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Here’s the story this time. what do you thin...

Posted on Sun, Aug. 27, 2006email thisprint this Pa. soldiers return from border patrol By Barbara Barrett CDT Washington correspondent LOS ALGODONES, Mexico -- Not five minutes after the boatload of migrants slipped across the Colorado River at dusk, the "dogcatchers" arrived. First, U.S. Border Patrol trucks -- the ones migrants call dogcatchers -- tore down a dirt road and cut their headlights. Then a helicopter dipped and circled with deafening blades, its spotlights probing across the water and the mountainside, again and again and again. On the Mexican side, above the town of Los Algodones, Francisco Lopez watched and listened. For a month, he said, he has been waiting. Three times he almost crossed. "They're here day and night," said Lopez, 42, who traveled from the state of Michoacán, Mexico, hoping to reach New York. The show of force now includes about 6,000 National Guard troops. Almost 70 soldiers from Pennsylvania returned this month after two weeks in the Arizona desert. There, they set up observation points on a levee within sight of the border. They used binoculars and night vision goggles to spot movement. They helped catch at least 10 migrants. "It made you think, 'Yeah, you're here helping people out,'" said Capt. Brad Pierson, a State College resident and commander of the 28th Military Police Company, based in Johnstown and Greensburg. The Pennsylvanians saw tragedy among their own, too. Spc. Kirsten Fike, 36, of Warren, collapsed in her first hours working in the 104-degree heat. She died a day later at a Yuma, Ariz., hospital. An autopsy on the cause of her death was inconclusive. The deployment of guard troops is part of President Bush's Operation Jump Start, a project meant to discourage migrants from risking the dash into the United States. It's having results: The increased security is pushing migrants into the harsh desert and mountains, forcing more to use smugglers and leading those who are caught to make repeated attempts that sap their strength and savings each time. Many walk for days with little food or water. In July, an 11-year-old girl was found in cardiac arrest on a 108-degree day in the remote Tohono O'odham Indian Reservation. The girl, Olivia Nogueda, wearing pink sneakers and traveling with her older sister, was declared dead at the reservation hospital. In the following week, in two counties in eastern Arizona, seven other migrants died, including two women and a 12-year-old boy. Last year, as the Border Patrol increased enforcement around urban areas, more than 460 migrants died trying to cross the border, nearly half in Arizona. "The more difficult you make it for people to cross, the more people will die," said Joseph Nevins, spokesman for Tucson-based No More Deaths, a coalition of humanitarian border groups. In eastern Arizona, Pima County medical examiner Bruce Parks holds onto the bodies. He has more than 200 dating back to 2004. "It's obviously a terrible tragedy for relatively young people to be dying under these circumstances," Parks said, hours after an autopsy on 11-year-old Olivia. "This may be the year we see a downturn. It would be nice." In Pennsylvania, Pierson occasionally deals with illegal immigrants in his work as a state trooper. He said he knows little about the politics of immigration, but standing guard in Arizona made him wonder what drives migrants to take such risks. "Obviously they're crossing for a reason," Pierson said. "To me, it seems dangerous. They're crossing in the heat, in the desert. I think, how bad can it be in Mexico to even go through this, take these chances?" Word spread quickly throughout Mexico after Bush made his announcement this spring. "I read the newspapers," said Hector Encinas, 29, who lives in the Mexican town of San Luis Rio Colorado, just south of San Luis, Ariz. "It's more hard right now," said Encinas, standing near an opening in the border wall. "They got a fence, more soldiers, more Border Patrol." Guadalupe Murrieta, 45, washing dishes in her home nearby, said she never liked the migrants who wander through at night, making her fearful for her children and grandchildren. Now, she said, it's quieter. What sends migrants into the distance are the images of the National Guard standing watch. In San Luis, the Pennsylvania soldiers worked under camouflage nets, setting up observation points every half-mile on a levee near the Colorado River, above stretches of dirt and fields of tall, swaying grasses. It was maybe the third day on watch for the Pennsylvanians when, about 3 a.m., one of Pierson's soldiers spotted movement at the levee. Four people -- three women and a man -- had crawled through the grasses and were trying to dash across the levee and into a nearby neighborhood. The troops called Border Patrol. All four migrants were caught. A few nights later, another soldier spotted six more. "It's nice to see the results, to see that you're making a difference," Pierson said. "It was good for morale." Mostly, Pierson thinks the Pennsylvanians were a deterrent, frightening migrants from even making the attempt. In Mexico, some residents aren't so sure. Migrants pass through the cotton and alfalfa fields around Rebeca Moreno's store near Los Algodones, a quarter-mile from the Colorado River, ignoring the signs warning "Peligroso!" -- danger. Moreno walked though the back of her store to an open window. Pointing across the cotton field, she said in Spanish: There is the river. The migrants try to swim across. They're caught, sent home and try again. She pointed to a spot in the road. A man died right there, she said. On the dirt road in San Luis Rio Colorado, behind the border wall, men were checking their chances recently as evening drew near. They lit trash fires, hoping to obscure the heat of their bodies. One man shinnied up a wire to peek above the wall toward the levee; a few others pretended to fish in the canal. Nearby stood Ricardo Mann, 47, the heat of the flames at his back, considering the soldiers standing watch. "It's like another wall," Mann said. "A human wall."

is there a music store in tucson arizona?

Is there a music store in tucson arizona, if so where?

Ron Paul Revolution March and Rally Tucson AZ 12-2...

News coverage of a March and rally in Tucson Arizona 12-29-07, what a time, you know there where only 120 people but hay we know the media can never get it right, HAHA ...

Where in Tucson, AZ is there ballrooms for special...

Something not that big-- enough for 200+ people, spatious (big) dance floor, and your decorations to be very visible to your guests. Something like or better than the Casino Ballroom, Hellenic Center, Flamingo Hotel, Arizona Saguaro Post.

Aren’t they racially profiling Sheriff Joe, ...

Hispanic lawmakers join call for Arpaio investigation 670 commentsby Scott Wong - Apr. 17, 2008 04:01 PM The Arizona Republic Showing a unified front, Latino state lawmakers said Thursday they are backing Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon's call for a federal probe into Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio's recent crime sweeps in Hispanic neighborhoods. Lawmakers said the sheriff's tactics are tantamount to racial profiling and reflect poorly on all Arizonans, regardless of their ethnic heritage. “When one group is under attack like this, when one group is having their civil rights violated, I believe it imperils all of us, everyone across this state and across this country,” said Rep. Linda Lopez, D-Tucson, who joined six other members of the Arizona Legislative Latino Caucus at a Capitol news conference. “That is not what this country is about. We're not about targeting individuals because of the color of their skin, their religion or their gender,” she added. “This has to be put a stop to, and I believe an investigation is fully warranted.” Arpaio was quick to fire back, vowing he will not be intimidated by threats from Gordon or state legislators. “I am not concerned about (the caucus) going to Washington. I have nothing to fear and will continue to do crime suppression. I will continue to lock up illegals,” said Arpaio, who denied that he targets Hispanic communities. “I will not be intimated by minority groups.” The Latino Caucus said it planned to send a letter Thursday to U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey requesting that the Justice Department launch an investigation into whether Arpaio's “saturation patrols” constitute a violation of civil rights. “Simply put, (Arpaio) is using the guise of ‘crime suppression' for the sole purpose of rooting out and deporting Hispanics who are in this country illegally,” the letter states. “He is not, however, considering the collateral damage that is occurring. Specifically, that the civil rights of Hispanic citizens are being infringed upon by being unfairly subjected to racial profiling.” Caucus members said without federal intervention, Arpaio will continue to target Hispanic communities throughout the county, creating a hostile atmosphere that could escalate into violence. In recent weeks, Arpaio has conducted crime sweeps in Guadalupe and parts of Phoenix. He said his officers arrested 30 illegal immigrants earlier this week after sweeps in Wickenburg. The sheriff indicated he will target Mesa next and plans to bring his patrols back to Phoenix despite objections from Mayor Gordon. In an April 4 letter, Gordon requested the Justice Department's civil-rights division and the FBI to investigate a “pattern and practice of conduct that includes discriminatory harassment, improper stops, searches and arrests.” Rep. Ben Miranda, a Phoenix Democrat and co-chair of the 14-member Latino Caucus, said Arpaio's sweeps have produced “plenty of examples” of racial profiling of innocent citizens. The caucus successfully fought for the release of a U.S.-born citizen who was taken into custody on March 22 after one of Arpaio's sweeps, Miranda said. Though he declined to identify the individual or provide further details, Miranda said the Hispanic man was incarcerated for 10 days despite producing a copy of his birth certificate. “These are the things that are going on in this community that need to be brought to the surface,” Miranda said. The Sheriff's Office disputed Miranda's depiction of the incident, saying the man was “belligerent” and refused to show identification upon being stopped for a traffic violation. Only after he was arrested and turned over to federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents was it discovered he was a citizen, said Brian Sands, the sheriff's chief of enforcement. “He was so uncooperative through all stages of the booking process, he was trying to get into a position where we might deport him,” Sands said. Miranda's brother, Sen. Richard Miranda, a Tolleson Democrat and the caucus' other co-chair, questioned during the news conference why Arpaio has not consulted with local police agencies when carrying out such sweeps. “Without that type of local advice or information,” the senator said, “these saturation raids are nothing more than a way for Sheriff Arpaio to gain media attention and obviously his re-election.” Arpaio dismissed the comments as petty politics and sought to turn the tables on his critics. He said Gordon has joined the immigration debate to drum up publicity for a future gubernatorial bid and that Latino Caucus members need the attention to retain their seats this fall. “I sure don't need this to get elected. I've been elected on tents and pink underwear,” said the sheriff, referring to two of his widely publicized initiatives. “They may need this to get themselves elected.”

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