News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Texas Sheriffs To Ask Congress For Border Funds |
Title: | US TX: Texas Sheriffs To Ask Congress For Border Funds |
Published On: | 2006-02-28 |
Source: | Washington Times (DC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 15:33:16 |
TEXAS SHERIFFS TO ASK CONGRESS FOR BORDER FUNDS
A coalition of Texas border sheriffs will testify at Capitol Hill
hearings this week that illegal immigration and drug smuggling have
sent law-enforcement costs soaring and exposed their deputies and
communities to escalating violence.
Overwhelmed by a flood of illegal aliens, drug smugglers and rapidly
increasing violence, the Texas Border Sheriff's Coalition -- which
includes all the sheriffs from Texas' 16 border counties -- want the
federal government to help them pay for manpower increases, rising
fuel bills, vehicles and equipment.
"If anything happens along the border areas, we're the first ones to
respond, and it's the local taxpayers who are footing the bills for
the federal government's inability to control the area," said Zapata
County Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez. Sheriff Gonzalez, who heads the
coalition, has argued that the federal government's failure to
control illegal immigration and drug smuggling and to curtail growing
violence along the 1,200-mile U.S.-Mexico border in Texas has forced
county law-enforcement authorities into a "financial nightmare."
"We feel our government is not protecting our country, particularly
at a time when terrorists could make their way into the United States
through our southern border," Sheriff Gonzalez said.
The coalition says criminal organizations involved in narcotics and
human trafficking have become more sophisticated and dangerous and,
as a result have moved their operations all along the border.
Val Verde County Sheriff D'Wayne Jernigan, backed by eight coalition
members, will testify tomorrow before a joint hearing of the Senate
Judiciary subcommittee on terrorism, technology and homeland
security, and the subcommittee on immigration, border security and
citizenship. The hearing is titled "Federal Strategies to End Border Violence."
On Thursday, a joint hearing by the House Judiciary subcommittee on
immigration, border security and claims, and the subcommittee on
crime, terrorism and homeland security will hear from Sheriff
Gonzalez and El Paso County Sheriff Leo Samaniego.
Executive Director Rick Glancey said the coalition it has reached out
to other law-enforcement agencies along the U.S.-Mexico border "who
share the same unique problems with very limited resources."
"We have decided as a coalition to reach out to our fellow sheriffs
in neighboring states to prove the issue is not about politics or a
hidden agenda; it is about border security," Mr. Glancey said. "You
must have border security in order to have national security and
homeland security."
Joining the coalition in support at the hearings will be Sheriff
Larry Dever of the Cochise County Sheriff's Office in southern
Arizona and Sheriff Todd Garrison of the Dona Ana County Sheriff's
Department in southern New Mexico. Sheriff Dever's jurisdiction
includes 83 miles of U.S.-Mexico border that have become the nation's
most traveled immigration corridor.
A coalition of Texas border sheriffs will testify at Capitol Hill
hearings this week that illegal immigration and drug smuggling have
sent law-enforcement costs soaring and exposed their deputies and
communities to escalating violence.
Overwhelmed by a flood of illegal aliens, drug smugglers and rapidly
increasing violence, the Texas Border Sheriff's Coalition -- which
includes all the sheriffs from Texas' 16 border counties -- want the
federal government to help them pay for manpower increases, rising
fuel bills, vehicles and equipment.
"If anything happens along the border areas, we're the first ones to
respond, and it's the local taxpayers who are footing the bills for
the federal government's inability to control the area," said Zapata
County Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez. Sheriff Gonzalez, who heads the
coalition, has argued that the federal government's failure to
control illegal immigration and drug smuggling and to curtail growing
violence along the 1,200-mile U.S.-Mexico border in Texas has forced
county law-enforcement authorities into a "financial nightmare."
"We feel our government is not protecting our country, particularly
at a time when terrorists could make their way into the United States
through our southern border," Sheriff Gonzalez said.
The coalition says criminal organizations involved in narcotics and
human trafficking have become more sophisticated and dangerous and,
as a result have moved their operations all along the border.
Val Verde County Sheriff D'Wayne Jernigan, backed by eight coalition
members, will testify tomorrow before a joint hearing of the Senate
Judiciary subcommittee on terrorism, technology and homeland
security, and the subcommittee on immigration, border security and
citizenship. The hearing is titled "Federal Strategies to End Border Violence."
On Thursday, a joint hearing by the House Judiciary subcommittee on
immigration, border security and claims, and the subcommittee on
crime, terrorism and homeland security will hear from Sheriff
Gonzalez and El Paso County Sheriff Leo Samaniego.
Executive Director Rick Glancey said the coalition it has reached out
to other law-enforcement agencies along the U.S.-Mexico border "who
share the same unique problems with very limited resources."
"We have decided as a coalition to reach out to our fellow sheriffs
in neighboring states to prove the issue is not about politics or a
hidden agenda; it is about border security," Mr. Glancey said. "You
must have border security in order to have national security and
homeland security."
Joining the coalition in support at the hearings will be Sheriff
Larry Dever of the Cochise County Sheriff's Office in southern
Arizona and Sheriff Todd Garrison of the Dona Ana County Sheriff's
Department in southern New Mexico. Sheriff Dever's jurisdiction
includes 83 miles of U.S.-Mexico border that have become the nation's
most traveled immigration corridor.
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