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SentLTE-Digest Sunday, December 20 2009 Volume 09 : Number 079

001 LTE: War Without Borders
    From: Richard Lake <>
002 LTE: 'War Without Borders'
    From: John Chase <>
003 LTE: Re: 'Marijuana for medicine'
    From: Kirk Muse <>
004 LTE: Re: 'Hired by customs, but working for the cartels'
    From: Kirk Muse <>
005 LTE: 'Survey shows drug abuse among youth is down'
    From: John Chase <>
006 LTE: Re: 'U.S. CASE LINKS DRUGS TO TERRORISM' 
    From: Kirk Muse <>
007 LTE: 'U.S. Case Links Drugs to Terrorism'
    From: John Chase <>
008 LTE: Re: 'Oklahoma's budget has country's biggest deficit'
    From: Kirk Muse <>
009 LTE: Re: 'Colorado's budget shortfall keeps growing'
    From: Kirk Muse <>


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Subj: 001 LTE: War Without Borders
From: Richard Lake <>
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 2009 00:02:05 -0800

WAR WITHOUT BORDERS

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DrugSense FOCUS Alert #423 - Friday, 18 December 2009

The Media Awareness Project has archived almost 14 hundred articles 
that mention Mexico so far this year.

Today's front page article, below, is one of them. Taking a page from 
the Los Angeles Times series 'Mexico Under Siege' the New York Times 
calls it's series War Without Borders.

It is that. No single issue of the drug war is costing more in lives 
and resources. None leads to more corruption. None better illustrates 
the costs of the prohibition of some drugs.

News clippings referencing Mexico are found at 
http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Mexico

Many may be appropriate targets for your letters to the editor.

**********************************************************************

Page: A1, Front Page

Source: New York Times (NY)

Copyright: 2009 The New York Times Company

Contact: 

Author: Randal C. Archibold

War Without Borders

HIRED BY CUSTOMS, BUT WORKING FOR THE CARTELS

SAN DIEGO -- At first, Luis F. Alarid seemed well on his way to 
becoming a customs agency success story. He had risen from a 
childhood of poverty and foster homes, some of them abusive, earned 
praise and commendations while serving in the Army and the Marines, 
including two tours in Iraq, and returned to Southern California to 
fulfill a goal of serving in law enforcement.

But, early last year, after just a few months as a customs inspector, 
he was waving in trucks from Mexico carrying loads of marijuana and 
illegal immigrants. He pocketed some $200,000 in cash that paid for, 
as far as the government could tell, a $15,000 motorcycle, 
flat-screen televisions, a laptop computer and more.

Some investigators believe that Mr. Alarid, 32, who was paid off by a 
Mexican smuggling crew that included several members of his family, 
intended to work for smugglers all along. At one point, Mr. Alarid, 
who was sentenced to seven years in federal prison in February, told 
investigators that he had researched just how much prison time he 
might get for his crimes and believed, as investigators later 
reported, that he could do it "standing on his head."

Mr. Alarid's case is not the only one that has law enforcement 
officials worried that Mexican traffickers -- facing beefed-up 
security on the border that now includes miles of new fencing, 
floodlights, drones, motion sensors and cameras -- have stepped up 
their efforts to corrupt the border police.

They research potential targets, anticorruption investigators said, 
exploiting the cross-border clans and relationships that define the 
region, offering money, sex, whatever it takes. But, with the border 
police in the midst of a hiring boom, law enforcement officers 
believe that traffickers are pulling out the stops, even soliciting 
some of their own operatives to apply for jobs.

"In some ways," said Keith Slotter, the agent in charge of the 
F.B.I.'s San Diego office, "it's like the old spy game between the 
old Soviet Union and the U.S. -- trying to compromise each other's spies."

James Tomsheck, the assistant commissioner for internal affairs at 
Customs and Border Protection, and other investigators said they had 
seen many signs that the drug organizations were making a concerted 
effort to infiltrate the ranks.

"We are very concerned," Mr. Tomsheck said. "There have been 
verifiable instances where people were directed to C.B.P. to apply 
for positions only for the purpose of enhancing the goals of criminal 
organizations. They had been selected because they had no criminal 
record; a background investigation would not develop derogatory information."

During a federal trial of a recently hired Border Patrol agent this 
year, one drug trafficker with ties to organized crime in Mexico 
described how he had enticed the agent, a close friend from high 
school in Del Rio, Tex., who was entering the training academy, to 
join his crew smuggling tons of marijuana into Texas.

The agent, Raquel Esquivel, 25, was sentenced to 15 years in prison 
last week for tipping smugglers on where border guards were and 
suggesting how they could avoid getting caught.

The smuggler, Diego Esquivel, who is not related to the agent, said 
he told her that her decision to enter the academy was a good career 
move and, he said, "I thought it was good for me, too."

Under the Bush administration, the United States has spent billions 
of dollars -- $11 billion this year alone for Customs and Border 
Protection -- to tighten the border between the United States and 
Mexico, building up physical barriers and going on a hiring spree to 
develop the nation's largest law enforcement agency to patrol the area.

But the battle for survival among cartels in Mexico, in which 
thousands of people, mostly in the drug trade or fighting it, have 
been killed, has only led drug traffickers to redouble their efforts 
to get their drugs to market in the United States.

Along the border, many residents have family members on both sides. 
Generations of residents have been accustomed to passing back and 
forth relatively freely, often daily, and exchanging goods, legal or not.

Federal officials believe that drug traffickers are seeking to 
exploit those ties more than ever, urging family and friends on the 
American side to take advantage of the hiring rush for customs 
agents. The majority of agents and officers stay out of crime. But 
smuggling can be appealing. The average officer makes $70,000 a year, 
a sum that can be dwarfed by what smugglers pay to get just a few 
trucks full of drugs into the United States.

Right now, only a fraction -- 10 percent or so -- of Customs and 
Border Protection recruits are given a polygraph screening that 
federal investigators say has proved effective in weeding out people 
with drug ties and other troublesome backgrounds. Officials say they 
do not have the money to test more recruits.

In years past, new hires rarely served in the areas where they had 
grown up, but recently that practice has been relaxed somewhat to 
attract more recruits, said Thomas Frost, an assistant inspector 
general at the Department of Homeland Security. Mr. Frost and other 
internal affairs veterans say that has made it easier for traffickers.

Mr. Tomsheck said that several prospective hires had been turned away 
after investigators suspected that they had been directed to Customs 
and Border Enforcement by drug trafficking organizations, and that 
several recent hires were under investigation as well, though he 
declined to provide details.

As one exasperated investigator at the border put it, "There is so 
much hiring; if you have a warm body and pulse, you have a job."

The F.B.I. is planning to add three multiagency corruption squads to 
the 10 already on the Southwest border, and the Department of 
Homeland Security's inspector general, the department's primary 
investigative arm, has also added agents. But such hiring has not 
kept up with the growth of the agency they are entrusted to keep watch over.

Over all, arrests of Customs and Border Protection agents and 
officers have increased 40 percent in the last few years, outpacing 
the 24 percent growth in the agency itself, according to the 
Department of Homeland Security inspector general's office. The 
office has 400 open investigations, each often spanning a few years or more.

Keith A. Byers, who supervises the F.B.I.'s border corruption units, 
said corruption posed a national security threat because guards 
seldom verify what is in the vehicles they have agreed to let pass, 
raising concerns "they could be letting something much more dangerous 
into the U.S."

Most corrupt officers gravitate to smuggling illegal immigrants, 
rationalizing that is less onerous than getting involved with drugs, 
investigators say.

But Mr. Byers and others point to a string of drug-related cases that 
make them wonder if the conventional wisdom is holding.

Margarita Crispin, a former customs inspector in El Paso, pleaded 
guilty in April 2008 and received a 20-year prison sentence in what 
the F.B.I. considers one of the more egregious corruption cases.

Through a succession of boyfriends and other associates with ties to 
major drug trafficking organizations in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Ms. 
Crispin helped smuggle thousands of pounds of marijuana over three 
years, almost from the time she began working for the agency.

She waved off drug-sniffing dogs in her lane, complaining she was 
afraid of them, although investigators later learned she had had dogs as pets.

"She is someone who from the beginning said this would be a good job 
to help the people I am associated with," Mr. Byers said.

Just last month, Martha Garnica, a 12-year Customs and Border 
Protection employee near El Paso, was charged with bribery and 
marijuana smuggling in concert with traffickers in Ciudad Juarez.

Ms. Garnica's 21-year-old daughter had also sought a job with the 
Border Patrol, in what investigators deemed a suspicious move given 
her mother's alleged involvement in the drug trade. The daughter, 
testifying in court last week, admitted she had lied on the 
application both about being a United States citizen and about owning 
property in Mexico. A spokesman for the United States Attorney's 
Office in El Paso declined to comment.

Mr. Alarid's history in the military probably made him seem like a 
good candidate for the customs job. But he had a tangled family 
history. According to court papers, both his parents were drug addicts.

Mr. Alarid was born in Tijuana, Mexico, but raised largely in foster 
homes in Southern California. He emerged from high school a track 
star and, over the next 10 years, did stints in the Marines and the 
Army, drawing praise from commanders for his dedication and service.

"I would willingly trust Luis with my life," Sgt. Maj. Michael W. 
Abbey of the Army wrote in a letter to the judge before Mr. Alarid 
was sentenced in February.

Mr. Alarid began working at the border in San Diego in October 2007. 
In his guilty plea, he admitted that he had started smuggling in 
February 2008. He was arrested three months later.

Mr. Alarid would wave in vehicles that should have raised suspicion, 
either because their license plates were partly covered or because 
the plates did not belong to the vehicle, something he would have 
seen on the computer screen in his inspection booth.

Before reporting to his lane, he would go out to the employee parking 
lot to use his cellphone, which federal agents believe was his way of 
telling the smugglers which lane to approach.

At his sentencing, all involved -- the prosecutors, the judge, his 
lawyer -- expressed bewilderment at the turn in Mr. Alarid's life. 
But in an interview, a family member who was not part of the case 
said Mr. Alarid had mounting gambling debts and, despite it all, had 
always sought a bond with his biological mother.

Still, Judge Janis L. Sammartino accepted the government's argument 
that a deterrent message needed to be sent.

"I do think that the public, for a while at least, needs to be 
assured that who we have at the border are 100 percent individuals of 
integrity," she said. "I think you were at one time. I don't know 
what went wrong for you, sir, and I hope that you attain that again."

**********************************************************************

Prepared by: Richard Lake, Senior Editor     www.mapinc.org

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Subj: 002 LTE: 'War Without Borders'
From: John Chase <>
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 2009 03:23:01 -0800

Editors, New York Times -

Re: War Without Borders

The violence and corruption were predictable, but we did it anyhow.

In the late 1920s Congress was escalating National Prohibition in a 
desperate attempt to stamp out alcohol. Now, 80 years later, we are 
doing it to stamp out drugs, and the results are the same.

The results are summarized in the 1930 resolution of Women's 
Organization for National Prohibition Reform, which reads, in part: "... 
the hypocrisy, the corruption, the tragic loss of life and the appalling 
increase of crime which have attended the abortive attempt to enforce 
it; in the shocking effect it has had upon the youth of the nation; in 
the impairment of constitutional guarantees of individual rights; in the 
weakening of the  sense of solidarity between the citizen and the 
government, which is the  only sure basis of a country's strength."

George Santayana wrote in 1905 that "Those who cannot remember the past 
are condemned to repeat it." Never more true than of today's U.S. Congress.

Submitted for publication.

John Chase
727 787 3085
1620 E Dorchester Dr
Palm Harbor, FL 34684

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Subj: 003 LTE: Re: 'Marijuana for medicine'
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 2009 05:19:04 -0800

To the Editor of The Arkansas Times:

I'm responding the the article: "Marijuana for medicine" (12-17-09).

I'd like to add that one of the medications prescribed by my personal
physician for my arthritis pain and inflammation, has the rare potential
side effect of death.  In other words, if I take this medication as
prescribed, I can die as a result.

On the other hand, marijuana has never been documented to kill a single
person in the 5,000 year history of its use.

For me, marijuana is the more effective medication.  Right now, if
adult citizens opt for the safer and more effective medication,
they are subject to arrest and being sent to jail with violent criminals.

Is something wrong with this situation?  I think so.

Shouldn't adult citizens have the freedom to choose what goes into their
own bodies in the privacy of their own homes?

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.

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Subj: 004 LTE: Re: 'Hired by customs, but working for the cartels'
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 2009 05:46:03 -0800

To the Editor of The New York Times:

Customs agent Luis F. Alarid is probably the norm and not the
exception.  What would you do if offered a choice between taking
silver (money) or lead (bullets)?  ("Hired by customs, but working
for the cartels" 12-18-09).

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.
Feel free to edit.
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Subj: 005 LTE: 'Survey shows drug abuse among youth is down'
From: John Chase <>
Date: Sat, 19 Dec 2009 11:33:14 -0800

Sent online to http://www.albertleatribune.com/

Re: Alice Englin's 18 Dec "Survey shows drug abuse among youth is down"

I have digested the results of the 2009  Monitoring the Future Study and 
found two important things not mentioned in the press release.

First, no mention of DAILY pot smoking, found only by drilling down to 
Table 4. Seems to me such use by kids indicates problem use and should 
have been discussed. The good news is that it is very small.

Second, recent trends in kids' smoking. For 13 years, cigarette smoking 
among kids has declined every year, far more rapidly than pot smoking, 
and all without the threat of felony arrest, even though tobacco is more 
addictive that pot. The message for our legislators is that candor is 
more effective than the criminal law to persuade kids.

John Chase
Florida

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Subj: 006 LTE: Re: 'U.S. CASE LINKS DRUGS TO TERRORISM' 
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Sat, 19 Dec 2009 19:36:40 -0800

To the Editor of The Los Angeles Times:

So our drug prohibition policies are not only financing Mexican
drug cartels but also international terrorist organizations.
("U.S.  CASE LINKS DRUGS TO TERRORISM" 12-19-09).

Will it take a nuclear bomb detonated in NY City or Washington,
DC to convince our politicians that out drug prohibition policies
are counterproductive?

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.
Feel free to edit.
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------------------------------

Subj: 007 LTE: 'U.S. Case Links Drugs to Terrorism'
From: John Chase <>
Date: Sat, 19 Dec 2009 20:06:52 -0800

Editors, the LA Times -

Re: "U.S. Case Links Drugs to Terrorism" Dec 19th

"...concrete signs of the convergence of drugs and terrorism"?

Of course. The drug war has driven the price of illegal drugs sky high,
so terrorists use them as a medium of exchange. If drugs were legal, 
terrorists would switch to some other high value, concealable, hard to 
trace commodity; perhaps diamonds. Would we then respond by trying to 
stamp out diamonds?

John Chase
727 787 3085
1620 E Dorchester Dr
Palm Harborm, FL 34684

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Subj: 008 LTE: Re: 'Oklahoma's budget has country's biggest deficit'
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Sun, 20 Dec 2009 09:40:59 -0800

To the Editor of The Oklahoman:

I'm writing about: "Oklahoma's budget has country's biggest deficit"
(12-20-09).

While Oklahoma and many other states are trying to figure out how to
close their massive budget shortfalls, the Dutch in the Netherlands are
trying to figure out what to do with their closed prisons.

While the Netherlands has a total population of about 16.5 million, it
has only about 12,000 prisoners. On the other hand, the United States
has more than 2.3 million prisoners.

Why the glaring disparity? I suggest it’s our drug policies.

In the Netherlands, adult citizens can use, buy and possess small
amounts of marijuana without criminal sanctions. In the United States,
adult citizens are subject to arrest, and jail or prison for buying,
selling or possessing various amounts of marijuana.

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.

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Subj: 009 LTE: Re: 'Colorado's budget shortfall keeps growing'
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Sun, 20 Dec 2009 11:11:33 -0800

To the Editor of The Denver Post:

I'm writing about: "Colorado's budget shortfall keeps growing"
(12-19-09).

While Colorado and many other states are trying to figure out how to
close their massive budget shortfalls, the Dutch in the Netherlands are
trying to figure out what to do with their closed prisons.

While the Netherlands has a total population of about 16.5 million, it
has only about 12,000 prisoners. On the other hand, the United States
has greater than 2,300,000 total prisoners.

If my math is correct, we in the U. S. have 18.2 fold the Dutch
general population and 191.6 fold their prison population.

Why the glaring disparity? I suggest it’s our drug policies.

In the Netherlands, adult citizens can use, buy and possess small
amounts of marijuana without criminal sanctions. In the United States,
adult citizens are subject to arrest, and jail or prison for buying,
selling or possessing various amounts of marijuana.

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.

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------------------------------

End of SentLTE-Digest V09 #79
*****************************

Mark Greer ()         ___ ___     _ _  _ _
Media Awareness Project              /' _ ` _ `\ /'_`)('_`\
P. O. Box 651                        | ( ) ( ) |( (_| || (_) )
Porterville, CA 93258                (_) (_) (_) \__,_)| ,__/
(800) 266-5759                                         | |
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/lists/                      (_)

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