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Old 12-23-2010, 06:54 AM   #1
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Default Smugglers Threaten Americans on Fed.Land

GAO: Armed Smugglers and Marijuana Growers Threaten the Safety of Americans on Federal Lands
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
By Edwin Mora
Border vehicle fence in New Mexico (El Paso district). (Photo courtesy of U.S. Customs and Border Patrol)


(CNSNews.com) – The safety of the public and of government employees on public lands is endangered by armed individuals involved in illegal border activity and marijuana cultivation, according to a new report by the Government Accountability Office.
The report, released on Dec. 17, states, “Law enforcement officials told us that some remote federal lands along the U.S. border are often used to smuggle drugs or humans into the country. According to these officials, such illegal activities can damage sensitive wildlife habitat and threaten public safety.”
The report continued, “Officials at the three [federal land] units we visited in Arizona – Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, Coronado National Forest, and Sonoran Desert National Monument – observed that smugglers are often armed and pose a risk to public and employee safety. The officials said that, while few violent encounters between smugglers and the public have occurred to date, many illegal immigrants or smugglers have been murdered or raped on federal lands.”
In reference to how marijuana cultivation on federal lands threatens the safety of the public and employees in those areas, the GAO said, “According to officials at several federal land units we visited and [the Justice Department’s] National Drug Intelligence Center reports, marijuana is increasingly grown on federal lands. Law enforcement officials told us that although most such marijuana cultivation has historically occurred on the West Coast, intensive cultivation – in many cases by large-scale international drug-trafficking organizations – has spread to other regions of the country in recent years.”
“Moreover, marijuana growers are typically armed, posing a threat to public safety and agency employees, according to agency law enforcement officials,” added the report.
“Hunters, hikers, and other members of the public, as well as agency employees, have been shot, shot at, kidnapped, and threatened with violence. Although such violent encounters are rare, law enforcement officials at several units we visited said that marijuana growers have become more violent in recent years,” the report said.
The GAO further reported, “Law enforcement officials also said that the public is increasingly aware of the danger and that some people avoid areas where marijuana cultivation is likely. In some areas, the threat posed by marijuana growers has also affected the agencies’ ability to work in remote areas.”
The GAO’s assessment of the public and employee threat posed by illegal activity on federal lands is based on interviews with law enforcement officials and land managers from 26 agency units in the U.S. Department of Interior (Interior) and in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

Sonoran desert in Arizona.


Those agencies include USDA’s Forest Service and Interior’s Bureau of Land Management, the Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service.
Together, those four agencies are responsible for managing “more than 670 million acres of federal lands across the country,” according to the GAO.
But, the GAO noted, “The four land management agencies did not have comprehensive information to determine the level of and trends in illegal activities occurring on the federal lands they manage.”
Nevertheless, officials from those agencies identified a variety of illegal activities on federal lands that can impact “natural and cultural resources and public and employee safety,” the GAO said.
Concerning those activities, the GAO grouped them into categories and listed them “roughly in order of severity.”
That order, from most severe to least severe, is as follows: violent crimes, illegal border activity, marijuana cultivation, and traffic violations.
Under the violent crimes category, the GAO said “public and agency employees can also be the victims of violence, including assault, rape, and homicide, on federal lands. Although land management officials stressed that this kind of violence remains rare, several units we visited reported some violent incidents.”
To counter “illegal activities occurring on the lands they manage, the agencies employ uniformed law enforcement officers who patrol federal lands, respond to illegal activities, and conduct routine investigations,” said the GAO. “In addition, the agencies have investigative special agents who investigate serious crimes in more detail.”
The GAO acknowledged that, in recent years, most of the federal agencies have augmented their permanent law enforcement presence.
“In an environment of constrained budgets, land management agencies will likely continue to face challenges in protecting natural and cultural resources, the public, and agency employees from the effects of illegal activities on federal lands,” the audit concluded.
“The limitations of available information on illegal activities on federal lands, and the agencies’ lack of systematic approaches to identifying law enforcement resource needs and distributing those resources, hamper the agencies’ efforts to target their resources effectively,” the report said.
“Without a more systematic method to assess the risks posed by illegal activities and a stronger framework for managing them, the agencies cannot be assured that they are allocating scarce resources in a manner that effectively addresses the risk of illegal activities on our nation’s federal lands,” said the GAO.
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Old 12-23-2010, 06:57 AM   #2
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We are we going to stop playing with these guys? Don’t we have helicopters, night vision and lots of volunteers if needed? This administration is reminding me of when I was in Viet Nam while Johnson was president. We fought with one hand tied behind our backs!
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Old 12-23-2010, 10:34 AM   #3
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They need to go in there and do an SSS on those scumbags. You know, shoot , shovel and shutup.
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Old 12-23-2010, 02:24 PM   #4
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Gang, there's much more to the story...
Make no mistake, the southern border is a drug and illegal alien highway.
We have PLENTY of resources to fix the problem.
There's PLENTY of people ready to go in there and seal that border.
The lawyers and the gubbermint are the problem, nothing else.
They're afraid of getting sued if someone gets hurt. But, our citizens die when the illegals drink and drive, and there's nobody that we can sue to recoup our losses.
Our women get raped, homes get invaded (weekly occurrence around Tucson, Nogales, Douglas, and other towns on the border), vehicles get stolen daily, and the list goes on.
They come here, drop a kid, and suddenly they're citizens.
It's no secret that the Pot growers have invaded our state and national parks.
There's been DEA and ICE interdictions all over the place, way back in the hills of these forests...
The bigger question in my mind is, what will it take to get over the top and put our boot on these people's necks?
How many have to die before it happens?
How much more of our lands have to be polluted beyond repair by these people, before we start hanging them in the town square?
What will it take?
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Old 12-24-2010, 08:49 PM   #5
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I lived in southern Arizona for about 6-years. I think this crud has been allowed to go on for too long.
Time for the feds to step up and give the bad boys the boot. We do not need the mexican drug cartell on american soil.
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Old 12-24-2010, 09:09 PM   #6
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sounds like it's time to start legalizing and growing this cash crop.

Prohibition worked for alcohol...oh wait, no it didn't.
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