Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jun 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/townhall/ci_14227323 Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Marty Schladen IN JUAREZ, LITTLE OUTCRY OVER DEATH OF TEENAGER EL PASO -- At a time of extreme focus on the U.S.-Mexico border, one might think it would be difficult to cross the Rio Grande into El Paso illegally. The presence of U.S. Border Patrol agents, a barrier fence and high-tech security are all intended to make it more difficult to cross the border. But Fernando Campos and others on both sides of the border know better. Campos lives at the foot of Chihuahua Street, just a few hundred yards from where a U.S. Border Patrol agent on Monday shot a Mexican teenager who had just run back south of the border. Campos, 76, heard the first shot from his front porch before going inside. The youths who were confronted by Border Patrol agents most likely were headed for the fence at the end of Campos' street. "Three days before the shooting, I saw three kids jump over that fence like rabbits," Campos said. He added that border patrol agents came a few minutes later, but too late to catch them. "Every day it's the same thing. After a while, you say, 'I hope you make it.' " As he sat with a copy of Vanity Fair in front of his tidy cottage with its well-kept yard, Campos looked out on hundreds walking along the west side of the Paso del Norte Bridge, crossing into Mexico. Border Patrol helicopters buzzed constantly overhead. "You can see the coyotes up on the bridge, directing people down below," Campos said of those who help people cross illegally into the United States. The physical obstacles to crossing aren't as great as you might think. For one thing, the steel border fence erected during the Bush administration doesn't extend to the two Downtown bridges. There's a fence, a rail yard, another fence, a concrete canal that on Wednesday was swollen with water, yet another fence, then a muddy riverbed that lies half in Mexico. Campos said the coyotes have cut holes in the fences that for some reason don't seem to get fixed. For Carlos Gutierrez, 67, the biggest obstacle to making the crossing into Mexico on Wednesday was the heat. He lugged two bags of groceries for his girlfriend. He stopped frequently to take a breather. As he looked at the base of the railroad bridge where the shooting took place, with a ball cap saying "Cock Fight" on his head, Gutierrez said he crosses into Mexico two or three times a week. There may be illegal crossings, but Gutierrez said he's seen few confrontations involving Border Patrol. From what he's heard about Monday's incident, he thinks the shooting was excessive. "Shooting at somebody throwing rocks is too much," he said. Despite the Mexican government's outrage at the shooting, disapproval on the Juarez side of the bridge seems mild. "There was no need to shoot," said Benjamin Garcia as he sat in the shade of an awning in the 104-degree heat in Juarez. But he said there isn't much public outrage. In his block, expressionless soldiers stood with machine guns amid the pharmacies, a dentist's office, liquor store, a sports book and one of the saddest-looking dogs ever. The soldiers are there to protect pedestrians from a drug war that's claimed more than 5,300 lives in the city since 2008. That war seems a lot more important to people in Juarez than Monday's shooting. "I never go down to the bridge," pharmacist Noel Vazquez said, seeming eager not to talk to a reporter. Jose de Jesus Meza Lozano, a civil engineer, said he'd heard about the shooting. But as he offered a visitor water in an office he shares with his father, he said he has more pressing concerns. "Every day, I'm really scared to think what's going to happen the next day," he said. Because of the drug war, the Juarez economy has slowed to a crawl, squeezing off revenue for public-works projects like the ones Lozano designs. So feeding his family and keeping it alive are his concerns. But less than a mile away in the U.S., it seems that Mexico's violence has to involve Americans to get much attention. The last time Campos saw a reporter was in March, when gunman killed an employee of the U.S. Consulate and her husband near the Mexican foot of the bridge. For two days, CNN parked a satellite truck right where Campos has been watching people jump the fence for all these years. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart