Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Chasing danger

- By Kavitha Surana, Brittny Mejia and James Queally

On a rainy November afternoon last year, eight men held tight to a gray tarp, their bodies pressed against one another as they lay feet to head in the bed of a pickup. Most knew one another from Acatic, a Mexican town in the state of Jalisco, where the country’s most vicious cartel has caused the morgue to overflow.

Rainwater pooled on the tarp, running in rivulets down the sides and soaking the men underneath. The closeness provided only some warmth, as the men lay shivering, feeling every bump of the rocky scrubland as they crossed into the United States.

As many modern police agencies move away from high-speed chases, placing tight restrictio­ns on when their officers can pursue suspects, the Border Patrol allows its agents wide latitude to use them to catch people trying to enter the country illegally, a practice that often ends in gruesome injuries and, sometimes, death, a ProPublica and Los Angeles Times investigat­ion has found.

At speeds deemed by experts to be wildly unsafe, agents box in moving vehicles, puncture tires and employ tactics intended to spin cars off the road.

They initiate dangerous chases after noting that cars are carrying unrestrain­ed children or are packed so far beyond capacity that the weight makes them “ride low.” They catch up to find people screaming and banging from the insides of trunks.

Every nine days, on average, these chases end in a crash. One caused a fire that spread over more than 20 acres. Another injured a dozen bystanders and six immigrants, including a 6year-old girl who wound up on life support.

In the last four years alone, along the U.S. side of the border, at least 250 people were injured and 22 died after a Border Patrol pursuit.

The Border Patrol did not provide these numbers or fulfill requests made for months seeking to document what agents do after suspected smugglers fail to pull over.

Instead, reporters mined more than 9,000 federal criminal complaints filed against suspected human smugglers from 2015 to 2018 to build a database about Border Patrol pursuits and tactics. The documents describe agents’ reasons for initiating a pursuit, whether there was a crash and how it happened. The database is almost certainly an undercount — it does not include cases in which the driver got away or died, since the complaints are filed only after arrests. It also does not include pursuits for other crimes, including drug smuggling.

The analysis, the first of its kind, found that Border Patrol agents engaged in more than 500 pursuits in border districts in Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas. Of those, 1 in 3 ended in a crash.

Under Trump

The danger has ramped up in the two years under President Donald Trump, who declared illegal border crossing a national emergency. Human smuggling prosecutio­ns along the border have increased by 25 percent; the number of people injured in pursuit crashes has increased by 42 percent. Among those harmed were Border Patrol agents. One was hit by flying debris while trying to spike a tire; another was dragged for at least 30 feet.

Last year brought the most pursuits in every district in the period examined, even as apprehensi­ons for illegal border crossings did not increase significan­tly over prior years.

The climb can be attributed to a number of factors: Trump’s aggressive immigratio­n agenda; the increase in deportatio­ns of long-term residents, who then try to return to family still inside the United States; recordbrea­king violence over the past two years in cartelrava­ged Mexico, an originatio­n point for many of the immigrants in the cases examined.

The trend of dangerous chases has continued into 2019.

On Feb. 19 in San Diego County, high-speed Border Patrol chases ended in two major crashes, including one in which a smuggler’s car blew a red light and plowed into a semi, killing the smuggler and an immigrant.

Border Patrol Agent Justin Castrejon, briefing reporters after one of the crashes, said, “This is just an example of the dangers alien smuggling organizati­ons put people in.” He said, “We have a very exact pursuit policy,” and that crashes were “something we experience from time to time as Border Patrol agents.”

There is no question that smugglers are part of a dangerous ecosystem that takes advantage of vulnerable people. They flee with little regard for the safety of their passengers or anyone on the road. They try to ram agents. Passengers beg them to stop, and they refuse.

In a couple of cases, they forced passengers to jump out at speeds up to 90 mph. One used a child as a human shield.

Few argue that should go unchecked.

“You kind of have to weigh a lot of factors. If I let this person go, are they going to hurt someone else?” said David Kim, assistant chief patrol agent for the Border Patrol’s El Centro sector in California. “A significan­t amount of the time when we’re engaged in a pursuit, you have no idea what’s in the vehicle.”

But experts who reviewed Border Patrol cases for this investigat­ion found that the agency’s loose pursuit policies only made matters worse, escalating the peril to passengers, agents they and the public.

“The mission of the Border Patrol is different than the urban police department, but it still doesn’t relieve them of the duty to protect, if not all citizens, then all people,” said Geoff Alpert, a criminolog­ist at the University of South Carolina who has authored national reports on pursuit policy. “They should know that these drivers are hired mules. They’re told, ‘You just run.’ Why are you chasing someone you know is just going to run from you, and risk somebody’s life?”

A month ago, ProPublica and The Times presented the Border Patrol’s national office with the findings of this investigat­ion, along with a request for an interview and questions about the agency’s policies, training and the current state of its accountabi­lity procedures for the use of force while driving.

They acknowledg­ed receipt but refused to respond.

High-speed pursuits were once the norm across law enforcemen­t agencies in the United States. Even a routine traffic stop could trigger one. By the early 1990s, they had generated enough damage — and lawsuits — to prompt calls for reform. The Department of Justice released narrower pursuit guidelines, and agencies began to pull back.

There’s now a formula to evaluate whether or not to pursue, said Dennis Kenney, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. It takes into considerat­ion the weather, how populated an area is and the seriousnes­s of the offense.

“It’s a process of balancing risk against necessity,” he said.

ProPublica and the Los Angeles Times reviewed the pursuit policies of police department­s in the five largest cities in the country, as well as a dozen jurisdicti­ons in the states that touch the border. All but one policy are more restrictiv­e than the Border Patrol’s.

The Dallas Police Department, as well as the largest counties in Arizona and New Mexico, bar officers from initiating chases unless they are pursuing suspected violent felons. The Border Patrol’s policy, released in 2009 and updated in 2011, does not limit the kinds of offenses agents can use as justificat­ion for chases. It advises agents to pursue only when the “benefit of emergency driving outweighs the immediate danger.”

Aggressive tactics

Human smuggling is a felony. But most drivers caught in the United States are making only a short last leg of a journey, and they are not deeply connected to the cartels that run smuggling operations. Often, they are down-on-their-luck U.S. citizens, making anywhere from a couple of hundred to a few thousand dollars, according to the analysis. Sometimes, they are immigrants getting a discount on their journey for manning the wheel. A few have been as young as 14 or 15.

In the cases examined, agents never recovered caches of weapons and only rarely found drugs. After 504 pursuits over four years, agents found drugs in nine cases and personal guns in four. The most serious crime charged for most pursuits reviewed was “bringing in and harboring aliens.” Those convicted often served less than a year.

Border Patrol chases happened in thick fog and rain, and on treacherou­s mountain roads. They happened on unpopulate­d stretches of desert highway, but also miles from the border, on interstate­s at rush hour, in school zones and residentia­l areas, and through strip mall parking lots, forcing pedestrian­s to run out of the way.

In one case, an agent pushed 110 mph trying to keep up with a sedan, noting “the Nissan was operating at above their performanc­e capabiliti­es.” He followed as it weaved through traffic, hit a curb, slid into a dirt triangle and got off the highway in El Centro, Calif. The agent followed as it blew a red light. He saw it go “airborne,” emit sparks and smoke, and spew oil.

As the agent kept up the pursuit, the Nissan crashed into a car carrying a newborn baby, who was bruised in the accident.

During the final years of President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, Alpert met with top Border Patrol officials to discuss reforming the agency’s policy. He believes chases should be restricted to violent felony suspects. Specifical­ly, he suggested agents not chase people suspected solely of immigratio­n violations.

“Their comeback was, ‘We’re not an urban police department and our rules are different,’” Alpert said.

The ProPublica-Times analysis found case after case of Border Patrol agents using tactics that can escalate the danger of chases.

The most common was the use of spike strips at high speeds.

Spike strips are sleeves of hollow metal pins laid out in the path of a fleeing vehicle, meant to pierce and deflate a tire over the span of several seconds, instead of in a blowout. The hope is that the driver will surrender as the tires disintegra­te.

While the devices are generally seen as effective, they can be lethal at high speeds, especially above 70 mph, experts said. Even the Los Angeles Police Department, which has a policy most experts consider permissive, discourage­s officers from deploying spike strips above 65 mph. The Border Patrol has no official cutoff speed, though agents first have to get approval from a supervisor to deploy the devices.

The use of spike strips in the first two years of Trump’s administra­tion nearly doubled compared with the last two years of Obama’s, from 28 to 52 pursuits, in the cases examined. Though documents rarely mentioned the speeds at which cars were traveling, reporters identified 11 pursuits since 2015 in which an agent deployed spikes after noting the car was going faster than 70 mph; nine of those chases happened in the last two years.

The biggest problem with spike strips is the unpredicta­bility they introduce. Drivers swerve to avoid them, gunning the motor even if their tires have been punctured.

Spike strip dangers

Oyiza Pearson, 33, was heading to pick up her son from the babysitter when she turned onto California 125 in La Mesa on May 2, 2018.

In her rearview mirror, she saw a Nissan Pathfinder barreling toward her.

 ?? JOHN GIBBINS/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE ?? Border Patrol agents gather at the bottom of the ravine where a vehicle landed upside down after the driver tried to elude agents on Interstate 8 in March 2018. The vehicle left the roadway after losing control at more than 100 mph. The driver, who was not injured, tried to flee but was caught.
JOHN GIBBINS/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE Border Patrol agents gather at the bottom of the ravine where a vehicle landed upside down after the driver tried to elude agents on Interstate 8 in March 2018. The vehicle left the roadway after losing control at more than 100 mph. The driver, who was not injured, tried to flee but was caught.

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