Five young Middle Eastern men were apprehended by the
U.S. Border Patrol this week in an Arizona town situated about 30 miles from
the Mexican border, law enforcement and other sources told Judicial Watch.
* SO MUCH FOR BORDER SECURITY, HUH...
(*SHRUG*)
Border Patrol agents spotted the men crossing a ranch
property in the vicinity of Amado, which is located about 35 miles south of
Tucson and has a population of 275.
* I BELIEVE RANCHERS - PROPERTY OWNERS - SHOULD HAVE THE
RIGHT TO DETAIN (CITIZEN'S ARREST) TRESPASSERS UPON THEIR PROPERTY AND WHEN
AUTHORITIES RESPOND, THE AUTHORTIES SHOULD EITHER ARREST THE TRESPASSERS (IF
THEY HAPPEN TO BE AMERICAN CITIZENS AND THE RANCHER/PROPERTY OWNER CHOOSES TO
PRESS CHARGES) OR - IF THE DETAINEE IS NOT IN OUR COUNTRY LEGALLY...
DEPORTATION SHOULD TAKE PLACE IMMEDIATELY.
Two of the Middle Eastern men were carrying stainless
steel cylinders in backpacks, JW’s sources say, alarming Border Patrol
officials enough to call the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for backup.
A multitude of federal agents descended on the property and the two men
carrying the cylinders were believed to be taken into custody by the FBI.
Only three of the men’s names were entered in the Border
Patrol’s E3 reporting system, which is used by the agency to track
apprehensions, detention hearings and removals of illegal immigrants.
* HUH...?!?!
E3 also collects and transmits biographic and biometric
data including fingerprints for identification and verification of individuals
encountered at the border.
The other two men were listed as “unknown subjects,”
which is unheard of, according to a JW federal law enforcement source. “In all
my years I’ve never seen that before,” a veteran federal law enforcement agent
told JW.
* WTF...?!?!
The disturbing incident comes just days after six men — one
from Afghanistan, five from Pakistan — were arrested in nearby Patagonia, a
quaint ranch town that sits 20 miles north of the Mexican border city of
Nogales.
* AGAIN... WE'RE TOLD THE BORDER IS SECURE; OBVIOUSLY
IT'S NOT.
Federal authorities have confirmed the November 17
arrests and a local news outlet published a story that includes an official
statement from the Border Patrol. Special Agent Kurt Remus in the Federal
Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) Phoenix
headquarters told JW that the agency’s Joint Terrorism Task Forces vetted and
interviewed the six men and determined that there were “no obvious signs of
terrorism” so they were returned to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
custody.
* YA MEAN LIKE THE TSARNAEV BROTHERS WERE
"VETTED?"
* FOLKS... WHAT ARE WE SUPPOSED TO DO WHEN FACED WITH A
GOVERNMENT WHICH MIGHT AS WELL BE A HOSTILE FOREIGN OCCUPIER?
However, Special Agent Remus told JW that there is no
record of this week’s incident in Amado and that he knew nothing about it.
(*SILENCE*)
JW also put in a call to DHS headquarters, but received
no response.
(*CONTINUING SILENCE*)
In the last year JW has broken a number of stories
involving serious terrorist threats on the southern border that were disputed
on the record by various Obama administration officials. Among these is an
April report — confirmed by high-level Mexican authorities — about ISIS
operating camps near the U.S. border in areas known as Anapra and Puerto
Palomas west of Ciudad Juárez in the Mexican state of Chihuahua.
(*CONTINUING SILENCE*)
Last fall JW was the first to report on an Islamic State
of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS) plot orchestrated from Ciudad Juárez to attack
the U.S. with car bombs or other vehicle borne improvised explosive devices
(VBIED). As a result of JW’s reporting Ft. Bliss, the U.S. Army base in El
Paso, increased security. The threat was imminent enough to place agents across
a number of Homeland Security, Justice and Defense agencies on alert.
A few weeks later JW reported that four ISIS terrorists
were arrested by federal authorities and the Texas Department of Public Safety
in McAllen and Pharr.
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