Mexican Government Helicopter Crosses Into U.S. and Attacks Border Agents
By JW
When one country
crosses over the border into another and launches an assault, it usually grabs
headlines because that is typically viewed as an act of war. But apparently this
is not the case when the Mexican government moves aggressively against its U.S.
counterparts along the southwestern border. The fact that this is probably the
first time you're hearing about this report drives this point
home.
After obtaining
documents from the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP), we have uncovered the
details of an incident on June 26, 2014, when a Mexican government helicopter
crossed into U.S. airspace and opened fire on U.S. Border Patrol personnel. The
attack occurred near Arizona's San Miguel gate. The CBP documents were released
in response to a July 9, 2014, Judicial Watch Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
request that asked for:
Any and all records
regarding, concerning or related to the June 26, 2014 incident near Sells, AZ on
the Tohono O'Odham Indian Reservation during which one or more Mexican military
helicopters reportedly entered U.S. airspace and fired shots in the vicinity of
U.S. Border Patrol personnel.
There's history
here. Going back a decade, your JW has forced both the Bush and Obama
administrations to release documents detailing intentional border incursions by
Mexican military and other government personnel. DHS records show that Mexican military incursions occur quite
often and go unpunished by the U.S. For instance, the DHS documents reveal 226
incursions by Mexican government personnel into the U.S. between 1996 and 2005.
In 2007 alone, 25 such incursions occurred along the U.S.-Mexico border. Earlier
this year a serious incursion occurred in Arizona. Two heavily armed and
camouflaged soldiers from Mexico crossed 50 yards over the border into Arizona
and held American Border Patrol agents at gunpoint in a tense
confrontation.
These new CBP records
provide detail on the 2014 incident:
[US Border Patrol] Agents from the Tucson Sector Foreign Operations Branch
were parked approximately 100 yards north of the Border on the U.S. Side when
they observed a Mexican LEA helicopter cross north into the U.S. for
approximately 100 yards. The agents then heard and observed two rounds being
shot from the helicopter which landed approximately 15 yards to the side of one
of the unmarked Border Patrol Vehicles (FOB) they were driving. Also, there were
two marked vehicles at the scene next to the unmarked as
well.
A total of six Mexican law enforcement helicopters flying near the
Represito Ranch were observed by the four agents. Two agents were driving two
marked Border Patrol vehicles and two additional agents were in a third,
unmarked vehicle when one of the helicopters flew directly north and crossed
into the US approximately 100 yards. The helicopter immediately turned back
south into Mexico and landed at the Represito Ranch where Government of Mexico
(GOM) officers exited the aircraft. Five GOM officers walked north and
approached the International Border Fence where the incident had occurred, and
subsequently made contact with the agents. The GOM officers apologized for the
incident and stated that the incident had been reported to their main office in
Mexico City, D.F.
Here we should also
credit the heavy lifting of California Congressman Duncan Hunter, who
has obtained information from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that
provides some disturbing details. On June 17, 2014, he reported that according
to DHS:
• There have
been a total of 300 documented incursions since January 1,
2004;
• Of the 300
documented incidents, there were 152 incidents involving armed subjects
(totaling approximately 525 subjects);
• Of the 152
incidents involving armed subjects, verbal or physical contact was made with the
armed subjects in 81 incidents (approximately 322 armed subjects in total). An
encounter with one of these Mexican Government Law Enforcement or Military
entities does not always equal a standoff or confrontation. It depends on a
case-by-case basis where one would have to read the narrative completed on the
Significant Incident Report for the specific incursion;
• Of the 81
armed encounters, a total of 131 subjects were detained. While the number of
unauthorized incursions by Mexican authorities is relatively few, it is
imperative for our officer safety to handle each situation assertively but with
sensitivity and professionalism.
It's not just the
Mexican government we need to be concerned about, but also foreign powers that
could be out to exploit the many points of vulnerabilities along our
southwestern border. Tens of thousands of "Other than Mexican" illegal
aliens (OTMs) have been apprehended
by our U.S. Border Patrol agents. There are also illegal
aliens from Special Interest Countries (SIC) with ties to terrorism that have been caught
crossing the border. It's time to worry.
The Mexican government
initially denied, but later admitted to, the armed incursion. The Mexican
government has little regard for the sovereignty of the United States. Mexican
military and law enforcement personnel intentionally and without consequence
cross our border and place U.S. law enforcement and other innocent Americans at
risk. These new documents show how our Border Patrol agents were almost killed
by a Mexican 'law enforcement' helicopter that crossed our border and fired on
the Border Patrol's clearly marked position. America is placed at risk by the
Obama administration's lawless open-borders policy that purposefully fails to
protect American citizens and front-line law enforcement from a corrupt Mexican
government, the drug cartels, the illegal alien crisis, ISIS and the Islamic
terrorist threat.
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