News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Mexico Denies Drug Patrol Entered US |
Title: | US CA: Mexico Denies Drug Patrol Entered US |
Published On: | 2000-11-03 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 03:31:22 |
MEXICO DENIES DRUG PATROL ENTERED U.S.
Border: Officials Admit That A Six-member Squad Was Near The Spot Where
American Agents Reported Being Pinned Down By Gunfire From Soldiers.
SAN DIEGO--Mexican authorities have acknowledged that an anti-drug squad
was patrolling near where U.S. Border Patrol agents last week reported a
confrontation with armed men north of the border, U.S. officials said
Thursday. But Mexico, which said six soldiers were looking for drug
smuggling, maintains that the squad did not cross into the United States or
fire weapons, U.S. officials said.
Meanwhile, the union representing Border Patrol agents in San Diego says
the agency downplayed the seriousness of the Oct. 24 confrontation, during
which it says uniformed men pursued a pair of agents on the U.S. side.
After the incident, Border Patrol officials said a squad of unidentified
men crossed during daylight into remote Copper Canyon, about four miles
east of the Otay Mesa port of entry. Officials said its agents called out,
identifying themselves as border officers, and summoned help after hearing
gunshots. But the agency said it was unclear if the shots came from the group.
But National Border Patrol Council Local 1613 is offering a more dramatic
account, saying two agents were pinned by gunfire and pursued on U.S. soil
by 10 men, who wore military-style uniforms and carried rifles with bayonets.
The union said snipers took positions on each side of the border while
others searched U.S. terrain, pointing their rifles toward the border
agents and ordering them out of the bushes where they had taken cover.
The group returned to Mexico when two more Border Patrol agents showed up,
the union said.
A spokesman said the union was airing its version, based on agents'
accounts, because it felt the Border Patrol had whitewashed the matter. The
union did not make the agents available for comment.
"We all know we face some dangers in our jobs," L. Keith Weeks, vice
president of Local 1613, said Thursday. "But in something like this--it's
something that shouldn't happen, that should be brought to light."
William T. Veal, Border Patrol chief in San Diego, said the incident was
taken seriously and was the subject of talks with Mexican counterparts.
"Whether they crossed into the United States or not we may never
definitively establish," Veal said.
But he said the episode showed the need for cross-border communication when
such exercises take place.
"Our concern is that when elements of the government are going to operate
in the immediate border vicinity, there needs to be a coordination
mechanism," Veal said.
The incident pricked sensitivities ever close to the surface at the border,
where issues of sovereignty and fair treatment can snarl binational
relations and provide instant talk-show fodder.
When a U.S. Marine was jailed on gun charges last year after inadvertently
crossing into Mexico with disassembled weapons in his truck, U.S. Rep.
Duncan Hunter (R-El Cajon) drew up a list of cases in which Mexican
authorities strayed into the United States but were allowed to return home.
Mexico, too, has complained that U.S. agents have strayed onto its soil in
chasing undocumented immigrants.
The union compared the incident to a March 14 case in which Mexican
soldiers patrolling against drugs crashed through a border fence west of El
Paso and fired at agents. Weeks said such incidents highlight the dangers
of working in remote border areas, where smuggling of drugs and immigrants
is a high-stakes criminal enterprise.
Border: Officials Admit That A Six-member Squad Was Near The Spot Where
American Agents Reported Being Pinned Down By Gunfire From Soldiers.
SAN DIEGO--Mexican authorities have acknowledged that an anti-drug squad
was patrolling near where U.S. Border Patrol agents last week reported a
confrontation with armed men north of the border, U.S. officials said
Thursday. But Mexico, which said six soldiers were looking for drug
smuggling, maintains that the squad did not cross into the United States or
fire weapons, U.S. officials said.
Meanwhile, the union representing Border Patrol agents in San Diego says
the agency downplayed the seriousness of the Oct. 24 confrontation, during
which it says uniformed men pursued a pair of agents on the U.S. side.
After the incident, Border Patrol officials said a squad of unidentified
men crossed during daylight into remote Copper Canyon, about four miles
east of the Otay Mesa port of entry. Officials said its agents called out,
identifying themselves as border officers, and summoned help after hearing
gunshots. But the agency said it was unclear if the shots came from the group.
But National Border Patrol Council Local 1613 is offering a more dramatic
account, saying two agents were pinned by gunfire and pursued on U.S. soil
by 10 men, who wore military-style uniforms and carried rifles with bayonets.
The union said snipers took positions on each side of the border while
others searched U.S. terrain, pointing their rifles toward the border
agents and ordering them out of the bushes where they had taken cover.
The group returned to Mexico when two more Border Patrol agents showed up,
the union said.
A spokesman said the union was airing its version, based on agents'
accounts, because it felt the Border Patrol had whitewashed the matter. The
union did not make the agents available for comment.
"We all know we face some dangers in our jobs," L. Keith Weeks, vice
president of Local 1613, said Thursday. "But in something like this--it's
something that shouldn't happen, that should be brought to light."
William T. Veal, Border Patrol chief in San Diego, said the incident was
taken seriously and was the subject of talks with Mexican counterparts.
"Whether they crossed into the United States or not we may never
definitively establish," Veal said.
But he said the episode showed the need for cross-border communication when
such exercises take place.
"Our concern is that when elements of the government are going to operate
in the immediate border vicinity, there needs to be a coordination
mechanism," Veal said.
The incident pricked sensitivities ever close to the surface at the border,
where issues of sovereignty and fair treatment can snarl binational
relations and provide instant talk-show fodder.
When a U.S. Marine was jailed on gun charges last year after inadvertently
crossing into Mexico with disassembled weapons in his truck, U.S. Rep.
Duncan Hunter (R-El Cajon) drew up a list of cases in which Mexican
authorities strayed into the United States but were allowed to return home.
Mexico, too, has complained that U.S. agents have strayed onto its soil in
chasing undocumented immigrants.
The union compared the incident to a March 14 case in which Mexican
soldiers patrolling against drugs crashed through a border fence west of El
Paso and fired at agents. Weeks said such incidents highlight the dangers
of working in remote border areas, where smuggling of drugs and immigrants
is a high-stakes criminal enterprise.
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