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8/1/17, "Drug Cartels Fuming at New U.S. Policy Screening 100% of Mexican Cargo Trucks," judicialwatch.org
"In a major shift from lax Obama-era regulations, the Trump
administration is finally allowing customs officers to screen all cargo
trucks entering the U.S. from Mexico and sources on both sides of the
border tell Judicial Watch Mexican drug cartels are fuming. U.S. Customs
and Border Protection is using X-ray technology and other non-intrusive
tools to screen 100% of cargo trucks crossing the southern border after
eight years of sporadic or random screening permitted under the Obama
administration.
“We felt like we were the welcoming committee and not like we were
guarding our borders,” said veteran U.S. Customs agent Patricia Cramer,
who also serves as president of the Arizona chapter of the agency’s
employee union.
“The order was to facilitate traffic, not to stop any
illegal drugs from entering the country,” Cramer added. “We want to
enforce the law. That’s what we signed up for.” Cramer, a canine handler
stationed at the Nogales port of entry in Arizona, said illicit drugs
are pouring in through the southern border, especially massive
quantities of fentanyl, an opioid painkiller that the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) says is more potent than morphine.
Approximately 471,000 trucks pass through the U.S-Mexico border monthly, according to figures published
by the U.S. Department of Transportation. The busiest port of entry is
in Laredo, Texas where 167,553 trucks enter the U.S. from Mexico
monthly, followed by Otay Mesa in California (76,953), El Paso, Texas
(58,913), Hidalgo, Texas (45,355) and Nogales with 29,439. Other busy
ports include East Calexico, California (29,173), Brownsville, Texas
(16,140) and Eagle Pass, Texas (12,952). Trucks bring in everything from
auto parts to appliances, produce and livestock. In fact, a veteran
Homeland Security official told Judicial Watch that cattle trucks passed
without inspection during the Obama administration because Mexican
farmers complained that the security screenings frightened their cows.
“Our guys were livid that we were not allowed to check cattle,” the
federal official said.
Frontline customs agents stationed along the southern border confirm
that trucks containing “legitimate” goods are often used by
sophisticated drug cartels to move cargo north. This is hardly
surprising since most illegal drugs in the United States come from Mexico,
according to the DEA, and Mexican traffickers remain the greatest
threat to the United States. They’re classified as Transitional Criminal
Organizations (TCOs) by the government and for years they’ve smuggled
in enormous quantities of heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and
marijuana. Last year the Congressional Research Service (CRS), the
nonpartisan agency that provides Congress with policy and legal
analysis, published a disturbing report outlining how Mexican cartels
move record quantities of drugs into the U.S. Because cartels move the
drugs through the Southwest border, western states have become part of
what’s known as the “heroin transit zone,” according to the CRS.
Federal law enforcement sources tell Judicial Watch Mexican cartels
operate like efficient businesses that resort to “other more treacherous
routes” when necessary, but driving through a port of entry in a cargo
truck is a preferred method of moving drugs.
Cartels station shifts of
spotters with binoculars in Mexican hills near border checkpoints to
determine the level of security screenings. “They know if we’re on the
job, the level of screening that we’re conducting,” Cramer said. “The
cartels watch us all the time.” Nogales is a favorite for cartel
spotters because the U.S. checkpoint sits in a valley surrounded by
hills on the Mexican side, where unobstructed views facilitate
surveillance. “They see everything,” Cramer said. For years the cartel
spotters saw that much of the cargo passing through the checkpoint was
waved through, according to agents contacted by Judicial Watch."
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Wednesday, August 2, 2017
Trump admin. finally allowing customs officials to screen all cargo trucks driving into US from Mexico. During Obama, “the order was to facilitate traffic, not to stop any illegal drugs from entering the country,” a veteran agent said. “We want to enforce the law. That’s what we signed up for." Massive quantities of opioid fentanyl coming across-Judicial Watch
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