Boxes contain American Patrol's analysis of this report.
Written by Glenn SpencerIs The Costly Border Fence Worth It?
April 8, 2008
(CBS) -- It had Americans clamoring for a border fence: Mexican nationals storming the border near San Diego, day and night. That was the early 1990s.
Today, on that border is double fencing, stadium lighting, surveillance cameras and motion detectors. It's the most heavily fortified five miles of the border - all monitored from a command center near San Diego, CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker reports.
Not true. The double fence covers ten miles, not five miles. "Over the years the San Diego sector has been able to incrementally gain operational control of this area," said Michael Fisher, the San Diego sector's chief patrol agent.
Proof? The number of people caught crossing illegally has dropped dramatically from 600,000 a year in the early '90s to just 153,000 last year.
Nonsense. Where the fence was built apprehensions dropped by over 90%. CBS is including apprehensions where there is no fence. This is dishonest. Fewer apprehensions means fewer people sneaking across, says the Border Patrol.
But not even all of the fencing can fully shut down the illegal flow.
There are two fences, lights, cameras ... and a lot of action.
"A lot of action, absolutely," Fisher said.
For every action there's an opposite reaction. Put up a fence and "they can be up and over, in some cases in less than a minute," Fisher said.
Chief Agent Fisher is a paid spokeshole for DHS Head Chertoff and BP Head Aguilar. It's frustrating and expensive. Only 670 miles of the 2,000-mile border are to get fencing and that's behind schedule. The price tag: $1.2 billion, says the Border Patrol. That's up to $3 million per mile.
CBS should have reported that this is a ripoff. The small fences they are building cost too much. But factor in life-time maintenance and congressional researchers say the price could top $50 billion.
Nonsense: The $50 billion maintenance price tag was discredited by American Patrol last year. More CBS incompetence and dishonesty. Today, almost every mile a different fence - short, tall, mesh, bars - intruders defeat every one. They even use car carriers to drive over.
Nonsense! They rarely defeat the San Diego Fence. Much of the rest are designed to fail. If not over, under: 21 tunnels have been discovered under the border since 2000. There are brazen ways to drive through. One man came sewn into a van's seat.
Stupid. There are only about 100 places along the border where a tunnel could emerge into a physical structure in the United States. (Don't try digging under the Rio Grande.) These could be easily monitored and sealed off. So, it sounds like no matter what you do, you're finding a way around it.
"Yes, they are - or they're trying to," Fisher said.
And that's where there is a fence. A state away, near third-generation cattleman Richard Hodges ranch south of Tucson, Ariz., there are miles and miles of open spaces along the U.S.-Mexico border. Only rusty barbed-wire divides the two countries.
Not true. The DHS has built a fence along the border at Hodges Ranch. See it here. "But that is no deterrent for anybody to come across," Hodges said.
The government promises a virtual fence of sensors and cameras for areas like this, but with that still on the horizon, those controversial border-watchers, the Minutemen, are building a $650,000 real fence along Hodges' mile of border to keep illegal crossers out.
What nonsense! CBS could clearly see the Minuteman fence laying is total disrepair and hadn't been touched in 17 months. Had they checked they would have learned it was a total rip-off. "But won't they just move on down the road to the next property?" Whitaker asked.
"They will, they will," Hodges said. "It's just not going to stop as long as there's a market for illegals."
Whitaker met a coyote, a small-time people smuggler, across the border in Tijuana. He asked CBS News to conceal his identity. He boasts that he gets 40 people a week into the U.S. - most through the fortified zone near San Diego - at up to $3,500 a person.
He said, through a translation, "You can build three or four fences along the border, but people will continue to cross because of the magnet of work."
Most Americans think putting up a fence is going to stop the illegal flow. But is it?
"No, not in and of itself," Fisher said.
But Fisher says a smart mix of fencing, technology and manpower can do for the entire border what it's done in San Diego.
"What we've done is we've increased the probability of apprehension," he said.
The question is, will a nation demanding total control of its borders be satisfied with less.
This must be one of the worst pieces of reporting by a major network in the history of television. Couric should be fired.
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