Source: Houston Chronicle Page: Page One, Front Page Author: James Pinkerton Contact: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Crackdown on the border is paying off, officials say McALLEN -- Border Patrol officials said Tuesday that it is too early to pronounce Operation Rio Grande a success, but claimed a dramatic drop in arrests of illegal immigrants is attributable to the unprecedented federal buildup in South Texas that began in August. Moreover, Border Patrol agents for the first time are confident that Washington has given them adequate tools -- hundreds of new officers, vehicles and an array of high-tech equipment -- to begin controlling a notoriously porous and violent stretch of the Texas-Mexico border. Shootouts with drug traffickers and immigrant smugglers are so common in the McAllen sector that agents must wear bulletproof vests and carry military assault rifles on the river. "I'm very, very satisfied with what's going on, but it's going to take time - -- it's a slow process," said Chief Joe Garza, who heads the McAllen sector, which includes 282 miles along the Rio Grande. The Border Patrol sector chief said crime has decreased in Brownsville, the largest city in the Rio Grande Valley, a drop city police attribute to the increased federal presence in city streets. Since the operation began, arrests of illegal immigrants in the 17,000-square-mile sector have dropped by as much as 5,400 a month, when compared with the same time in 1996. However, Garza emphasized the operation has failed to shut down the principal smuggling corridor on U.S. 77, used by an estimated 75 percent of undocumented immigrants who cross the border. Smugglers operate safe houses in and around the community of Raymondville, and walk their clients around the Border Patrol's highway checkpoint farther north. Garza said his Raymondville detail arrested 97 illegal immigrants Monday night, and noted the arrest rate has dropped slightly so far this year. Garza said that in the past, Border Patrol operations in his sector would be launched and "two or three days later we would be out of gas, out of time or out of money, and we'd have to go back to business as usual and the smugglers would just wait us out." Operation Rio Grande, launched in Brownsville last Aug. 25, has massed hundreds of Border Patrol agents along the Rio Grande in traditional crossing areas. The number of personnel has increased from 498 in 1995 to 849 today. Along with the additional agents, 38 batteries of floodlights are trained on the brush river banks, and a trio of long-range, low- light telescopes have been mounted in strategic buildings and now scan the border. "With Operation Rio Grande, we have changed our mindset," Garza said at a Tuesday news briefing. "I think we have the will ... and the resources and the support -- not only from the community, but from our own people, our administration in Washington plus our Congress -- to take control of the border." Marijuana and cocaine seizures have increased since the operation got under way as agents stop more vehicles driving away from the river and uncover more drug caches along the border. Meanwhile, immigration officials who are stationed at the Valley's international bridges report a record number of immigrants using false documents, including 67 arrested over New Year's weekend. Since the operation began, 2,278 people using fraudulent or borrowed documents have been arrested. An Immigration and Naturalization Service official speculated that many of those arrested were trying to avoid Operation Rio Grande. But Operation Rio Grande has it critics, including immigration rights groups. Activists say it has not cut down on the flow of illegals but has been a boon to the "coyotes," as immigrant smugglers are known. "Well, more than anything it is pushing people out west" into remote brushlands up river, said Nathan Selzer, with the Valley Coalition for Justice. "There is a concern if you push people away from the populated areas, there will be more risks." Garza, the Border Patrol sector chief, said there was not a single abuse complaint during Operation Rio Grande that has been substantiated. However, Selzer said his group is investigating five incidents including a man who claims Border Patrol agents broke his arm after his arrest. "What we've run into is a great reluctance of people to go forward to the government with allegations of abuse ... there is very little faith they won't be retaliated against," said Selzer, who works out of Harlingen. Operation Rio Grande is the third intensive operation this decade by the Border Patrol where agents are placed within sight of each other along the border, and is similar in some respects to earlier efforts in El Paso and San Diego. In all three instances, the operations have been popular with merchants in border cities who have for years put up with shoplifters, petty thieves and burglars who slip across the border to commit crimes. "The Border Patrol presence downtown has contributed in a positive way to decreasing the crime rate in Brownsville," said local police Lt. Henry Etheridge. "It runs the whole array. You have strong-arm robbers holding up people and running back to Mexico, and at night we used to have burglars who broke into businesses through the roofs. And that has decreased," he said. As in El Paso, gone are the scruffy squads of Mexican youths who stationed themselves on busy Brownsville intersections and washed windshields or juggled balls, asking for a few coins in return. Copyright 1997 Houston Chronicle