The Sentinel-Record

Government border town crackdowns on the rise

- JERI CLAUSING AND JUAN CARLOS LLORCA

SUNLAND PARK, N. M. – While much of New Mexico is west of the Rio Grande, this dusty enclave of 14,000 residents is the only U. S. city located on the Mexico side of the river, on the same side as – and just across the border fence from – Juarez.

But it’s more than the anomalous location that lends to the town’s persistent reputation as a self- contained banana republic.

When state police descended on the dysfunctio­nal community before the March elections, the reaction wasn’t so much surprise as “what now?”

And that would be the latest allegation­s of extortion and financial kickbacks among municipal officials, and, more colorfully, that a mayoral candidate tried to force his opponent out of the race with a secretly recorded video of the other man getting a topless lap dance.

But what is relatively new in Sunland Park and in other troubled border cities and towns is the harsh response to such shenanigan­s. State and federal agencies are cracking down on border town corruption as part of the larger effort to battle Mexican drug cartels.

“Everyone turned their heads for so long,” said Richard Schwein, a former FBI agent in nearby El Paso, Texas, where at least 28 people have either been convicted or indicted recently for voting scandals or awarding fraudulent contracts. Then, when the Department of Justice and the FBI made it a priority, “Bingo!”

Another example can be found 70 miles west of El Paso, in tiny Columbus, N. M., where authoritie­s a year ago arrested the mayor, police chief, a town trustee and 11 other people who have since pleaded guilty to charges they helped run guns across the border to Mexican drug cartels.

That corruption that seems endemic to the border towns can be blamed on a mix of small- town politics, an influx of corrupt government practices from across the border, and, of course, the rise of the cartels and their endless supply of cash.

“If you’re ( a small town police officer) making $ 35,000 a year, and someone offers you $ 5,000 cash ... and next month there’s another $ 5,000 in it for you, you’ve just ( substantia­lly increased) your income by not being on patrol on a given road,” said James Phelps, an assistant professor with the De- and Criminal Justice at Angelo State University in San Angelo, Texas.

The U. S. attorney for New Mexico, Kenneth Gonzalez, says more local officials have gotten caught up in scandals as federal authoritie­s put a more intense and sophistica­ted focus on border towns as part of their attempts to thwart the cartels.

“A result of that intense scrutiny is that we more than likely are going to ensnare someone abusing their position,” Gonzalez said.

In Sunland Park, an inquiry into local elections turned into a major probe by multiple agencies.

State auditor Hector Balderas said that broad cooperatio­n among agencies shows that law enforcemen­t is starting to realize that “many crimes are interrelat­ed.”

“I think law enforcemen­t agencies and other agencies are now learning that these fiscal problems are symptoms of potentiall­y greater corruption,” Balderas said. “And a village or municipali­ty can be infiltrate­d by criminal elements very easily.”

Dona Ana District Attorney Amy Orlando stated in court that Sunland Park’s former mayor pro tem and then mayor- elect, Daniel Salinas, 28, had boasted to his codefendan­ts in the cases there that he had ties to the cartels and could call on them to have people who testify against him killed.

Salinas’ attorney vehemently denied those allegation­s.

The two dozen felonies filed against Salinas to date focus on corruption of the financial and voting processes. Although he won the mayor’s chair, he was barred from taking office by the terms of his bail.

So allies on the City Council recently named a political newcomer to the job. The new mayor, 24- year- old Javier Perea, most recently worked as a jewelry store employee at an El Paso mall. He replaces former Mayor Martin Resendiz, who dropped a bid for Congress after admitting in a deposition that he signed nine contracts while drunk.

Said Orlando, “Unfortunat­ely I think what is happening down in Sunland Park is that it was being run by a small group of people that were using funds and using the resources there for their own gain, operating it really as just their own little town – not following rules, not following regulation­s.”

Incorporat­ed in 1983, Sunland Park could geographic­ally be considered a suburb of El Paso or Las Cruces, N. M., or even an upscale neighborho­od in north Juarez. The town has a modern racetrack, replete with casino gambling, on the U. S. side of the Rio Grande. There are a few store fronts, churches and even horse stables lining its main road.

The residents are friendly, but weary of the attention that they fear has made the town a laughingst­ock.

Salinas has declined to talk about the case, citing advice from his lawyer. But during an encounter outside his house after the second of his three arrests, he seemed at ease for a man facing multiple felony charges and continued investigat­ion.

“I could write a book,” he said with a wry smile.

And the native of the town still has many supporters.

“He is a good man, you can see it in his eyes,” a man at the senior center said, before rushing off when asked for his name.

Besides Salinas, several city workers, including the city manager, the city’s public informatio­n officer, the public works director and former city councilors and the former police chief, have also been indicted in the three separate criminal cases.

In one, Salinas and others are accused of trying to force his mayoral opponent, Gerardo Hernandez, out of the race with the lap dance video. Hernandez, who finished second, told investigat­ors that an unidentifi­ed man threatened to blackmail him by producing a still image from the video. Hernandez said he was set up.

In another case, Salinas is accused of giving the former acting police chief the job of chief for convincing his sister not to run against a Salinas ally for city council. And in the third, Salinas and others are accused of billing hookers, drinks and campaign videos to a $ 12 million fund set up for the city by the owner of Sunland Park casino and racetrack to aid the town’s ongoing efforts to get a border crossing built there.

State auditor Balderas said he’s been monitoring the town since 2009. A previous auditor recommende­d the state take over the town in 2004 after finding scores of violations of state and local laws.

“Sunland Park has had a culture that has lacked accountabi­lity for many years,” Balderas said. “They probably should have been taken over many years ago. They got more brazen when they didn’t.”

 ??  ?? CORRUPTION CRACKDOWN: In a March 12 photo, former Sunland Park, N. M., mayor- elect Daniel Salinas stands outside his house, in Sunland Park, N. M. Sunland Park and other troubled U. S. border cities and towns are facing a harsh response to alleged...
CORRUPTION CRACKDOWN: In a March 12 photo, former Sunland Park, N. M., mayor- elect Daniel Salinas stands outside his house, in Sunland Park, N. M. Sunland Park and other troubled U. S. border cities and towns are facing a harsh response to alleged...

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