Imperial Valley Press

Calif. National Guard begins border training

-

SAN DIEGO (AP) — After a contentiou­s standoff between the state and federal government, California National Guard troops started training Thursday with the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol to be camera operators, radio dispatcher­s, and to fill other support roles.

President Donald Trump ordered National Guard troops to deploy to the U.S.-Mexico border to help federal authoritie­s combat illegal immigratio­n and drug traffickin­g.

California’s all-Democratic leadership has positioned the state as a national leader in battling the Trump administra­tion, especially on immigratio­n issues. Government leaders at the state level and in big cities have condemned mass raids and deportatio­n efforts, President Donald Trump’s call for a border wall with Mexico and Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ “zero tolerance” order to prosecute people caught illegally entering the United States for the first time.

Gov. Jerry Brown agreed to contribute 400 troops to the National Guard’s deployment to the Mexican border to help go after drugs, guns and criminal gangs — not immigrants.

The governor has said under the terms of the agreement the state reached with the Trump administra­tion, the Guard cannot handle custody duties for anyone accused of immigratio­n violations, build border barriers or have anything to do with immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Some troops could start their new jobs as soon as Sunday, which will free up agents to patrol the Mexican border but keep National Guard members away from the internatio­nal line so they do not have contact with migrants.

Maj. Kimberly Holman told The Associated Press that some of the 250 troops who volunteere­d for the call to help Border Patrol agents started their onthe-job training Thursday after meeting their Border Patrol supervisor­s in San Diego.

“This will free up the green shirts — the badged agents — and get them out on line,” Holman said, adding that troops volunteere­d for the mission because they want to keep California safe.

“Nobody has been ordered to come here,” she said. “Everyone is here by choice and has said, ‘I would like to support this mission.’” So far, 250 are in place but more troops may be added as the Border Patrol needs them, Holman said.

William Rogers, supervisor­y Border Patrol agent for the San Diego sector, said troops are being put in jobs that will keep them away from migrants.

For example, he said National Guard camera operators will work monitoring video inside Border Patrol facilities and will not be assigned to manning a camera from a vehicle parked at the internatio­nal line.

He said the added manpower for jobs suchas dispatchin­g radio calls and maintainin­g vehicles will mean agents can also focus more on investigat­ive work.

“I think people really underestim­ate the help that the Guardsmen will provide,” Rogers said. “I actually think this also will provide a huge sort of morale boost to agents by seeing Guardsmen enthusiast­ically doing their jobs.”

The troops, who will also work in neighborin­g Imperial County, are expected to stay until at least Sept. 30.

National Guard troops are also assisting agents in three other U.S. states bordering Mexico — Arizona, New Mexico and Texas — all governed by Republican­s.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL ?? In this June 22, 2016, file photo, Border Patrol agent Eduardo Olmos walks near the secondary fence separating Tijuana, Mexico, (background) and San Diego. California National Guard troops have started training with the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol...
AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL In this June 22, 2016, file photo, Border Patrol agent Eduardo Olmos walks near the secondary fence separating Tijuana, Mexico, (background) and San Diego. California National Guard troops have started training with the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States