Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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Funny where you find some stuff. This from a depopulation group.
Policy frees illegal immigrants to move about U.S.
By Pauline Arrillaga - Associated Press
July 4, 2005
http://www.npg.org/apnews.htmlHARLINGEN, Texas (AP) - Several times a day, a chain-link gate
rolls open and dozens of illegal immigrants stroll out of the U.S.
Border Patrol station here, blinking into the hot Texas sun as they
look for taxis to the bus station and a ticket out of town.Each holds a piece of paper that Spanish-speakers call a "permiso"
_ permission, courtesy of the U.S. government, to roam freely
anywhere in the country.Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, more than 118,000
undocumented migrants who were caught after sneaking over the
nation's borders have walked right out of custody with a permiso in
hand.They were from Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Brazil. But also
Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, the Philippines, Yemen _ among 35
countries of "special interest" because of alleged sponsorship or
support of terrorism.These are the so-called OTM, or "Other Than Mexican," migrants
too far from their homelands to be shipped right back. More than
70,000 have hit U.S. streets just since this past October.The Border Patrol is catching them _ hundreds each day, riding
inner tubes across the Rio Grande, trekking through farm fields
and across deserts. But the government has no place to put all the
"OTMs" while they await deportation hearings, so they are released
with a notice to appear in immigration court.Over the years, thousands have failed to show up _ disappearing,
instead, among the estimated 10 million undocumented migrants
now living in America.The rate of release is increasing. In the fiscal year ending Sept. 30,
2001, 5,251 non-Mexicans were freed on their own recognizance
from Border Patrol custody, according to statistics the agency
provided. In fiscal year 2002, that rose to 5,725. Fiscal 2003:
7,972. Fiscal 2004: 34,161.Last year's number included at least 91 illegal immigrants from
"special-interest" countries.Releases have soared again this year. With four months still left in
the fiscal cycle, 70,624 OTMs have been released on their own
recognizance _ or 70 percent of all non-Mexicans apprehended by
the Border Patrol. That includes 50 undocumented migrants from
"special-interest" countries, Border Patrol spokesman Salvador
Zamora says.Authorities stress that apprehended illegal immigrants are
routinely screened, and any determined to be a risk are detained.
Individuals from "special-interest" nations aren't necessarily more
likely to be terrorist threats than others, they note.Still, front-line officers voice concern that so many who break the
law to enter the country are systematically set free."I absolutely believe that the next attack we have will come from
somebody who has come across the border illegally," says Eugene
Davis, retired deputy chief of the Border Patrol sector in Blaine,
Wash. "To me, we have no more border security now than we had
prior to Sept. 11. Anybody who believes we're safer, they're living
in Neverland."Outside the Harlingen patrol station, from which more than 10,000
OTMs have been released since November, an agent grumbled
recently that he'd dislocated his shoulder while catching one group
_ then, in no time, they walked free.___The afternoon is quickly fading, and 20 illegal immigrants sit under
a hackberry tree less than a mile from the Rio Grande."I betcha dollars to doughnuts that there's a bunch of OTMs in
there," Border Patrol agent Eddie Flores says, swinging his SUV to a
stop. He's right: This group consists of one Honduran, six
Brazilians and the rest Costa Ricans.They're passive, patient _ not at all bothered at being apprehended
by immigration officers. One Brazilian woman smiles, even, and
points at agent Julio Garcia as though he's her new best friend.
Then she fires off something in Portuguese.Garcia translates, so used to catching Brazilians he's picked up a
bit of the language. "They're depending on me," he says.They're depending on the very system charged with capturing
unlawful entrants to help them go free. Nowadays, OTMs often
flock to Border Patrol agents rather than fleeing them.Of the 834,731 apprehensions made by the Border Patrol so far
this fiscal year, 100,142 were non-Mexican arrests. That's a 137
percent increase from the 42,167 non-Mexicans arrested in year
leading up to the Sept. 11 attacks.Illegal immigrants from Mexico and Canada, because they live
next-door to the United States, typically choose to voluntarily
depart and can be returned home almost immediately upon being
caught by border officers. Those from other countries must
undergo deportation proceedings and await government flights
back to their nations. A growing number of those are freed with a
notice-to-appear because of lack of holding space."Catch and release," the arrangement is commonly called.Nowhere is it happening more frequently than in the Rio Grande
Valley at the southernmost tip of Texas. Here, 91 percent of non-
Mexicans who are caught are quickly released, statistics show.Most of those arrested in the region are from Brazil, Honduras and
El Salvador, though the number of Chinese is rising _ from about
50 arrests in fiscal 2003 to more than 700 so far this year,
according to internal Border Patrol statistics obtained by The
Associated Press.Arrests of illegal immigrants from "special-interest" countries such
as Eritrea, Turkey, Bangladesh, Iran and Iraq doubled in the region
from two dozen in fiscal 2003 to about four dozen in fiscal 2004,
the internal figures show. Nationally, Zamora says, 644 migrants
from "special-interest" countries were apprehended by Border
Patrol in fiscal 2004; more than 450 have been nabbed so far this
fiscal year.Detention space, meanwhile, has barely grown.Congress in the past two years funded 19,444 immigration
detention beds nationally, says Manny Van Pelt, spokesman for
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. An extra 1,950 bed
spaces were approved in May.The Border Patrol, as it checks apprehended entrants' names
against terrorist watch lists and crime databases, contacts ICE's
Office of Detention and Removal, or DRO, to see if there's holding
space. Unless the entrant is a convict or on a watch list, the answer
is often no _ and migrants are cut loose."It's not homeland security one bit," says James Edwards Jr. of the
conservative Hudson Institute think tank. "It's creating an
environment in which people can go around unnoticed. They can
easily obtain false identities. ... That's a mighty big risk to take."Knowing detention space is limited, smugglers have instructed
illegal migrants to claim asylum, venturing their clients would get
released while their cases were reviewed, the Department of Justice
has reported.Algerian Samir Abdoun sought asylum after the Border Patrol
caught him entering California from Mexico with a French passport
in 1998, federal court records state. Released, he failed to show up
at his 1999 asylum hearing. He wasn't arrested until Sept. 22,
2001, after immigration agents learned Abdoun had met for coffee
several times with two of the Sept. 11 hijackers. Abdoun was
deported Dec. 31, 2004.Migrants from terror-watch countries are vetted not only by Border
Patrol agents and criminal database checks but also federal Joint
Terrorism Task Force investigators. Some of those released are
juveniles and others are freed for humanitarian reasons, such as
illness, says Russ Knocke, a spokesman for the Department of
Homeland Security, which oversees the Border Patrol and ICE."An alien from a special-interest country who presents absolutely
no risk _ is that someone you're going to detain? Or are you going
to detain a drug dealer or a child predator from a country that's not
on the special-interest country list?" he says.Statistics provided in a letter from the Department of Homeland
Security to U.S. Rep. Solomon Ortiz, D-Texas, showed releases of
"special-interest" migrants had increased significantly _ from at
least 60 freed on their own recognizance in fiscal 2002 to at least
381 in fiscal 2004. The letter specifically responded to Ortiz's
request for statistics involving illegal immigrants who had been
arrested by the Border Patrol.However, Zamora now says most of the 381 cited were migrants
legally residing in the United States who were temporarily detained
by Border Patrol agents while their immigration status was verified
_ and then let go. He says only 91 of the total 644 undocumented
"special-interest" migrants arrested by Border Patrol in fiscal 2004
were released, and that the others were turned over for detention."Somebody's backtracking," responds Ortiz, whose district includes
the Rio Grande Valley. "The border is still very vulnerable and
people are still coming across. We still don't have detention
facilities, and as long as we don't have them, these numbers are
going to keep increasing _ as much as they try to change them."The Border Patrol refused to provide the AP with a country-by-
country breakdown of undocumented migrants released on their
own recognizance.Authorities point out that a new "expedited removal" program,
focusing on the quick return of non-Mexicans to their home
countries, has resulted in 7,000 deportations.Still, word is out among migrants that if they can make it across
the border and into the custody of immigration officers, they might
get walking papers."I had 46 of them standing there at the side of the road. That's the
first thing they ask me, `Immigration?' I go, `No, but hold on a
sec,'" says Joe Serna, one of two police officers in La Grulla, a no-
stoplight hamlet 65 miles west of Harlingen.He stumbles across immigrants every week, cutting through onion
fields or walking along the street, and detains them until the
Border Patrol can send a car _ sometimes a bus _ to pick them up
for processing."Best we can do," Serna says, "is check them for weapons."Homeland security officials say spotting would-be terrorists is now
the No. 1 priority of border guards. But veteran line officers note
databases can't always detect whether a migrant is using a fake
name, and may miss crimes committed in other countries. And
while they're busy processing OTMs, other illegal entrants are
getting by.Pakistani Farida Goolam Mahomed Ahmed was arrested last July at
the airport in nearby McAllen, Texas, as she tried to board a plane
to New York. She carried $7,300 in various currencies and a
passport with pages missing. Agents later learned she waded
across the Rio Grande.Authorities won't confirm whether Ahmed had ties to any terrorist
groups, although her case is cited as an example of "anti-terrorism
efforts" in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection news release. She
was deported in March.In February, the reputed leader of a violent Honduran gang was
arrested after he crossed from Mexico into Texas. Ever Anibal
Rivera Paz was found 100 miles north of the Rio Grande, hiding in
the trunk of a car.Rivera Paz, alleged head of the Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, gang
in Honduras, had escaped from a Honduran prison where he was
being held on charges of masterminding an attack on a bus that
killed 28 people. He is jailed in Houston.In La Grulla, officer Serna reflects on the group of 46 Brazilians he
found not long ago."How are 46 people crossing the border without being seen by
Border Patrol if we have such a high amount of vigilance here?" he
asks. "With this kind of access to the United States, I mean,
honestly, if you were a terrorist where would you go through?
LaGuardia (Airport)? When you can just walk across over here and:
`Hey, take me to the Border Patrol.'"___Immigration Judge David Ayala has grown accustomed to hearing
his own voice reverberate in his empty Harlingen courtroom."Nobody's here?" he asks one recent morning from the bench.The docket call of illegal immigrant absconders begins."Marcileia DaSilva Ferraz," Ayala intones. He stamps the date on
some papers and says: "In absentia.""Leny de Fatima Teixeria" _ stamp _ "in absentia.""Robson Adriano de-Oliveira" _ stamp _ "in absentia."With every name _ mostly Brazilians but also a South Korean and a
few others _ the list of people ICE's National Fugitive Operations
team must track down and deport lengthens.The Harlingen Immigration Court, one of 53 nationwide, incurs
more no-shows than any other: 87 percent of migrants failed to
appear and were ordered deported "in absentia" in fiscal 2004.
There were more than 9,000 such cases at Harlingen, some
involving migrants from countries with terror ties.Nationally, that failure-to-appear rate stands at about 22 percent.ICE estimates a cumulative 465,000 undocumented immigrants _
visa overstays, illegal entrants and others unlawfully in the States _
have received final orders of removal but remain at-large.On a warm afternoon, a half-dozen Brazilian migrants ramble
through the exit gate of the Harlingen Border Patrol station,
smiling and holding their "permisos." It is the same group caught
by Flores and Garcia just 24 hours earlier.Saying they came to the United States for work, half are destined
for Florida, half for New Hampshire, where friends and jobs wait.It's the end of a long trip. After buying $1,200 vacation packages
from Brazil to Mexico City, they say they traveled by bus to the
border town of Reynosa and crossed the Rio Grande on inner
tubes, clasping duffel bags labeled with the name of the tour
operator.Stepping outside the Border Patrol gates, they are giddy."Welcome to America!" 27-year-old Marilza Ramos dos Santos
Stafussa exhorts, practicing her spotty English.Soon, a shuttle operated by the Harlingen bus station pulls up,
offering a ride to the terminal. Luther Jones, who makes the rounds
several times a day, says of his clientele: "Everyone's trying to hit
on the terrorist angle, but they're just good people."Inside the terminal, the Brazilians buy $25 one-way tickets to
Houston, where they plan to get connecting flights."Tienen documentos?" the ticket clerk inquires. Do you have
documents?"Permiso?" Ramos asks, using the Spanish word she has learned.The clerk nods.Yes! the Brazilians exclaim.As they board the 10:30 p.m. bus to Houston, the last turns and,
beaming, gives a thumbs-up.Only Ramos and one other would return for their scheduled court
date. The four no-shows are now part of the lengthening list of
those ordered deported "in absentia."Copyright 2005 Associated Press
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Funny where you find some stuff. This from a depopulation group.
Policy frees illegal immigrants to move about U.S.
By Pauline Arrillaga - Associated Press
July 4, 2005
http://www.npg.org/apnews.htmlHARLINGEN, Texas (AP) - Several times a day, a chain-link gate
rolls open and dozens of illegal immigrants stroll out of the U.S.
Border Patrol station here, blinking into the hot Texas sun as they
look for taxis to the bus station and a ticket out of town.Each holds a piece of paper that Spanish-speakers call a "permiso"
_ permission, courtesy of the U.S. government, to roam freely
anywhere in the country.Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, more than 118,000
undocumented migrants who were caught after sneaking over the
nation's borders have walked right out of custody with a permiso in
hand.They were from Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Brazil. But also
Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan, the Philippines, Yemen _ among 35
countries of "special interest" because of alleged sponsorship or
support of terrorism.These are the so-called OTM, or "Other Than Mexican," migrants
too far from their homelands to be shipped right back. More than
70,000 have hit U.S. streets just since this past October.The Border Patrol is catching them _ hundreds each day, riding
inner tubes across the Rio Grande, trekking through farm fields
and across deserts. But the government has no place to put all the
"OTMs" while they await deportation hearings, so they are released
with a notice to appear in immigration court.Over the years, thousands have failed to show up _ disappearing,
instead, among the estimated 10 million undocumented migrants
now living in America.The rate of release is increasing. In the fiscal year ending Sept. 30,
2001, 5,251 non-Mexicans were freed on their own recognizance
from Border Patrol custody, according to statistics the agency
provided. In fiscal year 2002, that rose to 5,725. Fiscal 2003:
7,972. Fiscal 2004: 34,161.Last year's number included at least 91 illegal immigrants from
"special-interest" countries.Releases have soared again this year. With four months still left in
the fiscal cycle, 70,624 OTMs have been released on their own
recognizance _ or 70 percent of all non-Mexicans apprehended by
the Border Patrol. That includes 50 undocumented migrants from
"special-interest" countries, Border Patrol spokesman Salvador
Zamora says.Authorities stress that apprehended illegal immigrants are
routinely screened, and any determined to be a risk are detained.
Individuals from "special-interest" nations aren't necessarily more
likely to be terrorist threats than others, they note.Still, front-line officers voice concern that so many who break the
law to enter the country are systematically set free."I absolutely believe that the next attack we have will come from
somebody who has come across the border illegally," says Eugene
Davis, retired deputy chief of the Border Patrol sector in Blaine,
Wash. "To me, we have no more border security now than we had
prior to Sept. 11. Anybody who believes we're safer, they're living
in Neverland."Outside the Harlingen patrol station, from which more than 10,000
OTMs have been released since November, an agent grumbled
recently that he'd dislocated his shoulder while catching one group
_ then, in no time, they walked free.___The afternoon is quickly fading, and 20 illegal immigrants sit under
a hackberry tree less than a mile from the Rio Grande."I betcha dollars to doughnuts that there's a bunch of OTMs in
there," Border Patrol agent Eddie Flores says, swinging his SUV to a
stop. He's right: This group consists of one Honduran, six
Brazilians and the rest Costa Ricans.They're passive, patient _ not at all bothered at being apprehended
by immigration officers. One Brazilian woman smiles, even, and
points at agent Julio Garcia as though he's her new best friend.
Then she fires off something in Portuguese.Garcia translates, so used to catching Brazilians he's picked up a
bit of the language. "They're depending on me," he says.They're depending on the very system charged with capturing
unlawful entrants to help them go free. Nowadays, OTMs often
flock to Border Patrol agents rather than fleeing them.Of the 834,731 apprehensions made by the Border Patrol so far
this fiscal year, 100,142 were non-Mexican arrests. That's a 137
percent increase from the 42,167 non-Mexicans arrested in year
leading up to the Sept. 11 attacks.Illegal immigrants from Mexico and Canada, because they live
next-door to the United States, typically choose to voluntarily
depart and can be returned home almost immediately upon being
caught by border officers. Those from other countries must
undergo deportation proceedings and await government flights
back to their nations. A growing number of those are freed with a
notice-to-appear because of lack of holding space."Catch and release," the arrangement is commonly called.Nowhere is it happening more frequently than in the Rio Grande
Valley at the southernmost tip of Texas. Here, 91 percent of non-
Mexicans who are caught are quickly released, statistics show.Most of those arrested in the region are from Brazil, Honduras and
El Salvador, though the number of Chinese is rising _ from about
50 arrests in fiscal 2003 to more than 700 so far this year,
according to internal Border Patrol statistics obtained by The
Associated Press.Arrests of illegal immigrants from "special-interest" countries such
as Eritrea, Turkey, Bangladesh, Iran and Iraq doubled in the region
from two dozen in fiscal 2003 to about four dozen in fiscal 2004,
the internal figures show. Nationally, Zamora says, 644 migrants
from "special-interest" countries were apprehended by Border
Patrol in fiscal 2004; more than 450 have been nabbed so far this
fiscal year.Detention space, meanwhile, has barely grown.Congress in the past two years funded 19,444 immigration
detention beds nationally, says Manny Van Pelt, spokesman for
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. An extra 1,950 bed
spaces were approved in May.The Border Patrol, as it checks apprehended entrants' names
against terrorist watch lists and crime databases, contacts ICE's
Office of Detention and Removal, or DRO, to see if there's holding
space. Unless the entrant is a convict or on a watch list, the answer
is often no _ and migrants are cut loose."It's not homeland security one bit," says James Edwards Jr. of the
conservative Hudson Institute think tank. "It's creating an
environment in which people can go around unnoticed. They can
easily obtain false identities. ... That's a mighty big risk to take."Knowing detention space is limited, smugglers have instructed
illegal migrants to claim asylum, venturing their clients would get
released while their cases were reviewed, the Department of Justice
has reported.Algerian Samir Abdoun sought asylum after the Border Patrol
caught him entering California from Mexico with a French passport
in 1998, federal court records state. Released, he failed to show up
at his 1999 asylum hearing. He wasn't arrested until Sept. 22,
2001, after immigration agents learned Abdoun had met for coffee
several times with two of the Sept. 11 hijackers. Abdoun was
deported Dec. 31, 2004.Migrants from terror-watch countries are vetted not only by Border
Patrol agents and criminal database checks but also federal Joint
Terrorism Task Force investigators. Some of those released are
juveniles and others are freed for humanitarian reasons, such as
illness, says Russ Knocke, a spokesman for the Department of
Homeland Security, which oversees the Border Patrol and ICE."An alien from a special-interest country who presents absolutely
no risk _ is that someone you're going to detain? Or are you going
to detain a drug dealer or a child predator from a country that's not
on the special-interest country list?" he says.Statistics provided in a letter from the Department of Homeland
Security to U.S. Rep. Solomon Ortiz, D-Texas, showed releases of
"special-interest" migrants had increased significantly _ from at
least 60 freed on their own recognizance in fiscal 2002 to at least
381 in fiscal 2004. The letter specifically responded to Ortiz's
request for statistics involving illegal immigrants who had been
arrested by the Border Patrol.However, Zamora now says most of the 381 cited were migrants
legally residing in the United States who were temporarily detained
by Border Patrol agents while their immigration status was verified
_ and then let go. He says only 91 of the total 644 undocumented
"special-interest" migrants arrested by Border Patrol in fiscal 2004
were released, and that the others were turned over for detention."Somebody's backtracking," responds Ortiz, whose district includes
the Rio Grande Valley. "The border is still very vulnerable and
people are still coming across. We still don't have detention
facilities, and as long as we don't have them, these numbers are
going to keep increasing _ as much as they try to change them."The Border Patrol refused to provide the AP with a country-by-
country breakdown of undocumented migrants released on their
own recognizance.Authorities point out that a new "expedited removal" program,
focusing on the quick return of non-Mexicans to their home
countries, has resulted in 7,000 deportations.Still, word is out among migrants that if they can make it across
the border and into the custody of immigration officers, they might
get walking papers."I had 46 of them standing there at the side of the road. That's the
first thing they ask me, `Immigration?' I go, `No, but hold on a
sec,'" says Joe Serna, one of two police officers in La Grulla, a no-
stoplight hamlet 65 miles west of Harlingen.He stumbles across immigrants every week, cutting through onion
fields or walking along the street, and detains them until the
Border Patrol can send a car _ sometimes a bus _ to pick them up
for processing."Best we can do," Serna says, "is check them for weapons."Homeland security officials say spotting would-be terrorists is now
the No. 1 priority of border guards. But veteran line officers note
databases can't always detect whether a migrant is using a fake
name, and may miss crimes committed in other countries. And
while they're busy processing OTMs, other illegal entrants are
getting by.Pakistani Farida Goolam Mahomed Ahmed was arrested last July at
the airport in nearby McAllen, Texas, as she tried to board a plane
to New York. She carried $7,300 in various currencies and a
passport with pages missing. Agents later learned she waded
across the Rio Grande.Authorities won't confirm whether Ahmed had ties to any terrorist
groups, although her case is cited as an example of "anti-terrorism
efforts" in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection news release. She
was deported in March.In February, the reputed leader of a violent Honduran gang was
arrested after he crossed from Mexico into Texas. Ever Anibal
Rivera Paz was found 100 miles north of the Rio Grande, hiding in
the trunk of a car.Rivera Paz, alleged head of the Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, gang
in Honduras, had escaped from a Honduran prison where he was
being held on charges of masterminding an attack on a bus that
killed 28 people. He is jailed in Houston.In La Grulla, officer Serna reflects on the group of 46 Brazilians he
found not long ago."How are 46 people crossing the border without being seen by
Border Patrol if we have such a high amount of vigilance here?" he
asks. "With this kind of access to the United States, I mean,
honestly, if you were a terrorist where would you go through?
LaGuardia (Airport)? When you can just walk across over here and:
`Hey, take me to the Border Patrol.'"___Immigration Judge David Ayala has grown accustomed to hearing
his own voice reverberate in his empty Harlingen courtroom."Nobody's here?" he asks one recent morning from the bench.The docket call of illegal immigrant absconders begins."Marcileia DaSilva Ferraz," Ayala intones. He stamps the date on
some papers and says: "In absentia.""Leny de Fatima Teixeria" _ stamp _ "in absentia.""Robson Adriano de-Oliveira" _ stamp _ "in absentia."With every name _ mostly Brazilians but also a South Korean and a
few others _ the list of people ICE's National Fugitive Operations
team must track down and deport lengthens.The Harlingen Immigration Court, one of 53 nationwide, incurs
more no-shows than any other: 87 percent of migrants failed to
appear and were ordered deported "in absentia" in fiscal 2004.
There were more than 9,000 such cases at Harlingen, some
involving migrants from countries with terror ties.Nationally, that failure-to-appear rate stands at about 22 percent.ICE estimates a cumulative 465,000 undocumented immigrants _
visa overstays, illegal entrants and others unlawfully in the States _
have received final orders of removal but remain at-large.On a warm afternoon, a half-dozen Brazilian migrants ramble
through the exit gate of the Harlingen Border Patrol station,
smiling and holding their "permisos." It is the same group caught
by Flores and Garcia just 24 hours earlier.Saying they came to the United States for work, half are destined
for Florida, half for New Hampshire, where friends and jobs wait.It's the end of a long trip. After buying $1,200 vacation packages
from Brazil to Mexico City, they say they traveled by bus to the
border town of Reynosa and crossed the Rio Grande on inner
tubes, clasping duffel bags labeled with the name of the tour
operator.Stepping outside the Border Patrol gates, they are giddy."Welcome to America!" 27-year-old Marilza Ramos dos Santos
Stafussa exhorts, practicing her spotty English.Soon, a shuttle operated by the Harlingen bus station pulls up,
offering a ride to the terminal. Luther Jones, who makes the rounds
several times a day, says of his clientele: "Everyone's trying to hit
on the terrorist angle, but they're just good people."Inside the terminal, the Brazilians buy $25 one-way tickets to
Houston, where they plan to get connecting flights."Tienen documentos?" the ticket clerk inquires. Do you have
documents?"Permiso?" Ramos asks, using the Spanish word she has learned.The clerk nods.Yes! the Brazilians exclaim.As they board the 10:30 p.m. bus to Houston, the last turns and,
beaming, gives a thumbs-up.Only Ramos and one other would return for their scheduled court
date. The four no-shows are now part of the lengthening list of
those ordered deported "in absentia."Copyright 2005 Associated Press
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
