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Police Investigate Killings of Illegal Immigrants in Desert

October 23, 2002
By NICK MADIGAN






RED ROCK, Ariz., Oct. 22 - The police are investigating
whether armed vigilantes, self-appointed guardians of the
border with Mexico, fatally shot at least two illegal
immigrants in the desert last week.

A 32-year-old man who was part of a group of a dozen
migrants waiting to be picked up by smugglers at a pond
just west of here last Wednesday told investigators that he
escaped through the brush after two men wearing camouflage
fatigues descended on the group, firing an automatic rifle
and a pistol.

Police officers found two bodies riddled with bullets and
no sign of the remaining nine migrants. It is not known
whether they escaped or were loaded into vehicles and taken
away, either dead or alive.

Mike Minter, a spokesman for the Pinal County Sheriff's
Department, said detectives were looking into several
possibilities, including a suggestion that the shootings
were a result of a dispute between rival coyotes, as the
smugglers who guide migrants across the border are called.

Mr. Minter said the nine missing people "may have been
taken from one coyote group by another coyote group."
Conversely, he said, the possibility that vigilantes were
involved "hasn't been ruled out."

Migrants-rights advocates in Tucson, about 30 miles
southeast of here, say the killings are part of a vigilante
terror campaign intended to stop the flow of immigrants
from Mexico.

The advocates discounted the notion that rival coyotes, who
usually blend in with their charges so as to avoid
detection, were responsible for the killings.

"Never have I seen a coyote or a smuggler wear camo or
military dress," said John M. Fife, pastor of Southside
Presbyterian Church in Tucson and a former member of the
Sanctuary movement, which helped political refugees,
primarily from Central America, gain asylum in the United
States in the 1980's.

At a news conference on Monday, Isabel Garcia, 49, a public
defender in Pima County and co-chairwoman of the Human
Rights Coalition/Indigenous Alliance Without Borders, said
the killings "crystalize the increasingly hostile and
violent atmosphere created by failed U.S. border policies."


Members of the self-professed border guardian groups denied
any connection to last week's deaths. Glenn Spencer,
founder of American Border Patrol, based in Sierra Vista,
19 miles north of the Mexican border, said his associates
carried weapons during their patrols only for protection
against mountain lions.

But Mr. Spencer, 65, acknowledged that his goal was to
repatriate all illegal immigrants, even ones who have been
in the country for years.

"They're able to outsmart us all the time," Mr. Spencer
said of the migrants. "I'm not interested in enforcing the
law. It's about telling the American people what's going on
at the border."

Roger Barnett, who lives on a 22,000-acre ranch two miles
north of the border, near Douglas, and who heads Ranch
Rescue, the most visible of the citizens' patrol groups,
said coyotes were responsible for the killings last week.
The border was "out of control," Mr. Barnett said.

"The government has left us alone out here - they forgot
about us," Mr. Barnett said from his tow-truck shop in
Sierra Vista. "They got one hell of a problem here with
these invasions from Mexico."

Mr. Barnett, who has allied himself with Mr. Spencer's
group, said he and his brother, Donald, had detained at
least 8,000 illegal immigrants over the past four and a
half years and turned them over to the United States Border
Patrol. He said that the migrants, who are made to sit on
the ground, sometimes "get mouthy with us" and that he was
forced to become physically aggressive to control them.

"If you go out there and you're not armed, you're a fool,"
said Mr. Barnett, who carries a 9-millimeter pistol. "Who's
going to protect you out there?"

A brochure distributed by one of the citizens' patrols
urges volunteers around the country to "come and stay at
the ranches and help keep trespassers from destroying
private property." Next to a headline that reads "Fun in
the Sun," the invitation says that volunteers "may be
deputized if necessary."

Members of Ranch Rescue said that, clad in camouflage and
armed with semiautomatic rifles, they seized about 280
pounds of marijuana a week ago from smugglers crossing the
border near Lochiel, 65 miles south of Tucson.

Sheriff Marco Antonio Estrada of Santa Cruz County, where
Lochiel is, said Ranch Rescue teams did not have the
training to intercept drug traffickers and might lead such
smugglers to believe that trafficking was easier, if they
were not up against federal officers or local deputies.

"I have concerns that they're not really welcome, or really
not needed," Sheriff Estrada said of the citizens' patrols.
"They are not helping law enforcement, definitely not."

The known survivor of last week's shootings is being cared
for by Mexican consular officials in Tucson, who declined
to make him available for comment because he is a material
witness in the case.

Carlos Flores Vizcarra, the consul, said so-called
vigilantes who police the border "put out a message of fear
and intimidation" that prevents a resolution of larger
questions of immigration.

Farther north, the Maricopa County Sheriff's Department is
investigating the killing of eight men, at least six of
them Mexican citizens, whose bodies were found from June to
September in the desert west of Phoenix. The men were
gagged and handcuffed or bound with duct tape and elastic
bands. Seven had been shot in the back of the head; the
eighth was stabbed.

Investigators were looking into the possibility that
smugglers had killed them for their money, or that they
were involved in drug trafficking. Lt. J. J. Tuttle, a
sheriff's department spokesman, said hate groups or
vigilantes might also be to blame.

A broad expanse of desert in southern Arizona has been the
nation's busiest region for illegal border crossings for
the past five years, with more than 333,000 arrests by the
Border Patrol in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30. With 261
miles of border, the area has become even more active since
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, which brought increased
enforcement of restrictions on crossings in California and
Texas.

The harsh conditions of Arizona's deserts led to the deaths
of at least 134 migrants, primarily from dehydration and
exposure, in the 2002 fiscal year ended Sept. 30, up from
11 in 1998. The number is more than double that of the
second-most-perilous district, in eastern California, where
63 people died in the last fiscal year.

At the scene of the shootings here, yellow police tape
fluttered in the breeze tonight by the algae-covered pond.
On the ground, four sticks were arranged in the form of a
cross; while underneath them an X had been burned into the
dirt. David Cook, assistant manager of the Red Rock Custom
Feeding Company, about a mile west of the pond, recalled
his conversation with the survivor of the shootings, who
had gone there for help in what Mr. Cook called a
"panicked" state.

"He kept telling me, `They were soldiers, they were
soldiers', " Mr. Cook said. "I told him that soldiers don't
kill people up here."

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/23/national/23BORD.html?ex=1036383403&ei=1&en=2e4cc6059d0b5bba



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