Los Algodones, Baja California; Mexico

This is not the End of the World, but you can see it from here!



Showing posts with label U.S. and Mexican Border. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. and Mexican Border. Show all posts

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Smuggling Bust

CALEXICO, CA - U.S. Customs and Border protection officers bust a 32-year old U.S. resident attempting to smuggle 53 pounds of cocaine worth $477,000 across the border Tuesday night.

The incident happened at the Calexico downtown port of entry during vehicle inspections.

Officers flagged a blue 2006 Nissan Sentra for further examination and with the help of a canine team discovered 23 wrapped packages of cocaine hidden behind a false wall inside the trunk.

CBP officers turned the driver, a Heber California resident over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. She was booked into the Imperial County Jail where and awaits an arraignment.

CBP seized the drugs and vehicle.

Smuggling Bust

CALEXICO, CA - U.S. Customs and Border protection officers bust a 32-year old U.S. resident attempting to smuggle 53 pounds of cocaine worth $477,000 across the border Tuesday night.

The incident happened at the Calexico downtown port of entry during vehicle inspections.

Officers flagged a blue 2006 Nissan Sentra for further examination and with the help of a canine team discovered 23 wrapped packages of cocaine hidden behind a false wall inside the trunk.

CBP officers turned the driver, a Heber California resident over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. She was booked into the Imperial County Jail where and awaits an arraignment.

CBP seized the drugs and vehicle.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Drug Tunnels

TIJUANA, Mexico – When smuggling goes smoothly for the marijuana division of the huge Sinaloa Cartel, cross-border deliveries unfold with clockwork precision.

Harvested marijuana arrives in plastic-wrapped bales at a depot hidden among the rundown warehouses on the Mexican side of the concrete U.S. border fence.

Once enough marijuana is collected, workers drop the vacuum-packed bales through shafts leading to the ever-more-elaborate tunnels that cross underneath the border through the clay-laden soil.

U.S. agents have been waging war against the tunnels for years. They use a range of high-tech devices, from ground-penetrating radar to seismic sensors, to find and destroy them. But despite the efforts, drug smugglers continue to build the tunnels, often spending $1 million to dig a single pathway equipped with lighting, forced-air ventilation, water pumps, shoring on walls and hydraulic elevators.

Lately, new tunnels have included railways. The bales move on electric mining carts with hand throttles that roll at up to 15 mph.

"A tunnel represents an incursion into the U.S., and it's a national security event," said Jose M. Garcia, who oversees the federal multi-agency San Diego Tunnel Task Force.

The location of the tunnels helps explain why agents have such difficulty finding them. The area where the most advanced tunnels have been found is adjacent to the Tijuana international airport, where scores of planes take off and land daily.

Nearby warehouses buzz with legitimate activity.

"All that noise from the airport is a great advantage to them," said Victor Clark Alfaro, an anthropologist and human rights activist in Tijuana who also lectures at San Diego State University. "This border is perforated like an anthill."

Soil makes digging easy

U.S. officials say they have found more than 160 tunnels since 1990 along the 1,954-mile border, mostly in the stretch of Mexico that borders Arizona and California. In the past 15 months, U.S. agents have busted increasingly sophisticated tunnels.

Geography and geology make the intensely urban Tijuana-San Diego corridor ideal for the tunnels. Tijuana is Mexico's sixth-largest city, with 1.3 million people, while San Diego is the eighth-largest U.S. city, with several interstate highways.

Moreover, soil here has a composition that's easy to dig.

In a two-week span last November, U.S. agents shut down two sophisticated tunnels that led from an area near Tijuana's airport to the Otay Mesa industrial park on the U.S. side. Some 49 tons of marijuana was seized. The discoveries marked the second year in a row in which elaborate tunnels were found within a mile of the busy Otay Mesa border crossing.

U.S. officials are sensitive about a public view that they aren't finding the tunnels.

"Understandably, American citizens react to news stories about the discovery of a large tunnel, complete with plumbing, lights, ventilation and a rudimentary railway system, with a mixture of surprise, indignation, alarm and dismay," Laura E. Duffy, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of California, told the Senate drug caucus last June. "How, they ask, can such a sophisticated illegal structure be constructed right under our noses?"

Part of the difficulty, she said, is that drug traffickers use horizontal drills that cost up to $75,000 and can cut without disturbing topsoil. The tunnels run anywhere from 30 to 90 feet deep, avoiding greater depths, which would hit underground water tables.

Drug traffickers also have been adept at setting up bogus U.S. companies to rent space in bustling Otay Mesa and its 600 warehouses and 12,000 businesses. Many firms are unaware of activities by their neighbors, perhaps noticing only if there's truck traffic at unusual hours.

Garcia said that even with devices such as seismic sensors, a majority of tunnel busts came from tipoffs by informants or suspicious warehouse operators.

Mining experts enlisted

Big tunnels are thought to be the work of the Sinaloa Cartel, which has seized control of Tijuana from the local Arellano-Felix drug ring after years of bloody conflict and now is operating in tandem with remnants of the group.

Sinaloa operatives employ mining engineers and architects to help construct their tunnels, while keeping knowledge of locations to as few people as possible.

Experts on the San Diego Tunnel Task Force say "some tunnel excavators in Mexico are killed when the job is done to prevent them from spreading the word on the location," Duffy told senators.

Marijuana growers are turning to ever-larger plantations to meet the capacity of bigger tunnels. Last July, soldiers found a 300-acre screened and irrigated marijuana plantation – four times larger than any previously seized site – near San Quintin, 150 miles south of Tijuana. Eight months earlier, soldiers seized 148 tons of pot in Tijuana, a record.

Digging day and night

U.S. and Mexican agents say that tunnel digging, using pneumatic spades, generally is limited to teams of six or seven men. They live at the Tijuana site where the tunnel begins, and excavation is timed to conclude with the harvesting of marijuana crops in late summer and early autumn, so there's little time for the tunnel to sit idle and be detected.

"The process is tedious," Garcia said, involving working day and night and lugging bags of dirt along the shaft for removal.

But even with million-dollar investments, Garcia said, the tunnel builders "recoup that by making just one trip, given the value of the narcotics we've seized."

Most bales of marijuana carry stickers, often fanciful images such as Donald Duck, Captain America, Budweiser or Homer Simpson. The stickers indicate ownership and destination, U.S. agents said.

Tunnel operatives make sure to recoup their investments first.

"The way it works is the tunnel guys build it, so their stuff gets through first. Once it gets through, they start hiring out" to other drug organizations, said Louis Gomez, the supervisor of the San Diego Tunnel Task Force, which includes agents of Customs and Border Protection, the Drug Enforcement Administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the California Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement.

Tunnel shafts on the Tijuana side that a McClatchy journalist visited included one hidden in the floor of a walk-in freezer in a warehouse that's only two football fields away from warehouses on the U.S. side of the border.

Another shaft was hidden in a unique fashion: "It was the entire floor of a bathroom that went up and down, and they used a hydraulic lift like you'd see in a service station," Garcia said.

Tijuana Police Chief Alberto Capella Ibarra said the tunnels kept growing in sophistication.

"It speaks of the strength and economic power of the cartels, because these tunnels are a huge investment for them," Capella said.


Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/02/21/4278337/mexican-borders-drug-tunnels-grow.html#storylink=cpy

MEXICALI, MX -

A man wanted by authorities in Santa Maria, California was arrested in the Desert Southwest. Mexicali Police have arrested Severiano Leon Flores. A judge in Santa Maria issued a warrant for his arrest. He is accused of committing a homicide back in November of last year. Police say he is a member of a very dangerous gang called "West Park." They believe the homicide is gang related and to avoid being prosecuted Flores fled to Mexico. Mexicali Police says Flores was also being investigated on drug trafficking charges. After his arrest the alleged gang member was turned over to authorities in California.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Cooked Allowed Again

posted: Feb 15, 2012 3:28 PM Updated: Feb 15, 2012 3:31 PM

San Luis, AZ-- CBP says cooked eggs can now be crossed into U.S. once again.

After just about a year of restricting cooked eggs to be crossed into the United States, officials now say it's ok to do so.

U.S. Customs and border Protection officials say travelers may now once again cross fully cooked eggs into the United States from Mexico.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture restricted live bird and poultry imports from Mexico to protect the U.S. from Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, also known as HPAI.

The restriction included any cooked eggs including eggs inside breakfast or lunch meals to be eaten by individuals.

The change is effective immediately.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Aircraft Smuggling

Aircraft smuggling is on the rise according to U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement And more details on a story we brought to you this week about a pilot arrested for suspicion of trying to fly illegal immigrants.

Smuggling is like a cat an mouse game according to ICE and it is occurring more often.

"Were always trying to figure out what smugglers are doing and their method of operation. If it's not by car, it's by tunnel, or it's by aircraft. When they are not smuggling drugs they are smuggling illegal aliens. Aircraft smuggling is just another form of all these," says Ricardo A. Sandoval, a Special Agent with ICE.

Agent Sandoval tells news 13 why smuggling is becoming more common.

"I think that smuggling is increasing because of the economy and lack of jobs. I think it will continue and people are doing what they can do to make money," says Agent Sandoval.

Lino Rodriguez Chavez is a pilot who was arrested last week charged with allowing 3 illegal immigrants from Mexico to board his Cessna plane at the imperial county airport.

According to court documents special agents had been surveilling the suspected illegal immigrants staying at a Motel 6 in el Centro before catching them at the airport.

"These were Mexican nationals so they came from Mexico, we believe they came from the ports of entry and they were in route to Los Angles," says Sandoval.

Agent Sandoval says the illegal immigrants pay up to 5,000 dollars to get transported by plane.

ICE says the plane involved in the sting was the 4-th aircraft found to be used for smuggling people since last year in the agency's el Centro sector alone.

The Cessna plane was seized and Chavez has since posted 20-thousand dollars bond.

He's due back in court next month.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Border Drones

Border officials are looking to expand a drone surveillance program in California, allowing the remotely piloted aircrafts to cover almost all of the state, according to a story by California Watch.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials expect Federal Aviation Administration authorities will grant the agency permission to expand its unmanned aircraft operations into airspace east of the San Diego area, agency spokeswoman Gina Gray told California Watch.

Article Tab: image1-Federal officials look to add more border drones

While the aircrafts have been touted for their cutting-edge technology, some say they are too expensive and inefficient.

The drones cost $18.5 million each to operate.

Since 2005, the drones have helped seize 46,600 pounds of narcotics and caught about 7,500 people committing crimes along the border, California Watch stated.

The aircrafts, which can stay in the air for up to 20 hours, also help in emergency and disaster response missions.

Currently, the drones patrol about 1,200 miles along the Southwest border from east of El Centro in California to the Gulf of Mexico.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Border News 2011

Drug seizures rose while apprehensions of undocumented immigrants fell during the 2011 fiscal year along the U.S.-Mexico border, including in the San Diego area.

New figures from U.S. Customs and Border Protection also show that San Diego and Imperial counties accounted for nearly 70 percent of all methamphetamine confiscated at ports of entry nationwide in the same period, which ended Sept. 30. For narcotics overall, the agency seized more than 158 tons along the two-county portion of the international border.

“It’s a concern to me in that the volume of hard, dangerous narcotics that are coming to us is increasing. It is also a validation of our targeting efforts,” said Chris Maston, director of field operations in San Diego for Customs and Border Protection. His office oversees five land ports, as well as sea and air routes in the area. “The cartels are stepping up their efforts to move this product in large quantities, and we are getting better, much better, at managing intelligence, using it, making sense of it and converting that intelligence into viable targeting practices,” he added.

The U.S. government has bolstered security along the U.S.-Mexico border in the past decade. The number of Border Patrol agents has nearly tripled in that time, the National Guard has deployed to the area twice in recent years — including a current assignment that has lasted 18 months — and special task forces have been formed.

Customs and Border Protection receives the largest share — 20 percent — of the Department of Homeland Security’s budget. That amounted to more than $11 billion in the 2011 fiscal year.

The increased staffing and resources may have played a role in deterring border-crossers, along with a weak economy that makes the United States less attractive to job-seekers. In the last fiscal year, the Border Patrol apprehended 42,447 people between ports of entry in the San Diego sector.

(Meanwhile, the Office of Field Operations, also part of Customs and Border Protection, caught 37,277 people at ports entry along the California-Mexico border.)

“This very large investment in border security has certainly had a big impact on the ability of people to enter the country illegally, and it has put a dent in the flow of narcotics, but it hasn’t solved the problems and we need to consider other approaches,” said Paul Ganster, director of the Institute

for Regional Studies at San Diego State University. “As long as we have a very large number of Americans providing enormous demand for illegal drugs and as long as we have people in the U.S. willing to employ undocumented workers, we are going to have these problems.”

Customs and Border Protection has encountered a growing number of tunnels and ultralight aircraft in the border zone; boats and smaller watercraft on the open seas; and concealed drugs in the drive shafts, intake manifolds and other parts of vehicles. This is all evidence that smugglers have had to change their game, border experts said.

“That tells me that we are making it harder for them, they have to adjust and change their tactics, so I consider that a successful measure,” Maston said.

Still, there are skeptics of the reported success.

“A secure border is reflected by a border where violence has stopped, cartels are not getting through and smuggled illegals are no longer destroying swaths of border lands,” said Janice Kephart, director of national security policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates limited immigration.

Shark Fin Holiday Soup

— Agriculture specialists with U.S. Customs and Border Protection seized nearly 29 pounds of shark fins that were being illegally brought into the country at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, federal officials said Thursday.

A woman going through the pedestrian border crossing about 10:15 a.m. Wednesday was asked to place her bags through an X-ray machine. The fins were found inside.

The woman, a 54-year-old Mexican citizen, was cited for violating the Lacey Act, a federal fish and wildlife trafficking law.

The woman’s visa was canceled and she was returned to Mexico.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Holiday Border Users

Delays at border crossings into Mexico are on the rise as immigrants rush to get back to their homes for the holidays.

According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection pedestrian and vehicle lines are forming at the San Luis port of entry and other border crossings.

CBP says lines into Mexico typically form this time of year as immigrants try to get back to their hometowns to visit family. Traffic from Mexico into the U.S. is also heavier because more people are visiting friends or relatives or coming into the U.S. on shopping trips.

CBP officials say border users can help keep the lines moving by declaring items and making sure they're carrying their passports.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Children Drug Traffickers

San Luis, Arizona December 5, 2011 - It's a dangerous situation: children being recruited as drug traffickers.

"Here at the San Luis Port of Entry, we've actually encountered an increase of juveniles attempting to bring narcotics taped to their body."

Teresa Small with U.S. Customs and Border Protection says they apprehend many teenage drug traffickers.

"Most of the ones we encountered do it for the fast money," says Small, a Supervisor with CPB. "Some are coerced in doing this type of activity and some are just doing it for fun. So we do encounter all of those different ways or processes of why somebody will get involved in something like that."

Amanda Aguirre with Regional Center for Border Health in Somerton says kids involved with drug trafficking don't think of the consequences.

"Some kids are being told that they're not going to be arrested as adults so that it's going to be a minor incident," says Aguirre, the CEO/President of RCBH. "It is a serious criminal event that they are engaging in. And they need to know this is violating the laws."

Many of the youth trafficking drugs have families on both sides of the border so they don't have any language or cultural barriers.

"For many who cross daily are what we consider commuter crossers," says Small. "They just consider it going to neighbor's house, but when, in fact, they're actually crossing the border to another foreign country."

U.S. Customs and Border Protection partners with U.S. Border Patrol to educate youth about the dangers of drug trafficking.

"We're gone and conducted outreach with local high schools and elementary schools so that they know that they maybe approached by drug trafficking organizations," says Small.

Aguirre says although parents maybe busy with work, they should also be aware of what their kids are doing. Aguirre suggests parents get to know their kids' friends and their parents.

"They might not be looking who they're hanging around with or how late they're coming from school or staying around the school at night," says Aguirre. "Or maybe going across the border with some friends with not knowing what they're doing across the border."

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Holiday Scam Alert

Scam Alert

Holiday Hoaxes

5 gifts you don't want

For you, it's the season of giving. For scammers, it's the ideal time for taking. Here's how you can protect your money and identity:

Shopping shenanigans. Searching online for popular gifts can lead you to scammer-run websites. Click on a fake company listing from your search results and you may unleash identity-stealing computer "malware."

See also: Free ID theft protection.

Don't let scammers get your money or personal information while doing your holiday shopping.


Copycat websites simulating legit retailers also proliferate this time of year to collect credit card numbers or sell cheap counterfeit goods.

Defense: Never click on a link before you carefully read its address. Beware of unfamiliar firms or missing letters, misspellings or other tweaks of a legitimate company's name — tiffanyco.mn instead of tiffany.com, for instance. When paying for an item online, provide credit card numbers only if a page's address begins with "https," not "http" — the "s" stands for security.

Gift card grift. Taking gift cards from display racks, thieves copy or use portable scanners that can read the codes under the scratch-off strips. Then they replace the cards and check toll-free numbers later to see if the cards were activated and for how much. Before your niece can spend the card you gave her, they beat her to it, using the card's number for purchases.

Defense: Purchase gift cards from a store's customer service counter or website, rather than the less secure display racks.

Greeting card gotchas. These scams begin with an email claiming someone has sent you an e-greeting. Click on the provided link or attachment and you could get malware.

Defense: Delete, without opening, any email purporting to announce a greeting from an unnamed "friend," "admirer" or even "webmaster." Legitimate notifications include a confirmation code you can use to view the card by going to the card company's website.

Deceptive deliveries. You may get email claiming that a courier service or the U.S. Postal Service has a package for you; don't click on those links promising "details." Or you may get a postcard about an "undeliverable" package. If you call the number it provides, you may be tricked into making an expensive overseas call, with the scammer getting part of what you pay.

Defense: When in doubt, contact the courier or postal service by locating its phone number yourself.

Charity cons. Holiday season is prime time for fake funds for police, firefighters, needy children or veterans.

Defense: Ignore email solicitations and be wary of fundraising phone calls — never provide a credit card number to someone who calls you. Ask for printed material. And before donating, always check out a charity's legitimacy with a phone call or online search.

Also of interest: Ways to shop safely online. >>

Sid Kirchheimer is the author of Scam-Proof Your Life, published by AARP Books/Sterling.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Border Cell Phone Use

Coyotes use Cell phones to guide illegal's across the Border

Posted: Nov 30, 2011 7:35 PM Story by Felicia Martinez, Weekend Anchor/Reporter

El Centro, CA Nov. 30 - With technology evolving, the use of cell phones has become a clever way for migrant traffickers or coyotes to guide illegal immigrants across the U.S. Mexico border.

Rick Sandoval the Assistant Special Agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations in El Centro says, "When talking about alien smuggling it's always a cat and mouse game and every body is all into technology now. So, one of the things that we found is the use of GPS and cell phones."

By using GPS technology on a smart phone traffickers are able to use elevated locations like these mountains to guide illegal's across the border. Special Agent Sandoval says, "By giving the smuggler a cell phone he can direct and bring in the aliens from Mexico into the U.S. an when apprehended by the U.S. Border Patrol or ourselves then we've got the illegal aliens but don't have a smuggler because the smugglers on the phone and he's in Mexico.

Sandoval says despite the challenges they face with no coyote present, the smugglers aren't beating them at the cat and mouse game. He says, "It's pretty ingenious but obviously if we are catching illegal aliens we are arresting the illegal aliens then their losing money."

With the help of one phone application called the Transborder Immigrant Tool created by a University of California San Diego professor immigrants can now be directed to safe routes where water clothing an blankets are found.

Agent Sandoval says they don't want anyone to die but assisting in illegal acts is against the law and those using technology to assist aliens will face consequences. He tells News 13 If the law says they can't come in then were going to go discourage them or apprehend them and if we find anybody that's out there assisting we will process as the law dictates to us."

Homeland Security Investigations says as the new method of crossing the border evolves they expect many more arrests will be made utilizing the new technology.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Poinsettia

Here is another version of the legend of the Poinsettia

A charming story is told of Pepita, a poor Mexican girl who had no gift to present the Christ Child at Christmas Eve Services. As Pepita walked slowly to the chapel with her cousin Pedro, her heart was filled with sadness rather than joy.

"I am sure, Pepita, that even the most humble gift, if given in love, will be acceptable in His eyes," said Pedro consolingly.

Not knowing what else to do, Pepita knelt by the roadside and gathered a handful of common weeds, fashioning them into a small bouquet. Looking at the scraggly bunch of weeds, she felt more saddened and embarrassed than ever by the humbleness of her offering. She fought back a tear as she entered the small village chapel.

As she approached the alter, she remembered Pedro's kind words: "Even the most humble gift, if given in love, will be acceptable in His eyes." She felt her spirit lift as she knelt to lay the bouquet at the foot of the nativity scene.

Suddenly, the bouquet of weeds burst into blooms of brilliant red, and all who saw them were certain that they had witnessed a Christmas miracle right before their eyes.

From that day on, the bright red flowers were known as the Flores de Noche Buena, or Flowers of the Holy Night, for they bloomed each year during the Christmas season.

Today, the common name for this plant is the poinsettia!

Friday, November 25, 2011

Border Series Part 3:

Mexicali port administrator responds to internal corruption allegations Story by Stephanie Sanchez, Reporter
Mexicali, B.C.--Everyday tens of thousands of travelers cross thru the Mexicali port of entry.

Recently the Mexicali port was named as an open door to get the majority of guns, ammo and grenades into Mexico which then falls into the hands of cartel members.

Despite all the obstacles drug and human smugglers face when crossing the U.S. border some still make it across.

Mexico's port of entries like this one in Mexicali are the last line of defense where Mexican federal agents try to cut off the completion of an illegal deal.

Whether its thousands of dollars smuggled to pay a coyote in Mexico or guns sent to arm cartel members.

In September, Spanish media reported that a high ranking member of the Sinaloa drug cartel called the Mexicali port of entry "an open door" for thousands of weapons smuggled south of the border.

Reports said it caused a major shake-up and employee transfers were made left and right, even removing the port's director.

KSWT News 13's spoke with the port's new administrator regarding the allegations.

"No, the 33 transfers were already programmed. This was at a state level. It's not like one person was transferred to another port but there were a total of 33 changes here," Mexicali Port Administrator Frida Garcia said in Spanish.

According to a press release from Mexico's port of entry administration services, changes were made at 49 ports nationally including mexicali.

Garcia denies that any changes were made due to internal corruption.

"No, it's not because of that, like I said, the selections were made since may of this yea," Garcia said.

Garcia said she's skeptical of a suspect being arrested.

She said the suspect's name was never brought to light but they do take any information seriously.

She said when she first arrived, she increased security as her first task.

"I did increase certain levels of security, inspections, and contact with the American port as well." Garcia said. "Whether either of us face any threats."

Cars crossing through the port are scanned with Gamma ray technology and pass over an underground weight scale.

Agents question anybody carrying thousands of dollars in cash as it could be a payment making it's way to a smuggler.

Alarms go off if a car exceeds the average weight as it could be carrying illegal merchandise or guns.

"I come from a port in the state of Tamaulipas where security was really strong," Garcia said. "So when I got here, certain levels were increased whenever merchandise or cargo is passes thru the port. I also placed trustworthy people at the port."

Not even 6 months into the job, Garcia was already facing a bomb threat from the Mexico side of the border.

Though the ports remained opened, agents were on high alert.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Border Series Part 2

Number of illegal immigrant transfers are up

El Centro, CA--The number of illegal border crosser s arrested and trying to regain entry through the Desert Southwest has dropped.

On the ground, U.S. Border Patrol agents use century-old tracking skills to find illegal border crossers.

Most illegal immigrants know footprints can give them away.

While news 13 was taking a tour of the border with El Centro sector agents, 3 men were caught illegally crossing the border from Mexicali.

"The idea is to not leave any prints because they check the roads and this way our prints will hardly be seen," one illegal immigrant said.

We're told they use different tactics hoping not to get caught.

Agents said they will walk in the same steps of other people in front of them, walk backwards, they'll crawl or they'll brush away their footprints with branches.

One method used, agents say makes it even more difficult to detect is when they glue big sponges to the soles of their shoes.

Agents said the group of men, will most likely be transferred to other sectors along the southwest border like San Diego or Texas and then sent back to Mexico.

For these men that takes them farther away from their home, being they're from Sinaloa and Guadalajara.

Agents said they do this as part of the Alien Transfer Exit Progam which started in 2008.

"It breaks the cycle of smuggling. So what were trying to do is break away the people that entered the U.S. from a smuggling organization that facilitated their entry here into the U.S., Agent Adrian Corona, of the El Centro sector said.

Recently, the number of transfers have skyrocketed for all 7 participating sectors including Yuma and El Centro.

For this current fiscal year, border patrol's el centro sector have transferred 2,100 illegal immigrants to other ports.

Its a big jump from last years when 741 illegals were transferred.

Despite the increase of transfers, the number of illegal immigrants returning have decreased.

According to statistics, 3 out of 10 illegal immigrants try their fate at crossing the border again.

"They can either be federally prosecuted for re-entering country illegally or they can be subject to ATEP," Corona said.

As for the Yuma sector, aside from the ATEP program, if an illegal border crosser is caught they face jail time no matter what.

Yuma sector stats show as of July 31st of this fiscal year about 870 illegal immigrants arrested were transferred to either Nogales or Calexico.

That's about a 50 percent jump from the number transferred in 2010.

"We are seeing a couple of different things, number one it could be the amount of people who are coming in to the Yuma sector actually fit the program, more males in ages of 20 thru 60 who never been apprehended before whereas in the past it may not have been the case," Agent Robert Lowry of the Yuma sector said. "We might have been apprehending individuals more frequently because we didn't have operation streamline or ATEP in place."

Agents said a common misconception is that illegals caught, with or without criminal history, are dropped off back into Mexico in the middle of the night or that agents are separating families.

However, some illegal border crossers aren't easily discouraged by the program.

They said they're just looking to provide a better lifestyle for them and their families.

"Life is tough in Mexico, we're trying to make ends meet," an illegal immigrant said. "We don't come here to steal or do anything bad. We are working people, we come to work during harvest. We don't have any criminal records or anything like that."

When illegal immigrants are transferred to other ports, agents say Mexican immigration officials gain custody of the illegal immigrants.

In some cases, they're given funds to return to their point of origin or state.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Recalls Nov 2011

Recalls Nov 2011


11/28/2011 05:44 PM EST
Giant Eagle, Inc. performed a voluntary market withdrawal of all Valu Time brand canned pumpkin purchased on or after August 30, 2011, as well as all Food Club brand canned pumpkin purchased on or after October 28, 2011. These brands are produced by Topco Associates, LLC.

11/28/2011 01:34 PM EST
Trans-Ocean Products, Inc. of Bellingham, Washington is recalling its 4 ounce “transOCEAN Wild Alaska Sockeye Smoked Salmon” with lot numbers 1280W & 1293W because it has the potential to be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes, an organism, which can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems. Although healthy individuals may suffer only short-term symptoms such as high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea, Listeria infection can cause miscarriages and stillbirths among pregnant women.

11/26/2011 12:10 PM EST
Ocean Spray today announced it has taken the precautionary measure of voluntarily recalling certain production lots of its Original Flavor Craisins Dried Cranberries product in 5-ounce, 10-ounce and 48-ounce packages as well as bulk sweetened dried cranberries in 10-pound packages due to the possible presence of very small hair-like metal fragments that are unlikely to cause consumer injury. To date, the company has not received any reports of consumer complaints relating to this recall.

11/26/2011 12:10 PM EST
Ocean Spray today announced it has taken the precautionary measure of voluntarily recalling certain production lots of its Original Flavor Craisins ® Dried Cranberries product in 5-ounce, 10-ounce and 48-ounce packages as well as bulk sweetened dried cranberries in 10-pound packages due to the possible presence of very small hair-like metal fragments that are unlikely to cause consumer injury. To date, the company has not received any reports of consumer complaints relating to this recall.

11/25/2011 02:42 PM EST
Maxipan Bakery Corp, of West Hempstead, NY, is recalling its 8 ounce packages of “Semita De Pina� because they may contain undeclared milk allergens. Consumers who are allergic to milk allergens may run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reactions if they consume this product.

11/23/2011 07:41 PM EST
King & Prince Seafood Corp. of Brunswick, GA, is initiating a voluntary recall of Nova Style Cold Smoked Salmon and Sable Fish Lox, Salmon Sushi Fillets, and Salmon Trim because it has the potential to be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes, an organism which can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems. Healthy individuals may suffer only short-term symptoms such as high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea.

11/23/2011 04:22 PM EST
Caribbean Rum Balls of St. Thomas, VI, is issuing this alert due to undeclared allergens, specifically: wheat, coconut, milk, eggs and sodium bisulfite (preservative). People who have allergies to any of these ingredients run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume these products.

11/23/2011 09:09 PM EST
Four Star Import & Distribution Inc, 1075 Flushing Avenue, Brooklyn, New York, 11237 is recalling Noya Brand Boyal Dry Fish discovered by New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets Food Inspectors during a routine inspection and subsequent analysis of the product by New York State Food Laboratory personnel confirming that the product was not properly eviscerated prior to processing. This product may be contaminated with Clostridium botulinum spores, which can cause botulism, a serious and potentially fatal food–borne illness.

11/23/2011 09:02 PM EST
Four Star Import & Distribution Inc, 1075 Flushing Avenue is recalling Munia Brand Churi Dry Fish discovered by New York State Dept. of Agriculture and Markets Food Inspectors during a routine inspection and subsequent analysis of the product by New York State Food Laboratory personnel confirming that the product was not properly eviscerated prior to processing. This product may be contaminated with Clostridium botulinum spores, which can cause botulism, a serious and potentially fatal food–borne illness.


11/22/2011 11:13 AM EST
Rio Grande Imports Inc. of Copiague NY is recalling 50 cases of Semita de Piña because it may contain undeclared dairy. People who have an allergy or severe sensitivity to dairy run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume these products.

11/21/2011 09:17 AM EST
Diamond Crystal Brands Inc. of Savannah, Ga., ISSUES ALLERGEN ALERT FOR UNDECLARED MILK in 12-ounce GFS sugar canisters that were inadvertently filled with non-dairy coffee creamer. These items were shipped in 24-can cases labeled GFS non-dairy coffee creamer.

11/18/2011 03:56 PM EST
Maumee Valley Vending Company announced a voluntary recall on Buffalo Chicken Wedge Sandwiches containing cheese, a milk product. A recall notification was initiated by Maumee Valley Vending Co. because milk was not listed in the ingredients on the label. The total production for this product was three hundred fifty (350) sandwiches.

11/17/2011 07:28 PM EST United Natural Foods, Inc. today announced a correction to its previously announced recall of selected types of Gentes Foods Gordita Black Bean Tortillas, specifically to correct the previously stated date code of 12 7 11 to the revised date code of 11 6 11. United Natural Foods, Inc. is recalling this product dated 11 6 11 because it has the potential to be contaminated with Clostridium botulinum, a bacterium which can cause life-threatening illness or death.

7/2011 10:16 AM EST
Ready Pac Foods, Inc. of Irwindale, CA is recalling a total of 5,379 cases of bagged salad products containing Romaine lettuce, as listed below, with the Use-by Date of November 18, 2011 because they may be contaminated with E. coli (E.coli O157.H7). E.coli O157:H7 is an organism that may cause diarrheal illness often with bloody stools.

11/17/2011 09:45 AM EST
The J.M. Smucker Company today announced a limited voluntary recall on two specific Best-If-Used-By dates of 16 oz. Smucker’s®® Natural Peanut Butter Chunky because it may be contaminated with Salmonella, an organism that can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems.

11/16/2011 06:27 PM EST
CooperVision announced today that it is expanding its worldwide recall of the Avaira brand product line of contact lenses to include a limited number of lots of Avaira Sphere contact lenses. In continued collaboration with the United States Food and Drug Administration, CooperVision is expanding the recall because it identified certain lots of Avaira Sphere lenses that did not meet its updated quality requirements due to the level of a silicone oil residue.
11/14/2011 10:23 PM EST
United Natural Foods, Inc. is recalling selected types of FoodMatch, Inc. Divina Stuffed Olives, because they have the potential to be contaminated with Clostridium botulinum, a bacterium which can cause life-threatening illness or death. Consumers are warned not to use the product even if it does not look or smell spoiled.

11/10/2011 Gentes Foods Black Bean Tortillas Clostridium botulinum United Natural Foods, Inc.
11/10/2011 Virility Max Virility Max Dietary Supplement Contains undeclared drug ingredient sulfoaildenafil Keime, Incorporated

11/09/2011 FoodMatch Inc. Divina, Tabatchnick Stuffed Olives and Bean Soup Clostridium botulinum
United Natural Foods, Inc.

11/09/2011 Kotex Tampons Enterobacter sakazakii Kimberly-Clark

11/08/2011 Golden Glen Creamery Raw Cheddar Listeria monocytogenes Golden Glen Creamery

11/04/2011 Rice-A-Roni Rice Pilaf Undeclared milk Rice-A-Roni

11/04/2011 Bio Gaudiano Olives Stuffed with Almonds Clostridium botulinum Pure Italian, LLC

11/04/2011 Assi Oysters Norovirus Korean Farms Inc.

11/04/2011 Badia Pine Nuts Salmonella Badia Spices, Inc.

11/04/2011 Leslie Leger and Sons Ltd. Salted Smoked Split Herring
Unevicerated fish poses a potential botulism hazard Quirch Foods Company

11/04/2011 Sunrise Commodities Pine nuts Salmonella Sunrise Commodities

11/03/2011 Pangasinan Smoked Seafood Products Clostridium botulinum Foremost Foods International, Inc.

11/01/2011 Bio Gaudiano Olives Stuffed with Almonds Clostridium botulinum Pure Italian, LLC


for more information contact http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/