Los Angeles Times

Federal ban on shark f in proposed

Experts warn that high hiring goals may lead agencies to cut corners and allow unfit agents to serve.

- GREG MORAN greg.moran @sduniontri­bune.com Moran writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Orange County lawmaker’s bill would follow California in prohibitin­g buying, selling and possession of the delicacy.

President Trump’s promise to crack down on illegal immigratio­n includes not only a wall but more people behind the wall — an additional 5,000 Border Patrol agents and 10,000 immigratio­n officers.

Those lofty goals come with a set of unknowns — such as how soon, where the money would come from — and a recent history that provides some cautionary tales.

Like the story of Oscar Ortiz Martinez.

For years, Martinez had one goal in mind: become a federal law enforcemen­t officer.

After a four-year stint in the Marine Corps he returned to his El Centro home in 2002, but it would take a while to achieve his dream. He worked as a security guard at a privately run immigratio­n jail for years before he was hired by U.S. Customs and Border Protection in 2006.

At first, Ortiz had a problem joining. He was terminated in 2007 when a background check turned up a restrainin­g order taken out by his ex-wife. Undeterred, he reapplied in 2008 and was hired.

It was a good time to join. The CBP along with its sister agency, U.S. Border Patrol, was in the midst of an unpreceden­ted hiring spree that would lead to both agencies doubling in size between 2003 and 2009.

That rapid increase in staffing came with some problems. Hiring standards were lowered, training at the Border Patrol Academy truncated, and background checks — a crucial step — were delayed or not performed at all.

Just months after being hired, a girlfriend accused Ortiz of stalking her. And shortly after that, he became the target of a sting operation orchestrat­ed by a federal task force focusing on border corruption.

Ortiz was investigat­ed for teaming up with a former colleague at the immigratio­n jail to allow loads of drugs to be smuggled in to the U.S. through the inspection lane he staffed at the Calexico port of entry.

In 2013, he was convicted in federal court of bribery and sentenced to 12 years in prison.

Ortiz took his place in an ignominiou­s lineup of about 170 border law enforcemen­t agents and officers who have been arrested, indicted or convicted in corruption cases since 2002.

Officials would later acknowledg­e that the pressure to meet the hiring goals allowed less qualified candidates onto the force, and fueled in part a surge in the cases.

Trump’s ambitious hiring goals have raised concern among some experts that the effort could lead to a repeat of the 2000s, when the push to hire set aside longstandi­ng agency practices designed to screen out unqualifie­d and unfit candidates.

Other concerns include how quickly a ramp-up can be achieved and the capacity of the agencies to absorb extra workers.

“We’ll have to see if they’ve learned the lessons from the last time,” said Doris Meissner, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute and a former commission­er of the Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Service, since reconstitu­ted as Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

“The core lesson is this is law enforcemen­t, and these are agencies that have had rigorous standards over the years,” she said. “You have to be in a position to be able to push back and not cut corners.

“That’s not easy to do when there are pressures to build up quickly.”

Customs and Border Protection, which includes the Border Patrol, is the largest law enforcemen­t agency in the nation with about 43,000 officers and agents.

A January executive order issued by Trump would bring a 25% increase in staffing for the Border Patrol and would triple the number of ICE officers, from 5,000 to eventually 15,000.

In October, the inspector general for Homeland Security released a report saying that the Department of Homeland Security was slow to hire law enforcemen­t positions.

The report showed that it took 282 days, about nine months, to hire a single Border Patrol agent. That was an improvemen­t from 2013, when it took 420 days to hire an agent.

At ICE, it took 212 days to hire a single officer in 2015, compared with 1,161 days to hire a single deportatio­n officer in 2012.

The report pointed to insufficie­nt staffing to support the hiring surge. In 2015, ICE had three people to process 3,000 applicatio­ns for entry-level deportatio­n officer jobs — and this was during a previous hiring surge.

In February, after the executive orders were issued calling for more Border Patrol and ICE staff, Inspector General John Roth testified to a congressio­nal committee that DHS “will face a number of challenges” in executing the orders.

After referring to the long hiring times, he said his office would work with the agencies to help “avoid previously identified poor management practices and their negative impacts,” a reference to the corruption and misconduct problems.

Although only a small fraction of the total workforce has been implicated, the slew of misconduct cases cast a pall over the agency and led to scrutiny from watchdogs, the media and Congress.

“Even one is too much,” said David Aguilar, the Border Patrol chief during President George W. Bush’s administra­tion when the hiring surge was launched.

DHS has been trying to get a handle on corruption problems in its border security forces for several years. In 2014, then-Secretary Jeh Johnson convened an integrity panel to examine several issues, including preventing corruption.

Among the panel’s early recommenda­tions was that CBP urgently needed to add hundreds of criminal investigat­ors to its Internal Affairs division to investigat­e allegation­s.

In its final report issued in March 2016, the panel said CBP needed 550 full-time investigat­ors and recommende­d that 350 be added over the next three years.

According to the report, the agency had added only 57, with plans to add just 30 more the next fiscal year. At that pace, the panel said, it would take almost a decade to get Internal Affairs to the staffing levels it said would be needed to root out corruption.

“This leaves CBP vulnerable to a corruption scandal that could potentiall­y threaten the security of our nation,” the panel wrote last year.

At the time of the report — months before Trump called for the increases in staffing in his executive order — CBP was already having problems hiring new agents and officers. One problem appears to be an anti-corruption measure requested by Congress.

In 2012, in response to the corruption cases, Congress ordered the CBP to administer pre-employment polygraphs to all new applicants. In January, the Associated Press reported that two of three applicants fail the polygraph exam — twice the rate of other law enforcemen­t agencies.

The former head of CBP said the results showed the polygraphs were working, but others said the results showed the tests were being applied too stringentl­y, with examiners trying to trip up otherwise qualified candidates.

An internal memo last month from CBP Acting Commission­er Kevin McAleenan said the agency wanted to take steps to meet the hiring goals, including waiving the polygraph exam for some applicants and giving itself the power to “determine the type and level of background investigat­ion needed for CBP positions.”

On Friday three senators formally introduced a bill that would waive the polygraph tests for applicants in law enforcemen­t and veterans.

Shawn Moran, vice president of the National Border Patrol Council, the labor union that represents agents, said the polygraph process had to be examined because many qualified candidates were being put through excessivel­y long questionin­g — often lasting four to eight hours or longer.

But Moran said the agency can’t let its guard down elsewhere when it comes to relaxing hiring standards.

 ?? Hayne Palmour IV San Diego Union-Tribune ?? BORDER PATROL agents in San Diego shoot at targets for firearm qualificat­ion. President Trump has called for 5,000 more Border Patrol agents and 10,000 immigratio­n officers in a crackdown on illegal immigratio­n.
Hayne Palmour IV San Diego Union-Tribune BORDER PATROL agents in San Diego shoot at targets for firearm qualificat­ion. President Trump has called for 5,000 more Border Patrol agents and 10,000 immigratio­n officers in a crackdown on illegal immigratio­n.

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