Pubdate: Sun, 11 Feb 2007 Source: Monitor, The (McAllen, TX) Copyright: 2007 The Monitor Contact: http://www.themonitor.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1250 Author: Jeremy Roebuck, Monitor Staff Writer BORDER SECURITY EFFORTS INVOLVE INTRICATE POLITICAL MANUEVERING, EXPERTS SAY McALLEN -- With more than $40 million in state grants already spent since 2005 on securing the Texas-Mexico border, Gov. Rick Perry is asking for more. But experts say convincing state legislators to go along with the plan will involve political maneuvering that has already blurred the line between immigration enforcement and combating border crime. During his State of the State address Tuesday, Perry repeated calls for an additional $100 million to bolster border security efforts. The speech came a week after the end of Operation Wrangler, the latest in a string of law enforcement initiatives that have targeted drug and human traffickers. The governor's remarks and recent statewide efforts seem to speak to two divided camps, said Jerry Polinard, a political science professor at the University of Texas-Pan American. The first, a hard-line wing of the Republican Party, looks at past initiatives like operations Linebacker and Rio Grande as part of an overall effort to crack down on illegal immigrants, Polinard said. Others support Perry's tough stance on drug smugglers but believe state and local authorities have no place enforcing federal immigration law. "He's kind of performing a balancing act" without taking a stand on either side of the issue, Polinard said. Although the governor's office has always cited cutting crime as the primary goal of these campaigns, immigrant rights groups question their true effects, while Perry's critics doubt they have accomplished anything at all. "We continue to be very concerned about blurring the line between civil and criminal border policing," said Rebecca Bernhardt, a policy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas. Wrangler teamed up 133 police departments and 90 sheriff's departments across the state with U.S. federal agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration, Border Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and soldiers from the National Guard. During a Jan. 24 news conference at the McAllen Police Department, Perry touted the effort as solely focused on combating drug and human trafficking. But during the weeklong operation, the Mexican Consulate in Dallas charged that local law enforcement had used overtime hours to detain illegal immigrants who had not committed any crime. Similar allegations arose during Operation Linebacker's run, during which sheriff's offices in 16 counties received $15 million in state grants. In May 2005, state Sen. Juan "Chuy" Hinojosa, D-McAllen, called on Perry to outline appropriate uses for the money after hearing reports that El Paso County Sheriff Leo Samniego had set up checkpoints designed to catch undocumented workers. Bernhardt worries that incidents like the ones in Dallas and El Paso could frustrate the everyday efforts of border law enforcement agencies. "When the huge immigrant population in these communities believes that local law enforcement is coming after them, they're going to be hesitant to work with police on other issues," she said. Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Trevino has frequently voiced concerns over this blurred line, prohibiting his deputies from stopping or apprehending individuals "solely on the belief that they are in this country illegally." But the more important question, he said, is how money for border security efforts is spent. So far, Perry's office has not released statewide numbers on Operation Wrangler's results, but Trevino doubts a one-week initiative can have a long-term effect on border crime. "Can I sit here and tell you that Operation Wrangler had any sort of impact on our levels of drug trafficking and human smuggling?" Trevino said. "I just don't know." Still, he supports any effort attempting to tackle the issue, while arguing that the best solutions to the border security problem must involve a longer commitment. "Once you take care of a problem, you have to keep using resources to maintain the fix," he said. "Hopefully, Wrangler can be used as a stepping stone. I feel confident that the extra $100 million could be the answer." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath