had a record. Now the FBI has me on their charts did death do me part. I can only be restored by a pardon from the Governor of Florida but almost twenty years has passed. I hope this will not ever happen to anyone it is tragic it happened to Professor Gates of Harvard. Maybe and not because he is black but he is looking out for all Americans and don’t think President Obama is going to take it lightly that one his his most influential and famous citizens was racially profiled and then put in handcuffs and basically snubbed by Harvard Campus police who refused to give their names they should all be charged and fired.

I don’t believe he was racially profiled, but he was singled out for being rude and obnoxious to the responding police officer, the problem with the police is the fact we have a first amendment right to free speech, so once the professor produced documentation of his place of residency the police investigation stopped, the fact he continued to be rude to the police after the fact is not a crime, i.e. why the DA dropped the charge

So while the police may have been offended by the way he conducted himself, once it was established he was not a criminal, the offense nature absent intent to harm the officer, is allowed under our first amendment rights, the police had no right to arrested a person expressing their first amendment right to free speech