Lodi News-Sentinel

Officials install cameras at Trump’s border wall project, citing ‘threat environmen­t’

- By Greg Moran

SAN DIEGO — In the weeks before constructi­on was to begin on eight prototypes for President Donald Trump’s border wall, Customs and Border Protection officials ordered a video surveillan­ce system to help authoritie­s guard the project, according to a recently released federal document.

The remote video surveillan­ce system moved forward without competitiv­e bidding, added to an existing contract held by General Dynamics.

How much it cost is not known. A document published on a federal government website on Nov. 16 — two months after the decision was made to use it — blacked out the price.

It was approved under a nobid process because the agency decided it had to install the system immediatel­y, just before constructi­on was to begin on Sept. 26. The normal bidding process would take weeks, the notice said.

The report is the latest example of how concerned federal authoritie­s were over possible security issues at the constructi­on site for the prototypes, which cost $20 million to build. The border wall project is the centerpiec­e of the Trump administra­tion’s border security and immigratio­n crackdown.

The document makes several references to the “threat environmen­t” surroundin­g the project and said it was “necessary to deploy surveillan­ce technology to the constructi­on site in order to provide situationa­l awareness related to threats against the site and against the contractor­s building the prototype walls on behalf of CBP.”

During the prototypes’ monthlong constructi­on, there was not a single protest or incident.

The document is the latest example of security precaution­s taken by federal and local law enforcemen­t. Before constructi­on began, the Homeland Security Department issued a memo to local agencies warning of the potential for violent protests.

San Diego police and the county Sheriff ’s Department blocked off streets leading to the site, banned parking on other streets for a month and constantly patrolled the area.

 ?? K.C. ALFRED/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE ?? Mario Villarreal, the field office division chief for Customs and Border Protection, walks near border wall prototypes that were built east of San Ysidro on the border of Mexico on Nov. 20.
K.C. ALFRED/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE Mario Villarreal, the field office division chief for Customs and Border Protection, walks near border wall prototypes that were built east of San Ysidro on the border of Mexico on Nov. 20.

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