Santa Fe New Mexican

Border Patrol’s checkpoint­s overlooked in wall debate

- By Nomaan Merchant

LAREDO, Texas — As vehicles line up at the Border Patrol’s checkpoint a half-hour drive north of the U.S.-Mexico border, its agents have around 10 seconds to check each driver and decide which few they will stop for additional inspection.

It’s a situation challenged constantly by smugglers, sometimes with deadly consequenc­es. In July, 10 migrants died after a tractor-trailer packed with people made it through Laredo North, only to be discovered two hours later in a Walmart parking lot in San Antonio. Dozens of others streamed out of the trailer, gasping for air.

The Border Patrol considers its 34 permanent interior checkpoint­s along the United States’ southern border such as Laredo North a crucial layer of its strategy to stop smuggling. The checkpoint­s inside the U.S. can be up to 100 miles from any border, in addition to the ports of entry where people face inspection when coming into the country.

But agents who work the Laredo North checkpoint say they’re understaff­ed and sometimes overwhelme­d by traffic. And while top Border Patrol officials say President Donald Trump’s proposed border wall would help them cut the number of overall smuggling cases, some critics don’t believe a wall would reduce illegal immigratio­n and is drawing attention and money away from the checkpoint­s and other critical needs on the border.

The Trump administra­tion’s latest budget proposal includes $1.6 billion to start building a wall that the administra­tion has estimated will cost $18 billion. It asks for funding to hire more Border Patrol agents. It also includes $33 million to build a new Border Patrol station in Freer, Texas, northeast of Laredo. But it doesn’t directly address needs at other checkpoint­s, and it proposes zeroing out new spending on tactical infrastruc­ture like roads used by border agents and replacemen­t border fencing.

The proposal also would end funding for efforts to find and destroy border tunnels built by cartels to get under existing barriers. Border security experts have warned that constructi­ng a wall will lead to smugglers trying to dig more tunnels.

Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Laredo Democrat who sits on the U.S. House subcommitt­ee directing Homeland Security funding, wants U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Border Patrol’s parent agency, to invest in additional scanners and other improvemen­ts at Laredo North, as well as intercepto­r boats and radio towers for remote border areas. Cuellar also says the government should fund retention bonuses to keep agents from leaving the patrol.

“They’re taking money away from proven law enforcemen­t systems to put it into this 14th century solution,” Cuellar said.

A CBP spokesman declined to comment on the budget request.

Built in 2006, Laredo North sits 30 miles north of the Rio Grande, the river separating the U.S. and Mexico in Texas.

All of the approximat­ely 9,000 daily vehicles that pass Laredo North’s seven lanes get an inspection. An agent checks immigratio­n documents and talks to each driver. A camera reads license plates, and another agent guides a dog around each passenger vehicle to search for hidden people or drugs. A fraction of vehicles are sent to a secondary inspection, where agents interview the driver further and search the vehicle. The occasional tractor-trailer is directed to a mobile X-ray machine that scans the interior of the truck.

Opponents argue the checkpoint­s unlawfully restrict the movement of immigrants in the U.S. illegally who live in South Texas, pointing to incidents like the brief detention of a 10-yearold Laredo girl with cerebral palsy who needed surgery at a hospital north of the checkpoint­s. A Government Accountabi­lity Office study released in November said problems with Border Patrol data made it impossible to determine how effective the checkpoint­s are.

Agents do make big catches at such checkpoint­s. In January, agents at another Laredo checkpoint discovered 76 people inside a tractor-trailer that had been flagged for extra inspection. But the Border Patrol’s largest union says agents have low morale and believe large loads of people and drugs are able to get through.

 ?? NOMAAN MERCHANT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Border Patrol agent uses a dog earlier this month to inspect a car waiting to pass through the Laredo North vehicle checkpoint in Laredo, Texas. The dogs are trained to catch drugs and people who try to enter the U.S. illegally in trunks and vehicle...
NOMAAN MERCHANT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Border Patrol agent uses a dog earlier this month to inspect a car waiting to pass through the Laredo North vehicle checkpoint in Laredo, Texas. The dogs are trained to catch drugs and people who try to enter the U.S. illegally in trunks and vehicle...

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