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NewsMax.com
-- September 2, 2005 Bush endangers America by moving BP to hurricane region U.S. Border Patrol officers are being shifted away from their posts guarding the U.S.- Mexico border to aid in the Katrina Hurricane disaster, leaving the country vulnerable to illegals and terrorists attempting to enter the U.S., NewsMax has learned. -- The Bush administration ordered the U.S. Customs and Border Protection... |
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Hal Netkin's
LAWatchdog.com -- August 18, 2005 Listen to Chertoff's spokeshole shuck and jive about invasion A reader informed American Patrol on August 25 about a live interview of some DHS BS- peddler named Russ Knocke being dragged over the coals by talk show host Doug McIntyre, of KABC radio in Los Angeles. This is a 'must hear'. If this clown is representative of the people we have protecting American lives, we are in deep trouble. |
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DHS |
Joseph Farah
-- WorldNetDaily.com -- August 26, 2005 Good news, bad news on border The good news is Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff this week acknowledged we have a problem with our border. -- The bad news is his solution is more judges and lawyers, not fences and enforcement agents. -- There's no question Washington is becoming aware of the growing public frustration over the way our country is being invaded... |
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Snake Oil |
As Heard
on KABC -- August 25, 2005 McIntyre grills Chertoff pal on border plans Doug Mcintyre, a talk show host on KABC Radio in Los Angeles, interviewed the spokesman for Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff live on the air this morning. McIntyre grilled spokesman Russ Knocke on just what Chertoff's grand plan to fix the border nightmare 'once and for all' consists of... |
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Chertoff |
KVOA-TV
-- Tucson -- August 25, 2005 Local officials react to new DHS enforcement scheme The nation's top immigration official admits that there's lots of public frustration over illegal immigrants, and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff says the federal government must step up its border security efforts. [Chertoff is doing nothing but pushing globalist Bush's destructive amnesty scam.] |
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Chertoff |
Dallas Morning
News -- August 24, 2005 Bush lackey poo-poo's idea of civilian patrols Washington -- Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff was sharply dismissive Tuesday of a Texas congressman's proposal to create armed civilian militias to assist law enforcement along treacherous sections of the U.S.- Mexico border. -- "The border is a very dangerous place," Mr. Chertoff said. [Duh! This guy is simply peddling Bush's nutty amnesty scheme.] |
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DHS |
Associated
Press -- August 23, 2005 Bush lackeys working to tighten security (and other jokes) Washington -- The nation's homeland security chief said Tuesday he had ordered a review of border security strategy before two governors declared an immigration emergency on the U.S.-Mexico line. -- Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told reporters his department had recently begun mapping out its surveillance equipment... |
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KRGV-TV
-- Harlingen -- August 11, 2005 MS-13 kills coyote, police say Roma, Texas -- A neighborhood was on alert Wednesday after Mara Salvatrucha gang members allegedly killed an immigrant smuggler. -- The MS-13 gang members are believed to have ties to al-Qaida, and sheriff's deputies want locals to be on the lookout. [Also see: What homeland security?] |
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USAToday
-- August 9, 2005 Congressman: U.S. had monitored 9/11 hijackers Sept. 11 ringleader Mohammed Atta and three other hijackers were identified by defense intelligence officials more than a year before the attacks but information about their possible connections to al-Qaeda never were forwarded to law enforcement, Rep. Curt Weldon said Tuesday. |
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Commander of Malfeasance |
Pittsburgh
Tribune-Review Editorial -- August 7, 2005 The Mexican threat While the Bush administration's and Congress' servility to the open borders/cheap labor lobby persists, Mexico has become the chief supplier of illicit drugs to the United States, replacing the Colombians. -- Does $400 billion annually sound like a nice round figure? -- The trade is buttressed by the "Zetas".... |
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Poll Info |
Diane M.
Grassi -- ElitesTV.com -- July
20, 2005 Inactions by Government Is Biggest National Security Threat When the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 was signed into law last December by President Bush, Republican Congressmen in the House of Representatives were concerned that the president's proposed budget for fiscal year 2006 would not provide enough funding for the additional Border Patrol agents... [See: What Homeland Security?] |
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What Homeland Security? |
Washington
Times -- July 15, 2005 Senate shuns attempt to add Border Patrol agents The Senate voted yesterday against fulfilling its pledge from last year to hire 2,000 more Border Patrol agents and fund 8,000 new detention beds for illegal aliens in fiscal 2006, as some potential presidential candidates weighed in on border security and illegal immigration. |
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What Homeland Security? |
Fox News
-- July 12, 2005 Other Than Mexican? Welcome to America For many people around the world, the U.S.-Mexico border is a doorway to opportunity - one that's unlocked and wide open. -- Brazilians, Chinese, Pakistanis and many others are joining the tide of Mexicans who sneak across every day. -- "OTMs include people from all over the world - South America, the Middle East, the Caribbean..." |
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What Homeland Security? |
WorldNetDaily.com
-- July 11, 2005 Al-Qaida nukes already in U.S. ...According to captured al-Qaida leaders and documents, the plan is called the "American Hiroshima" and involves the multiple detonation of nuclear weapons already smuggled into the U.S. over the Mexican border with the help of the MS-13 street gang and other organized crime groups. |
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WRAL-TV
-- Raleigh-Durham -- July 6, 2005 Illegals grabbed at Air Force base Seymour Johnson AFB, N. C. -- A sting operation involving illegal immigrants has been uncovered at a North Carolina military base. -- The U.S. Attorney's Office told WRAL 50 to 60 illegal immigrants were arrested at Seymour Johnston Air Force Base Wednesday morning. WRAL has learned they were working on the base... |
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What Homeland Security? |
Knight-Ridder
Newspapers -- July 4, 2005 Arrests exposing security weaknesses Nearly four years after the Sept. 11 calamity, arrests of illegal immigrant workers are exposing security gaps at sensitive sites. -- everal weeks ago, the Homeland Security Department's Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, or ICE, detained 26 undocumented workers [criminals] at the Northrop Grumman shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss... |
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What Homeland Security? |
Associated
Press -- July 4, 2005 Border insecurity On the U.S.-Canada Border (AP) -- Nearly four years after the Sept. 11 terror attacks and after billions in security investment on both sides of this frontier stretching from Atlantic to Pacific, authorities and average folks are still jittery. Here's why: At the edge of a sprawling raspberry field where Washington state meets British Columbia... |
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Onslaught |
New York
Times -- June 30, 2005 Brazilians Streaming Into U.S. Through Mexican Border Braúnas, Minas Gerais, Brazil -- ...Encouraged by highly organized groups of smugglers offering relatively cheap packages, Brazilians recently have been migrating in record numbers to the U.S. -- With direct entry to the U.S. tougher than in the past, more often than not their route of choice is through Mexico... |
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What Homeland Security? |
New York
Times -- June 22, 2005 U.S. Borders Vulnerable, Witnesses Say The federal government's efforts to prevent terrorists from smuggling a nuclear weapon into the United States are so poorly managed and reliant on ineffective equipment that the nation remains extremely vulnerable to a catastrophic attack, scientists and a government auditor warned a House committee on Tuesday. |
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Metro Toronto
Newspaper -- June 16, 2005 U.S. border surveillance system became fiasco Washington (Reuters) -- A $250 million program to put remote video surveillance cameras along parts of the United States' northern and southern borders was grossly and possibly criminally mismanaged, a House subcommittee heard on Thursday... |
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What Homeland Security? |
Range News
-- Willcox, Arizona -- June 15, 2005 Jail space unavailable as onslaught soars The U.S. border with Mexico is overwhelmed, federal officials said last week. -- That's not a surprise to anyone who has lived or worked along the international boundary. -- What is startling are two factors that were announced: the number of non-Mexican illegal immigrants increased significantly in the past fiscal year, and there isn't enough room in prisons... |
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al-Zarqawi |
Del Rio
News-Herald -- May 23, 2005 Officials: OTMs 'a very grave problem' The "Other Than Mexican" problem is far from solved, but both the indignation and the sheer numbers of illegal immigrants are rising fast. -- Mexicans who illegally cross the Rio Grande are easily deported. After processing with photos and fingerprints, Border Patrol vans simply carry them to the nearest international bridge... |
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What Homeland Security? |
WorldNetDaily.com
-- May 22, 2005 Without more detention facilities, 'OTMs' must be released The president of a labor organization representing Border Patrol employees and a Texas congressman are criticizing the House's recently passed Homeland Security bill for failing to fund construction of new detention facilities to hold illegal border-crossers from countries other than Mexico, resulting in their automatic release pending a later hearing date. |
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The Missoulian
-- May 22, 2005 Securing the border isn't optional Luis Posada Carriles is a suspected terrorist accused of bombing a Cuban airliner and orchestrating a series of bombings in Cuba. He's well-known by the U.S. government, and his name shows up on terrorist watch lists. Several weeks ago, he crossed illegally from Mexico into the United States. When Cuba and Venezuela, where he is wanted, sought help in capturing him... |
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Commander of Malfeasance |
Wheeling
News-Register -- May 20, 2005 Border Security Still Not Taken Seriously Massive protests of government inefficiency tend to fold quickly once improvements have been made. It tells you something, then, that the Minuteman Project hasn't gone away. -- Far from it, in fact: Minuteman organizers have revealed that they plan to take their volunteers to a second site along the U.S.-Mexican border... |
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Arizona
Daily Star -- May 6, 2005 New border agencies, same woes For two years, the mantra at the Department of Homeland Security has been "one team, one fight." -- But since its inception, the same management problems that plagued the previous federal immigration and border enforcement efforts have resurfaced in Homeland Security's two immigration agencies... |
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DHS |
Arizona
Daily Star -- May 6, 2005 New border agencies, same woes For two years, the mantra at the Department of Homeland Security has been "one team, one fight." -- But since its inception, the same management problems that plagued the previous federal immigration and border enforcement efforts have resurfaced in Homeland Security's two immigration agencies... |
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Onslaught |
KGBT-TV
-- Harlingen -- April 29, 2005 Invaders overrunning small Texas town La Grulla, a small Starr County [Texas] town, asked for help Thursday to deal with the growing problem of illegal immigration. -- "We're seeing people from other countries like especially from Central America and Brazil," said La Grulla Mayor Alejandro Solis. -- The town of La Grulla is located along the U.S. Mexican Border... |