Pubdate: Thu, 29 Mar 2001
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Copyright: 2001 Houston Chronicle
Contact:  http://www.chron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198
Author: Michael Hedges

JUDGE: COURTS LET IMMIGRATION SLIDE

WASHINGTON -- The number of drug dealers caught at the Texas-Mexico border 
has overwhelmed the federal court system, forcing judges to mostly ignore 
immigration violations, a Texas-based federal judge told Congress on Thursday.

Texas and federal lawmen also told a House subcommittee that more than 
two-thirds of all illicit drugs confiscated along the Southwest border are 
seized in Texas, and the North American Free Trade Agreement has made it 
tougher to stanch the flow.

"My message here today is simple: The border courts are beyond their 
capacity to handle their caseloads," said U.S. District Judge W. Royal 
Furgeson Jr. of the Western District of Texas.

"Washington cannot increase the crackdown on illegal drugs and immigration 
along the Southwest border without more judges to allow these cases to be 
prosecuted."

Michael Scott, of the Texas Department of  Public Safety, said drug 
smugglers looking to come from Mexico into Texas have benefited from the 
huge increase in cross-border traffic  since NAFTA passed in 1994.

"It is clear there have been some serious unintended or overlooked 
consequences" of NAFTA, Scott testified.

As few as one in 20 vehicles crossing the border are searched, he said.

"This is a prescription for failure ... Mexican drug-trafficking 
organizations have exploited our collective inability to inspect vehicles 
and pedestrians entering this country," Scott said.

The status of the ongoing federal war on drugs in Texas and elsewhere along 
the border with Mexico was examined at a hearing of the House subcommittee 
on crime Thursday.

During the hearing, members of Congress and those testifying made 
references to the film Traffic, which portrays a failed war on drugs. "What 
we've heard is incredibly discouraging," said Rep. Lamar Smith, R-San 
Antonio, who chaired the hearing.

Some federal law enforcement officials said anti-drug efforts should not be 
viewed as a failure.

Law enforcement efforts to stop the flood of drugs, combined with education 
and treatment programs, have had an important impact, said Drug Enforcement 
Administrator Donnie Marshall.

He said the number of regular illegal-drug users in the United States has 
fallen from 26 million in 1980 to 13 million today.

But Marshall admitted that despite dismantling "two or three dozen major 
drug organizations" in recent years, the major kingpins controlling the 
illicit drug trade remain untouchable in Mexico Colombia and the Dominican 
Republic.

Some members of the congressional panel, including Democratic Rep. Sheila 
Jackson Lee of Houston, questioned whether any increased spending against 
drug abuse would be more effectively used for additional treatment programs.

"We have been engaged in a war on drugs for a long time," she said. "I'm 
not convinced we are being successful."

The problem is particularly acute for Texas, experts said Thursday.

An estimated 55 percent of the cocaine smuggled across the Mexican border 
enters in South Texas, while 68 percent of all drugs seized at the border 
are grabbed in Texas, according to U.S. Border Patrol statistics.

And, since NAFTA became law in 1994, the motor vehicle traffic into Texas 
has grown dramatically, reaching 48 million passenger vehicles and 3.1 
million commercial trucks in 2000.

Scott said Mexican drug smugglers are buying trucking companies to help 
them move cocaine and heroin into the United States.

Another problem in fighting the drug war on Texas turf is that many of the 
smaller drug arrests are being shunted into state courts, burdening state 
prosecutors and, according to Scott, "costing local taxpayers millions of 
dollars."

Smith noted that the Bush administration budget was authorizing $50 million 
to reimburse counties along the Southwest border for costs of assisting 
federal drug prosecutions.

Furgeson outlined an avalanche of added burdens on the federal court system 
in Texas and elsewhere along the border with Mexico.

He noted that drug prosecutions in federal courts have doubled since 1993. 
During that period, immigration cases have increased sevenfold.

Furgeson said, "We can't handle any more cases." Of the 1,644,000 illegal 
immigrants apprehended along the border last year, only 1 percent were 
prosecuted.

John Varrone, assistant commissioner of the U.S. Customs Service, outlined 
some recent successes in nabbing drugs and busting smugglers coming across 
the Texas border.

Last week, customs agents found 1,450 pounds of marijuana on a train that 
crossed the border at Brownsville. Eight Mexicans were arrested. And two 
weeks ago, a ship was seized on Falcon Lake, near Falcon Heights, with 
8,800 pounds of pot on board that had come from Mexico.

But Varrone said for every pound of drugs confiscated, at least a pound 
gets through. "In my personal opinion, we are not getting 50 percent," he 
said. "The windows of opportunity for would-be drug smugglers along the 
border are staggering."

Varrone noted that 293 million people crossed the U.S. border from Mexico 
last year, along with nearly 100 million vehicles.

Thursday's hearing was billed as a look at the situation existing on the 
border, and few new solutions were proposed.

But Furgeson said the shortage of federal judges on the border could be 
solved if Congress would let judges be transferred from states where the 
workload was lighter.

That recommendation has been ignored by Congress, as states jealously guard 
their federal judgeships.

Rep. Smith acknowledged Thursday the idea was likely to go unheeded. After 
conferring with ranking Democrat Rep. Bobby Scott of Virginia, Smith said, 
"Member Scott says the judges aren't coming from Virginia."
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D