|
Note: This is a Text only archive. Go directly to the real forum.
Illegals are now arsonists
- Click HERE to go to the original thread with graphics
banner
| Illegals are now arsonists
- Click HERE to go to the original thread with graphics
|
| booybob |
Do you believe this shit. If they will do this to get here, imagine what happens when they are here.
Arsonist Illegals "Burning Out" US Border Security Agents
Unarmed patrols attacked by Mexicans setting fire to observation posts
Steve Watson
Infowars.net
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
Email Print Friendly Page
Yahoo! MyWeb Del.icio.us
Illegal alien arsonists from Mexico are setting fire to security observation posts in Arizona and attacking Border Patrol Agents by throwing flaming grapefruit sized rocks, firebombs and Molotov cocktails at them.
The Washington Times is reporting that U.S. Border Patrol agents seeking to secure the nation's border in some of the country's most pristine national forests are being targeted by illegal aliens, who are using intentionally set fires to burn agents out of observation posts and patrol routes.
According to the Times, firefighters in the Coronado National Forest in Arizona have to be accompanied by armed police and authorities admit smugglers of aliens and drugs have walked through the middle of active firefighting operations.
At least five fires were set below a Border Patrol observation post during the operation in an effort to burn the agents out, according to a Forest Service report. The fires were extinguished, and no one was arrested.
The fires correspond to a dramatic rise in assaults against Border Patrol agents -- up more than 100 percent over last year.
A Forest Service supervisor told a House Appropriations subcommittee last month that the law-enforcement personnel have been assaulted, threatened with weapons and shot at, and their vehicles have been rammed by cross-border violators. The Senate however continues to push for total blanket amnesty while offering empty promises to secure the border, which the President has bizarrely stated will be funded by raising $4.4bn in immediate additional funding from fines collected from illegals caught entering the US.
In other words the problem itself is being touted as the solution!
The Times also states that other blazes also have been set, including two this month near the San Luis, Ariz., port of entry as the result of Molotov cocktails -- one of which barely missed a Border Patrol agent. These events were barely mentioned in the media however.
Border patrol agents, who are not legally allowed to defend themselves with force if attacked, are regularly being attacked by illegal aliens with grapefruit-size rocks wrapped in rags, dipped in gasoline and set on fire, according to the Forest Service report.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The true story behind government sponsored terror, 7/7, Gladio and 9/11, get Terror Storm!
Let us help you reach a huge audience of potential customers. Help support the website and take advantage of low advertising rates. Click here for more info.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Yuma Sun carried a June 4th report which highlights the extent and seriousness of the literal war that is going on at the border. In this short report the following attacks are detailed:
The first incident occurred at 1:20 a.m. about a half-mile east of the port, when agents encountered a group of five suspected illegal immigrants, who turned around and headed back to Mexico when they saw the agents. Once across the border, they began throwing rocks at the agents, who withdrew to a safe distance and contacted Mexican authorities, according to a Border Patrol news release.
Ten minutes later, an agent saw a Molotov cocktail being thrown from Mexico over the international boundary fence about a mile west of the port of entry. It landed about 30 yards from the agent’s truck and burned out. Then, several people in Mexico threw rocks directly at the agent, who drove to a safe location behind the secondary fence and contacted Mexican authorities, the release said.
At 3 a.m., an agent observed the fire burning in the agricultural fields west of San Luis and near County 23rd Street. The San Luis Fire Department was called and extinguished the fire, which was limited to a wheat field.
Such instances of arson on the border are not new. Last July a 180-acre brush fire in San Diego north of the Riverside County line near the U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint forced the closure of Interstate 15 in both directions.
In the same month California declared a state of emergency for southern parts of the state as brush fires engulfed more than 16,000 hectares of mountain scrub land 125 miles (200 kilometers) east of Los Angeles.
Comments (2) | Trackback |
|
|
| DREAD |
"Such instances of arson on the border are not new. Last July a 180-acre brush fire in San Diego north of the Riverside County line near the U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint forced the closure of Interstate 15 in both directions.-"
That was a FUCKING NIGHTMARE- it took some people 10 hours to get home from San Diego |
|
|
| Reverend Tyler |
| Infowars ... :rolleyes: |
|
|
| JC16101 |
| Put Land Mines along the border. |
|
|
| Halcyon |
Three words:
"Shoot to kill"
Problem solved |
|
|
| Racist Kramer |
Quote: Originally posted by Reverend Tyler Infowars ... :rolleyes: |
http://washingtontimes.com/function...19-121814-2527r
By Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published June 19, 2007
U.S. Border Patrol agents seeking to secure the nation's border in some of the country's most pristine national forests are being targeted by illegal aliens, who are using intentionally set fires to burn agents out of observation posts and patrol routes.
The wildfires have destroyed valuable natural and cultural resources in the National Forest System and pose an ongoing threat to visitors, residents and responding firefighters, according to federal law-enforcement authorities and others.
In the Coronado National Forest in Arizona, with 60 miles of land along the U.S.-Mexico border, U.S. Forest Service firefighters sent in to battle fires or clear wild-land fire areas are required to be escorted by armed law-enforcement officers.
Armed smugglers of aliens and drugs have walked through the middle of active firefighting operations, the authorities said.
The Border Patrol's Tucson, Ariz., sector, which encompasses most of the Coronado National Forest, has the highest incidence of cross-border violators in the nation. Nearly 500,000 illegal aliens were apprehended last year -- more than 30,000 a month. In addition, nearly 100,000 pounds of marijuana, with a street value of $200 million, was seized as it was hauled through the Coronado National Forest.
Last month, the Border Patrol -- in a single operation targeting illegal aliens causing what Forest Service officials called "significant damage" to the Coronado National Forest -- apprehended more than 300 illegals along just a three-mile section of U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona and confiscated 600 pounds of marijuana in a 10-day period.
At least five fires were set below a Border Patrol observation post during the operation in an effort to burn the agents out, according to a Forest Service report. The fires were extinguished, and no one was arrested.
Wildfires are being set by alien and drug smugglers, authorities said, to create a diversion in an attempt to gain undetected access across the border. The fires correspond to a dramatic rise in assaults against Border Patrol agents -- up more than 100 percent over last year.
"Criminal activity by both illegal immigrants and citizens in forests near the border is a threat to members of the public trying to use their public lands and to our employees trying to manage these lands," Tina J. Terrell, a Forest Service supervisor told a House Appropriations subcommittee last month.
She said law-enforcement personnel have been assaulted, threatened with weapons and shot at, and their vehicles have been rammed by cross-border violators. Because of the remoteness of the area, she said, timely assistance from other law-enforcement agencies is not always possible, and communications limitations and active interference with radio frequencies in Mexico create additional safety risks.
"Even normal enforcement duties bring our officers in regular contact with cross-border violators," she said. "Our officers risk their lives every day to enforce the law in these remote federally managed lands."
The Coronado National Forest is not the only area along the border being targeted for wildfires. Other blazes also have been set, including two this month near the San Luis, Ariz., port of entry as the result of Molotov cocktails -- one of which barely missed a Border Patrol agent.
Authorities said agents are being targeted by illegal aliens and their smugglers for rock attacks -- including grapefruit-size rocks wrapped in rags, dipped in gasoline and set on fire.
"As larger areas of the border come under operational control, we can expect violence to increase as smuggling operations can no longer operate with impunity and do not have unfettered access to the border for their criminal activities," Border Patrol Chief David V. Aguilar told a Homeland Security subcommittee this year.
"This explosion of aggression is an indicator how desperate and angry drug and human traffickers are at the increasing disruption of their smuggling routes," he said. |
|
|
|
|
|