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Hawkeye6
02-07-2005, 06:36 AM
From the Washington Times:

http://www.washtimes.com/national/20050203-125017-1369r.htm

Snipers Target Border Agents

By Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published February 3, 2005

Snipers working as "lookouts" for drug traffickers and illegal-alien smugglers are targeting U.S. Border Patrol agents from vantage points across the U.S.-Mexico border.
Within the past week, agents assigned to the Douglas station in Arizona's southeastern corner -- one of the nation's busiest illegal-entry points -- have been fired at on at least six occasions, according to federal authorities, and although none of the officers was injured, several reported near-misses.
One agent's vehicle was hit twice as he moved to avoid gunfire. Another sniper fired both at an agent and at a surveillance camera, which was hit by four bullets but was not seriously damaged.
Since Oct. 1, agents assigned to the Tucson sector, which includes the border stations at Douglas, Naco and Nogales in the highest alien- and drug-trafficking corridor in the country, have been assaulted 80 times, nine involving shootings. Responsible for a 260-mile section of the Arizona-Mexico border, the Tucson agents are being assaulted at a rate of two every three days in that period, more than doubling last year's total.
"The continuing increase in the number of assaults being directed at our agents is of great concern," said Border Patrol spokesman Andy Adame in Tucson. "We believe the vast majority of these assaults are directly tied to alien and drug smugglers based in Mexico.
"Although the border is more secure today than it was even a year ago, we acknowledge that more agents, equipment and technology are needed immediately to bring control and to reduce the number of violent assaults against our agents," Mr. Adame said.
The rise in assaults comes as the Bush administration reportedly has decided not to hire the 2,000 new Border Patrol agents that were authorized for each of the next five years in the recently passed intelligence-overhaul bill. Most of them would have been assigned to the Tucson sector.
Instead, President Bush is expected to seek an increase of only about 200 agents for the new fiscal year, according to law-enforcement authorities and others.
Passed by Congress and signed into law by Mr. Bush in December, the intelligence-overhaul bill authorizes 10,000 new Border Patrol agents in five years as part of Congress' response to the September 11 attacks and to a report by the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, which found deep institutional failings and missed opportunities by U.S. authorities in stopping the al Qaeda terrorists who crashed jetliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, who left office this week, and Undersecretary Asa Hutchinson, who leaves March 1, have confirmed separately that Mr. Bush will not seek funding for the 2,000 agents this year. Both said budget concerns precluded hiring the additional agents.
That decision has riled Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr., Wisconsin Republican and chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who told reporters last week he was "disappointed," because the reduction appeared to be contrary to what the president had promised.
In a letter, Mr. Sensenbrenner asked Mr. Bush to fully fund the authorized increases. The letter was signed by all five House Republican leaders on the intelligence bill: Mr. Sensenbrenner and Reps. Henry J. Hyde of Illinois, chairman of the House International Relations Committee; Duncan Hunter of California, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee; Peter Hoekstra of Michigan, chairman of the House intelligence committee; and David Dreier of California, chairman of the House Rules Committee.
Rep. Tom Tancredo, Colorado Republican and chairman of the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus, said he was "not surprised" by the funding decision, but was "disappointed."
"It's equivalent to denying a crime-ridden city more officers for protection. It simply makes no sense," Mr. Tancredo said, adding that the State Department issued a traveler's warning for the northern part of Mexico just last week, citing deteriorating security conditions -- including killings and kidnappings -- along the U.S.-Mexico border.
White House officials have said Mr. Bush's 2006 fiscal budget, due Monday, will "provide increased resources" for continued border-security initiatives, although they declined to elaborate.
Meanwhile, Border Patrol agents in the Tucson sector said snipers fire at the agents using cover on the Mexican side of the border, then disappear into the desert -- knowing that they are not going to be pursued.
Mr. Adame said one agent on patrol on Jan. 26 near the U.S.-Mexico boundary fence adjacent to Douglas International Airport observed several people standing behind the fence and identified them as "lookouts" for alien or drug smugglers. He said as the agent approached, he saw a muzzle flash and heard a bullet as it "whizzed by."
The agent, he said, moved to safety, and as other agents responded to the scene, the unidentified men disappeared farther into Mexico.
Mr. Adame said another agent on patrol Friday, also near the Douglas airport, moved to safety after hearing gunshots coming from Mexico. No one was spotted, he said, although an examination of the agent's vehicle revealed that it had been hit twice, once in the rear driver's side tire and another through the front bumper and into the motor.
No one has been arrested in the shootings.

indyhntr
02-07-2005, 05:33 PM
I'd be more than happy to spend a week of my vacation sitting on the border doing a little sniping of my own just to try and help the gov. out if they would just ask:D One way or another we have got to get controll of our Southern border.

gregarat
02-07-2005, 07:26 PM
A counter sniping vacation sounds like fun.

Does anyone know of any guides?
How much would an all-inclusive 7 day package cost?
:)

skeet
02-07-2005, 09:18 PM
Hey we'd have to get Boyd and Petey in on that. They like that long range stuff. I just happen to know where there is a nice Bolt Action 50 BMG for sale. I have about 300 rounds of ammo here already. Would that be enough for a week??

GoodOlBoy
02-08-2005, 01:47 PM
On the Texas side we have a reverse bag limit. You MUST shoot at least 3 drug dealers a day if sniping on the border.

:D

GoodOlBoy

Nulle
02-08-2005, 06:07 PM
The State Dept. put out a no travel warning for Mexico as they were going to step up drug enforcement in that Country = guess they are !

AZZAFOX
02-09-2005, 10:41 PM
Unfortunately ROEs for enforcment officers stop you pursueing them accross the border and any return fire could be construed by the corrupt mexican governments as a prelude to there country being invaded.:mad:

donnie
02-10-2005, 08:57 AM
no reo's for us common folk! what dealer is going to report his lookout being hit?
video the whole thing from muzzle flash through return fire and impact, then show it on the local news. should make it harder to recruit snipers on their side.
anyway they don't seem to be very good shots, or they are afraid of actually killing a LEO.
could be good anti sniper training for our military.
would mexico really be dumb enough to start something with the US.

MarkL
02-10-2005, 12:57 PM
Originally posted by AZZAFOX
Unfortunately ROEs for enforcment officers stop you pursueing them accross the border and any return fire could be construed by the corrupt mexican governments as a prelude to there country being invaded.:mad:

Seems to me they started it. The invasion started long ago and now its a shooting war. I say it's time to strike back. If the mex govt isn't making every effort to stop it, they're complicit. Remember that pamphlet they published with instructions on how to sneak across the border?

gregarat
02-10-2005, 01:21 PM
Originally posted by AZZAFOX
Unfortunately ROEs for enforcment officers stop you pursueing them accross the border and any return fire could be construed by the corrupt mexican governments as a prelude to there country being invaded.:mad: I was going to ask why anyone would even want to invade Mexico:confused:

AZZAFOX
02-10-2005, 07:40 PM
To get the good tequilla and women, that's why we would invade and then pull out.:D

Valigator
02-10-2005, 07:54 PM
Fox you are bad...I laughed out loud the moment I saw it...My heart goes out to you border state members...I know the feeling...I have always thought maybe snipers could set up their own select outfitters group....you know like Hailburton...:D :D ;) anyway, maybe thats what we should do for a little while...call in a private army.........whatya'think

AZZAFOX
02-10-2005, 08:58 PM
Fox you are bad...Valigator

It was only a lil Aussie humour:D

wrenchman
02-10-2005, 09:32 PM
hey azza i am a southern wisky southern bell man my self but if up could get me a carry out of tamolys it would be great.

AZZAFOX
02-14-2005, 09:03 PM
Right with you, nothing like a red-headed TXan to get the blood flowing.:D PS. I'm a Jamesion drinker.:D