From Deseret News archives:

Border patrol searches the dark for signs of life

Published: Monday, Oct. 10, 2005 12:47 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
SUNLAND PARK, N.M. — So far, only jackrabbits are hopping the border along this stretch of desert between the United States and Mexico.

But the night is young, and it is a smuggler's moon — a half crescent that emits just enough light to travel but not enough to be seen.

Veteran U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agent Jorge Martinez pulls his SUV through sagebrush-covered hills looking for any sign of humans as the sun sinks in the southwestern sky. The evening shift is typically the most active for border crossers, he says.

New Mexico, Texas and the Mexican state of Chihuahua come together here. A white statue of Christ on the cross stands atop Sierra del Cristo Rey as a symbol of goodwill between the United States and Mexico. It is also a place where dozens of people play cat and mouse with the border patrol each day.

Martinez is among some 1,200 agents in the vast El Paso sector — 125,000 square miles including 289 miles of border — where the job is all about holding the line.

"We try to prevent them from getting in. That's our job," he said. "But they do get in."

Three hundred new agents are due to arrive soon.

Story continues below
The El Paso border patrol has detained 110,000 men, women and children, mostly younger men, in the past 11 months. It has made 1,184 drug seizures at a street value of $153 million.

"If you're not familiar with the volume of narcotics, it's kind of breathtaking when you see it for the first time," said Doug Moser, customs and border patrol spokesman.

On this night, Martinez has a tip from a confidential informant that marijuana smugglers are planning to dash across the line into a house in Sunland Park. There is no evidence of them or anyone else for that matter early in his shift. But it is early and still daylight.

Several Mexican children straddling a tall iron gate separating the two countries are the first people he encounters, though he keeps his distance. Another officer who took a closer look informed Martinez the young boys were throwing rocks.

A local church uses the gate to deliver food and clothing to residents of impoverished Rancho Anapra, a shanty town of squatters on the Mexican side, just feet from the border. The cinder-block shacks and wooden-pallet shelters lack running water and electricity. What power they do have is pirated from the utility lines overhead.

The boys aren't a threat, so Martinez moves on.

Agents say most border crossers are peaceful, even cooperative. They rarely have to draw their guns, let alone fire them.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Tyler Sipe, Deseret Morning News

Mexican children play on a gate on the U.S. border next to the Mexican town of Rancho Anapra. A church uses the gate to deliver food and clothing to residents of the shanty town of squatters.

previousnext

Latest comments

If Jordan Bluth is in this year's production, then it is a must-see...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

...will always have a great memory. What will you have?

Utah had double the penalties as BYU, and most of those personal fouls. I...

the BYU athletic program is a shining beacon to the world. I've been told...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

Let's just all let the water roll off our backs and then move on to...

When I decided to attend university to read Theology and Religious Studies,...

There definetly is a chapel in center city philadelphia. I was there when it...

Oops - too late

The AP Top 25; TCU 4th, BYU 16

That BYU fans and players should now be rooting for a Utah bowl win so that...

Hall just said what Utah fans think and want to say about BYU. The only...

Advertisements