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  • 6
    Dec
    2012
    10:33am, EST

    New data confirm big drop in illegal immigration

    By Hope Yen, The Associated Press

    New census data released Thursday affirm a clear and sustained drop in illegal immigration, ending more than a decade of increases.

    The number of illegal immigrants in the U.S. dropped to an estimated 11.1 million last year from a peak of 12 million in 2007, part of an overall waning of Hispanic immigration. For the first time since 1910, Hispanic immigration last year was topped by immigrants from Asia.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Demographers say illegal Hispanic immigration — 80 percent of all illegal immigration comes from Mexico and Latin America — isn't likely to approach its mid-2000 peak again, due in part to a weakened U.S. economy and stronger enforcement but also a graying of the Mexican population.


    The finding suggests an uphill battle for the Republicans, who passed legislation in the House last week that would extend citizenship to a limited pool of foreign students with advanced degrees but who are sharply divided on whether to pursue broader immigration measures. 

    In all, the biggest surge of immigration in modern U.S. history ultimately may be recorded as occurring in the mid-1990s to early 2000s, yielding illegal residents who now have been settled in the U.S. for 10 years or more. They include migrants who arrived here as teens and are increasingly at risk of "aging out" of congressional proposals such as the DREAM Act that offer a pathway to citizenship for younger adults.

    Photoblog: Latino enclave scatters as border agents move in

    "The priority now is to push a vigorous debate about the undocumented people already here," said Jose Antonio Vargas, 31, a journalist from the Philippines. "We want to become citizens and not face the threat of deportation or be treated as second class," said Vargas, whose campaign, Define American, along with the young immigrant group United We Dream, have been pushing for citizenship for the entire illegal population in the U.S. The groups point to a strong Latino and Asian-American turnout for President Barack Obama in last month's election as evidence of public support for a broad overhaul of U.S. immigration laws.

    Earlier this year, Obama extended to many younger immigrants temporary reprieves from deportation. But Vargas, who has lived in the U.S. since 1993 and appeared this year on the cover of Time magazine with other immigrants who lacked legal status, has become too old to qualify.

    "This conversation is a question about how we as a nation define who is an American," Vargas said, noting that if politicians don't embrace immigration overhaul now, a rapidly growing bloc of minority voters may soon do it for them. "If you want us to pay a fine to become a citizen, OK. If you want us to pay back taxes, absolutely. If you want us to speak English, I speak English. But we can't tread water on this issue anymore."

    Report: Border crossings changing, Central Americans on the rise

    Jeffrey Passel, a senior demographer at the Pew Research Center and a former Census Bureau official, said U.S. immigration policies will have a significant impact in shaping a future U.S. labor force, which is projected to shrink by 2030. Aging white baby boomers, many in specialized or management roles, are beginning to retire. Mexican immigration, which has helped fill needs in farming, home health care and other low-wage U.S. jobs, has leveled off.

    "Immigration is one way to boost the number of workers in the population," he said, but the next wave of needed immigrants is likely to come from somewhere other than Mexico. "We are not going to see a return to the levels of Mexican unauthorized immigration of a decade ago."

    The numbers are largely based on the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey through March 2011. Because the Census Bureau does not ask people about their immigration status, Passel derived estimates on illegal immigrants largely by subtracting the estimated legal immigrant population from the total foreign-born population. The numbers are also supplemented with material from William H. Frey of the Brookings Institution and Mark Mather of the Population Reference Bureau, who reviewed data released Thursday from the Census' American Community Survey.

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    The data showed that 11.1 million, or 28 percent, of the foreign-born population in the U.S. consists of illegal immigrants, virtually unchanged since 2009 and roughly equal to the level of 2005. An additional 12.2 million foreign-born people, 31 percent, are legal permanent residents with green cards. And 15.1 million, or 37 percent, are naturalized U.S. citizens.

    Fewer Mexican workers are entering the U.S., while many of those immigrants already here are opting to return to their homeland, resulting in zero net migration from Mexico.

    In 2007, legal and illegal immigrants made up equally large shares of the foreign-born population, at 31 percent, due to ballooning numbers of new unauthorized migrants seeking U.S. construction and related jobs during the mid-2000s housing boom. Naturalized U.S. citizens then represented 35 percent.

    Broken down by geography and race, roughly half of all states last year posted declines or no change in their numbers of foreign-born Hispanics, including big immigrant states such as California and New York as well as economically hard hit areas in Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina, which previously had seen gains.

    Foreign-born Asians were a bigger source of population gain than Hispanic immigrants in California, New York, Virginia, Illinois and New Jersey. Newly moving into suburban communities, the Asian population spread out more across the southeastern U.S. and Texas, increasing their share in 93 percent of the nation's metropolitan areas.

    As a whole, foreign-born residents are slowly graying, with 44 percent now age 45 or older. They are more likely than in 2007 to be enrolled in college or graduate school (39 percent, up from 32 percent) and to be single (17 percent married, down from 22 percent).

    Births to immigrant mothers also are on the decline, driving the overall U.S. birth rate last year to the lowest in records dating back to 1920.

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    "At least temporarily, the face of immigration to the U.S. is changing in terms of cultural background, education and skills," Frey said. "The fertility bump provided by past Hispanic immigrants may not be replicated in the future, especially if Asians take over a greater share of U.S. immigrants."

    House Republicans, seeking to show they are serious about addressing the immigration issue after being largely rejected by Hispanics in the election, voted last week to make green cards accessible to foreign students graduating with advanced science and math degrees from U.S. universities.

    The measure, strongly backed by the high-tech industry and touted as a boost to the U.S. economy, would have a net effect of extending more visas and eventual citizenship to students from India and China. It is opposed by most Democrats, the Obama administration and immigrant rights groups such as the Asian American Justice Center which want to see it packaged with broader legislation that extends legal status for illegal immigrants.

    These groups also oppose the proposed new 55,000 visas for foreign students because they would be offset by eliminating a lottery program that provides green cards to people with lower rates of immigration, mainly those from Africa. Senate Democrats on Wednesday blocked Republicans from bringing up the bill.

    A bill introduced by Sens. Jon Kyl of Arizona and Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas, who are retiring at the end of this session, seeks to offer some legal status to young immigrants. Critics say it falls short because it does not provide a path to citizenship, an issue that Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., describes as "non-negotiable."

    About 77 percent of Hispanic voters in the November election said they thought people working in the U.S. illegally should be offered a chance to apply for legal status, according to exit polling conducted for the television networks and The Associated Press. That is compared with 71 percent of Asian-Americans and 65 percent of voters overall.

    The political implications are great.

    Hispanics and Asian-Americans are the nation's two fastest-growing population groups, each increasing by more than 40 percent since 2000. A higher birth rate and years of steadily high immigration have boosted Hispanics to 17 percent of the U.S. population, compared with blacks at 12 percent and 5 percent for Asians.

    Even if the nation's estimated 11 million illegal residents do not attain citizenship, the nation's Hispanics, who made up roughly 10 percent of voters in November, are expected to nearly double their share of eligible voters by 2030. Asian-Americans, who now are 3 percent of voters, will also continue to increase.

    About 73 percent of Asian-Americans voted for Obama, second only to African-Americans at 93 percent and slightly higher than Latinos at 71 percent, according to exit polling.

    Asian-Americans don't strongly identify with either party, but they tend to cite jobs, education and health care as issues most important to them and generally prefer a big government that provides more services. Relatively new to the U.S. and religiously diverse, Asian-Americans also may have been repelled by Republican Mitt Romney's forceful stance during the primaries seeking "self-deportation" of immigrants as well as the GOP's sometimes narrow appeal to evangelical Christians, said Karthick Ramakrishnan, a political science professor at the University of California-Riverside who helps conduct a broad National Asian American Survey.

    While Mexicans make up about 55 percent of illegal immigrants and other Latin Americans represent another 25 percent, Asians make up a 10 percent share, many of whom overstay temporary visas.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    78 comments

    I am still dismayed by the failure to address the root question With unemployment levels this high, why do we permit ANY immigration? If many illegals simply overstay visa's, wouldn't the issue be solved by not issuing any visa's at all? The reality is immigrants equal cheap labor. Supply and demand …

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    Explore related topics: mexico, immigration, latin-america, illegal-immigration, latinos, dream-act
  • 26
    Nov
    2012
    5:08pm, EST

    Top 10 fugitive went to extremes to evade capture in Mexico

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    FBI

    The FBI's listing for Jose Luis Saenz after his capture last week in Mexico.

    An alleged drug cartel hit man on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list was living a relatively normal life when he was arrested last week in Mexico, the FBI said Monday.

    Toni Guinyard, Jonathan Lloyd and Janet Kwak of NBC 4 of Los Angeles and R. Stickney of NBC 7 of San Diego contributed to this report. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    The man, Jose Luis Saenz, who is 36 or 37 (the FBI listed four possible birthdates), went to great lengths to build that life, agents said Monday after his arraignment in Los Angeles in connection with four brutal murders in California from 1998 to 2008.

    When he was taken into custody Thursday at his apartment in Guadalajara — partly as a result of a $100,000 reward, the FBI said — Saenz identified himself as "Giovanni Torres," just one of 21 aliases the FBI said he was known to have used.


    Saenz had also put on significant weight and had undergone procedures to remove identifying tattoos on his arms, it said. He had even tried to alter his fingerprints.


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    Saenz is accused of three murders in Los Angeles in 1998: the killings of two alleged rival gang members and the kidnap, rape and slaying of his estranged girlfriend two weeks later.

    Investigators said Saenz killed Sigrieta Hernandez, his girlfriend and the mother of his daughter, because he believed she was going to tell police about the gang slayings.

    Saenz was added to the FBI's 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list in 2009, after he was linked with a fourth homicide in Whittier, Calif., in October 2008. 

    The victim in that case, identified as Oscar Torres, was killed over a drug debt, authorities said. A security camera videotaped a man believed to be Saenz in the act of killing Torres, wounding another person and leaving the scene in a stretch limousine. 

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    The FBI said Saenz was believed to be highly dangerous because he had "reportedly made previous statements indicating plans to kill a police officer upon his arrest."

    In Mexico, Saenz was working as a hit man for a drug cartel in Guadalajara, "living as an average citizen in an apartment above a beauty salon," FBI agent Scott Garriola said.

    "We were dogged in our determination to find him, but when you have that many aliases and you have that much money and connections and you move around that much, it makes it a little more difficult," Garriola said.

    He was flown Friday night to Los Angeles, where he told reporters he was "not guilty for life."

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    79 comments

    I can agree with you.It also goes to show that we are DECADES overdue in shutting our borders.This guy was an "American"

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    Explore related topics: fbi, mexico, fugitive, featured, nbclosangeles, nbcsandiego, jose-luis-saenz
  • 24
    Nov
    2012
    3:32am, EST

    One of FBI's 10 most-wanted fugitives captured in Mexico

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    One of the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugitives was arrested in Mexico and returned to Los Angeles Friday night to face charges of murder, kidnapping and rape, U.S. officials said.

    Reputed Los Angeles gang member Joe Luis Saenz was taken into custody in Guadalajara late Thursday following a joint operation with the Mexican government, Bill Lewis, assistant director in charge of the FBI's Los Angeles office, said.


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    Investigators said Saenz shot and killed two rival gang members in July 1998 to retaliate for an assault on one of his associates.

    Saenz suspected Sigrieta Hernandez, his girlfriend and the mother of his daughter, was going to tell police about the slayings, investigators said.

    He is accused of kidnapping, raping and killing her less than two weeks later.

    Videotape murder
    Saenz also is believed to have killed Oscar Torres at his home in suburban Whittier in October 2008 because he failed to repay $600,000 in drug money after police seized the cash during a traffic stop.

    Authorities said they have videotape from a surveillance camera at Torres' house that shows Saenz killing Torres and wounding another person.

    Saenz was still listed on the FBI’s most-wanted list early Saturday, but with a red caption on his photograph reading “CAPTURED.”

    Born in Los Angeles, Saenz was known to travel between the United States and Mexico.

    Saenz, who is about 37 years old, was believed to be hiding in Mexico, working as an enforcer and hit man for a Mexican drug cartel.

    He had a number of aliases including Zapp, Peanut Joe Smiley and Honeycutt, it added.

    Saenz had been on the FBI's most-wanted list since 2009, putting him among the ranks of Osama bin Laden, Boston crime lord James "Whitey" Bulger and other notorious criminals.

    There was a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading to his arrest.

    The Associated Press, Reuters and NBC's Ian Johnston contributed to this report.

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    101 comments

    No trial, no jury, just death. Rehabilitation won't work, get rid of him. Spend no more money or time on this prick, than to execute him.

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  • 3
    Nov
    2012
    6:46am, EDT

    Despite constant bloodshed, Mexico is ignored during White House race

    Adriana Alvarado / AP

    Rapid response Coahuila state police stand at a checkpoint iin Piedras Negras, Mexico, after a prison break on Sept. 18. Security is among the challenges facing the country.

    By Maria Camila Bernal, Telemundo

    News analysis

    Where is home to the largest number of Americans living abroad, as well as the world's richest man?

    Which country is the United States' third-largest foreign supplier of oil?

    Which nation did President George W. Bush call the U.S.' most important bilateral partner?

    Which close American ally has lost some 60,000 lives in a U.S.-backed effort to combat violent crime?

    The answer to all of the above is Mexico.

    But despite the many ties that bind the two countries, the United States' southern neighbor barely warranted a mention during the presidential campaign, and didn't come up once during the third "foreign policy" debate between Gov. Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama.

    President Barack Obama and Republican candidate Mitt Romney discuss foreign policy in the third and final presidential debate.

    This omission is not lost on many in Mexico.

    "At times the United States sees Mexico as an unconditional ally and they see us with the stigma of an undeveloped nation," said Eduardo Rosales, director of the United States-Mexico relations master's program at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). "But the United States needs to put their eyes south. It is the most important bilateral relationship in the world."

    Some Mexico-related news is grimly familiar to most Americans -- tens of thousands have died in violence since outgoing President Felipe Calderon declared war on the country's drug cartels at the end of 2006.

    Mexico's drug war: No sign of 'light at the end of the tunnel'

    Mexican cartels funnel between $19 and $39 billion worth of illegal drugs to the United States every year, according to the State Department. The United States, in turn, is a major source of weapons for the cartels.

    Mexico's death toll remains stubbornly high and swathes of the country virtually ungovernable despite the Merida Initiative, a $1.9-billion U.S.-funded program aimed at fighting trafficking, organized crime and money laundering.

    A vivid example of the shared security challenges came in August when Mexican police officers thought to be working in cahoots with the cartels ambushed and wounded two U.S. agents.

    Violence, including the discovery of 49 mutilated bodies near the U.S. border, is reaching new levels in the ongoing drug war in Mexico. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    Oscar Alvarez, a college student in the northern state of Coahuila, alleged that much of the blame for the violence and crime lies with the United States, the world's largest consumer of illegal drugs.

    "The demand on drugs is not being controlled ... and Mexico will always be affected," said Alvarez, 22, who has a small printing business to help cover the costs of school. "Whoever wins (the U.S. election) needs to act. I've heard a lot of talk but I haven't seen anything get done."

    Full coverage: NBCNews.com's The World is Watching series

    More election news at Telemundo

    That the drugs trade and the hyper-violent crime that surrounds it is a shared problem has not been widely accepted in the United States, according to UNAM's Rosales.

    "The problem is the consumption and the things that surround it such as violence and money laundering," he said. "It's a reality that is neglected by the United Sates. But our bloodshed continues to grow."

    Cross-border methamphetamine trade booms amid Mexico's 'war on drugs'

    It isn't clear how incoming President Enrique Pena Nieto of Institutional Revolutionary Party, which governed Mexico for about 70 years, will deal with the cartels, but indications are that many in country are losing patience with the drug war.

    "I'm against the war," former Mexican foreign minister Jorge Castañeda told NBC News in May. "At six years on, it is beginning to look more difficult to see any kind of light at the end of the tunnel."

    Jorge Castaneda, former Mexican foreign minister and NBC News Latin America policy expert, talks about the latest developments in Mexico's drug war where this week 49 mutilated bodies were found near the U.S. border.

    Crime and cartels do not define Mexico.

    It is one of the United States' most important trading partners. Its economy, the world's 14th largest, grew at 5.5 percent in 2010 and 3.8 percent in 2011, according to the Office of the United States Trade Representative, despite the global economic downturn. Trade between the United States, Mexico and Canada -- members of the North American Free Trade Agreement -- is worth more than trade within the eurozone. 

    Also in this series: Iran, Israel name checks illustrate America's twin obsessions

    A symbol of Mexico's growing international economic prominence is Carlos Slim Helu– a telecoms tycoon with wide-ranging investments including a sizable stake in The New York Times – who topped Forbes' list of the world's richest people in 2012.


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    But despite billionaire tycoons and high growth rates, the anemic economy north of the border is hurting Mexico.

    Mexico leader's message to US: 'No more weapons!'

    Isidoro Peyron, owner of a family-run tile-making business in Pachuca, central Mexico, says the United States' slowdown has hit him directly. Whoever wins Tuesday's election must kickstart the economy for the sakes of both the U.S. and Mexico, he says.

    "The next president of the United States needs to reactivate the American economy," said Peyron, 63, who has stopped exporting to the United States. "They are (Mexico's) main commercial partner."

    Nevertheless, U.S. trade with Mexico totaled about $500 billion in 2011. 

    Also in this series: Suspicion of US rife as Obama, Romney jab China

    The 2,000-mile border between the two countries makes this trade easier, but the easy access also fuels another issue that both unifies and divides the U.S. and Mexico: immigration.

    At an estimated 12 million, Mexicans are by far the largest immigrant group in the United States. And around 7 million, or 59 percent of undocumented immigrants, are thought to have come from Mexico.

    The Justice Department inspector general found no evidence that Atty. Gen. Eric Holder even knew about the operation that brought more than 2000 guns into Mexico. Fourteen federal law enforcement officials, however, are connected to the botched gun trafficking operation. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    While Obama decreed earlier this year that hundreds of thousands of undocumented migrants who went to the United States illegally as young children would be entitled to remain, the promise he made in 2008 to reform immigration has not been fulfilled.

    Meanwhile, there have been more deportations under the Obama administration than during any other presidency in modern times.

    Also in this series: Should next US president treat Russia as friend or foe?

    But even though Obama has disappointed many for not delivering on immigration reform, the UNAM's Rosales did not hold out hope that Romney will resolve the problems.

    "If Romney got to power, there would be zero chances of an immigration reform," Rosales said. "If Obama is elected a second term, it's still hard, but the chances increase."

    In his public life, Mitt Romney has said and written little about his ancestors' history in Mexico. It's a little-known fact that there's a whole branch of Mitt Romney's family living south of the border, including his second cousin Leighton Romney, and about 40 other relatives descended from religious pioneers who first traveled to Mexico 125 years ago. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

    Romney favors a U.S.-Mexico border fence and opposes education benefits to illegal immigrants, as well as offering legal status to illegal immigrants who attend college, although he would support doing so for those who serve in the armed forces.

    More Mexico coverage from NBC News

    Mike Reyes, who currently resides in Mexico City, lived in Arizona for eight years as an illegal immigrant. He feels the U.S. fails to appreciate what immigrants like himself contributed to the country.

    "We hope the situation with Hispanics can be resolved in this election," said Reyes, 45, who works as a driver for the public transportation system despite having a degree in business.

    Net Mexican immigration to the United States has stopped growing and may even have declined in recent years, according to a recent study. But with about half of Mexico's population classified as poor, economic realities are likely to continue propelling many Mexicans north for years to come. 

    So immigration policies pursued by the winner of the 2012 presidential race will have an impact not only on the United States but Mexico.

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    321 comments

    "The United States, in turn, is a major source of weapons for the cartels." That sentence is the key, I believe. The US now is one of the world's major supplier or weaponry. If Mexico ever gets its act together, the US arms makers will lose a great deal of money.

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    Explore related topics: mexico, violence, election, drugs, obama, romney, felipe-calderon, featured, cartels, enrique-pena-nieto, world-is-watching
  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    5:06am, EDT

    Mother reunited with son 5 years after child's abduction

    View more videos at: http://nbcsandiego.com.

    By Diana Guevara, NBCSanDiego.com

    SAN DIEGO -- A mother and her 7-year-old son have been reunited five years after the boy was kidnapped by his father and taken to Mexico, authorities said.

    According to the San Diego District Attorney's office, the boy had been living with his grandparents near Mexico City after his father, 37-year-old Julio Rocha kidnapped him and left him there.

    "I haven't really celebrated Christmas or his birthday or anything," he boy's mother, Leilani Masumoto, told NBC 7. "I was just waiting to get him back home. This will be our first Christmas together."

    Masumoto said she had just been given full custody of her son, Keoni, when Rocha took the boy to Mexico. But last week her prayers were answered.

    That's when authorities got a call from the grandparents' next-door neighbor, who came across a missing children's poster online with the boy's photo and recognized him.

    'Broke down in tears'
    After years of anguish, mother and child were finally reunited.

    "As soon as he came, I just broke down in tears," Masumoto recalled.

    But they are tears she says she would not shed if she ever has to face Keoni's father again.

    Read more stories from NBCSanDiego.com

    "I think my first initial reaction would be to just slap him across the face. I don't think he cared about Keoni, it's just more the fact of taking him to hurt me and he accomplished that," she said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Although she may have lost years of memories with her son, it only took one look at her little boy to find that love again.

    "It was like, will I recognize my son? Will he recognize me? And when I saw him, that was it," she said.

    Right now, Masumoto is focused on getting her son settled in back home.

    Keoni is autistic so Masumoto is trying to find a school that focuses on special-needs students.

    Authorities are still looking for Rocha. He is facing felony kidnapping charges.

    Investigators say he might be going under the name Miguel Martinez and may be staying with relatives in Virginia or North Carolina.

     

    69 comments

    The grandparents had to be just as mean and controlling to keep that kid for 5 years. What horrible people they must be to take a child from it's mother.

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  • 4
    Oct
    2012
    7:09pm, EDT

    Feds examine whether 'friendly fire' killed Border Patrol agent

    Investigators have told NBC News that they cannot rule out the possibility that Border Patrol agent Nicolas Ivie, who was shot to death Tuesday morning, may have been a casualty of "friendly fire." NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    By NBC News

    Federal investigators have told NBC News they are examining whether the shootings of Border Patrol agents early Tuesday morning were the result of friendly fire – officers accidentally shooting each other.


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    Initial reports from U.S. and local officials blamed the shootings on armed criminals. Agent Nicholas Ivie, 30, was killed and another agent was wounded in the incident.

    Mexican police said Thursday that they arrested two suspects in a Mexican military operation in the city of Agua Prieta, in Mexico’s northern Sonora state, a few miles from where Ivie was shot, Reuters reported.  


     

     

    Related: Mexican troops arrest two in killing of US border agent

    Ivie was responding to desert sensors that track movements in a remote area five miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border, near Naco, Ariz., authorities have said. He was with two other agents, one of whom was wounded and released from the hospital after undergoing surgery. The third agent, a woman, was unharmed.  

    Ivie was a father of two who grew up in Utah and was active in the Mormon Church. He had been an agent for four years.

    It was the first fatal shooting of an on-duty Border Patrol agent since December 2010, when Brian Terry was killed in a shootout with bandits near the border. Terry's shooting was later linked to the government's "Fast and Furious" gun-smuggling operation, which allowed people suspected of illegally buying guns for others to walk away from gun shops with weapons, an attempt to track the weapons.

    Two Border Patrol agents were killed last year in an accident during a car chase with smugglers near Phoenix.

    Regarding the more recent case, investigators caution that that have reached no conclusions and still have lots of work to do. But they said they cannot rule out that it was a friendly fire incident.

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    154 comments

    This probably eminated from the DOJ to stall the investigation of Holder and his goons. I believe the BP is well trained to do their job and this is just a smoke screen.

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    Explore related topics: mexico, border, shootings, border-patrol
  • 3
    Oct
    2012
    6:54pm, EDT

    Mexican troops arrest 2 in killing of U.S. border agent

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent Nicolas Ivie, 30, was shot to death Tuesday near the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Updated at 8:20 p.m. ET: MEXICO CITY -- Mexican troops have arrested two suspects in the killing of a U.S. Border Patrol agent and the wounding of a second officer in Arizona, Mexican security officials said on Wednesday. 


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    The two suspects were detained in a Mexican military operation in the city of Agua Prieta, in Mexico's northern Sonora state, a few miles from the spot where Nicholas Ivie was shot dead early on Tuesday while responding to a tripped ground sensor, a Mexican Army officer, who declined to be named, told Reuters.


    Ivie was among three agents who were patrolling on foot about five miles north of the international border when gunfire erupted. A second agent was also wounded while the third, a woman, was unharmed.  

    The agents had been patrolling in an area near the border town of Naco, well-known as a corridor for smuggling, and the Cochise County Sheriff's department has said that tracks were found heading south after the shooting.

    Related: Feds examine whether friendly fire killed border agent

    Ivie was a 30-year-old father of two who grew up in Utah and was active in the Mormon Church. He had been an agent for four years.

    A Mexican police official in Naco, across the border from the Arizona town of the same name, confirmed the arrests, which occurred in the early hours of Wednesday.

    U.S. officials refused to comment on the report of the arrests to NBC News.

    It was the first fatal shooting of an on-duty Border Patrol agent since December 2010, when Brian Terry was killed in a shootout with bandits near the border. Terry's shooting was later linked to the government's "Fast and Furious" gun-smuggling operation, which allowed people suspected of illegally buying guns for others to walk away from gun shops with weapons, rather than be arrested.

    Two Border Patrol agents were killed last year in an accident during a car chase with smugglers near Phoenix.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    253 comments

    When can we expect to hear the two suspects were successfully executed? Oh, I forgot. Mexico doesn't have the death penalty. These two murderers will be put in jail and will walk away in the next mass jail break we read about in the news.

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    Explore related topics: mexico, drug, border, shootings, crime, patrol, cartels, commentid-mexico
  • 19
    Sep
    2012
    6:36am, EDT

    State Department: No secret plan to invade Canada

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    The U.S. and Mexico are not secretly planning to invade Canada, a State Department spokeswoman confirmed to laughter during a daily press briefing.

    Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland was taking questions from journalists about its activities Tuesday, which included a meeting between Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Mexico Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa.


    Follow Ian Johnston on Twitter

    She was asked about “a signing ceremony” with Espinosa – what was being signed and why was the ceremony not open to the press.

    “I think it’s an update on Merida, but I will get that for you,” Nuland reported, referring to the Merida Initiative to fight organized crime.

    The journalist asked, “This isn’t some secret thing … to invade Canada or something like that?”

    Amid laughter, Nuland replied: “No, no, no. It’s not anything classified.”

    The U.S. did draw up a secret plan to invade Canada in 1935, codenamed “War Plan Red,” some of which was accidentally published by mistake and reported by The New York Times.  

    A U.S. invasion of Canada also featured in the film, "Canadian Bacon," starring John Candy, Alan Alda and Rhea Perlman, and the movie South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, which included the song "Blame Canada."

    There is also a website called www.invadecanada.us, which lists reasons such as connecting the mainland U.S. with Alaska, “they’re just a little too proud,” and “they stole our basketball teams.” 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Democracy declined worldwide in 2011 with Arab Spring at risk, watchdog says
    • 132 inmates tunnel out of Mexico prison near US border
    • Fresh anti-Japan protests erupt in China
    • Islamist militants attack Egypt security headquarters in Sinai
    • NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin in Benghazi answers questions about attack
    • In Niger, child marriage on rise due to hunger
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    376 comments

    The State Department is not aware of the CIA's plans for Canada.

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  • 24
    Aug
    2012
    7:34am, EDT

    Report: Ton of marijuana seized, 7 arrested off Calif. coast

    By NBC News staff

    More than a ton of marijuana was seized and seven people arrested when U.S. border agents backed by a Blackhawk helicopter intercepted a sailboat and another small vessel in the sea off California’s Santa Catalina Island, according to a report.


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    The Los Angeles Times said four Mexican citizens on a panga boat, which was carrying the drugs, were arrested along with three U.S. citizens on the sailboat.


    A loaded shotgun, a .40-caliber pistol and night vision equipment also were found, the paper said.

    “We are beginning to see this as a more common tactic: Smugglers attempting to move contraband from open hull panga boats to recreational vessels,” Keley Hill, director of Marine Operations for CBP in San Diego, said in a statement issued to the Times.

    “The smugglers think that when the recreational vessel moves in to shore, it will blend in with legitimate boating traffic off of the Southern California coastline and make it much more difficult for us to detect illegal activity,” Hill added.

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    337 comments

    Oops the price of pot just went up 3 cents an ounce for 30 minutes. Good job.

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  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    7:47am, EDT

    Report: US government weighs using battlefield blimps at Mexico border

    © Lucas Jackson / Reuters / Reuters, file

    A sandstorm blows past an inflatable blimp inside Forward Operating Base Joyce in Afghanistan's Kunar Province in June.

    By NBC News staff

    Dozens of surveillance blimps now being used on the battlefield in Afghanistan and Iraq could be deployed on the border with Mexico under a new joint initiative by the American military and border patrol officials, the Wall Street Journal reported.

    If tests overseen by the military over the next few weeks are successful, the Department of Homeland Security would deploy 72-foot-long, unmanned surveillance blimps to help trace drug traffickers and those trying to enter the United States illegally, the newspaper reported on Tuesday.


    The helium-filled drones have drifted over military bases throughout Afghanistan and Iraq for years, the Wall Street Journal reported. Often floating some 2,000-feet above above ground, they are equipped with cameras, infrared sensors and other hardware to help keep an eye on militants, insurgents and troops in battle, according to the newspaper. 

    Border Patrol unveils first new strategy in 8 years

    With bases in Afghanistan shutting down, the aircraft are part of an enormous trove of military equipment set to leave the country over the next two years, the Wall Street Journal reported.  

    Heavily armed boats from Texas are now patrolling the U.S.-Mexico border along the Rio Grande. NBC's Charles Hadlock reports.

    Drug smuggling tunnels discovered between US and Mexico

    If the tests go well, the military could give Homeland Security dozens of blimps and surplus equipment worth $27 million, the newspaper reported.  Border officials are already using military hardware along the border with Mexico, such as unarmed Predator drones, the Wall Street Journal said. 

    The surveillance drones were being offered free of charge, Mark Borkowski, assistant commissioner at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Office of Technology Innovation and Acquisition, told the paper.

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    241 comments

    Our government has no interest in controlling the flow of illegals into our country. A blimp is not going to do anything if we are not to deport illegals. I expect Washington thinks that if we see a blimp in the air, we will think they are doing something constructive.

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  • 26
    Jul
    2012
    6:34am, EDT

    Three Calif. firms charged with dodging $10 million in customs fees

    Joe Klamar / AFP/Getty Images

    Containers wait to to shipped on Long Beach harbor, California, on April 26. Three firms have been charged with fraudulently processing container shipments that contained clothing from China, cigarettes from India and Germany and packages of the Mexican cactus dish nopalitos through the port.

    By NBC News and wire services

    SAN DIEGO -- Prosecutors have charged three California companies with seeking to avoid paying $10 million in customs fees by bringing containers of food and other items to port and claiming they were destined for other countries, then selling the goods in the United States.

    The criminal complaint unsealed by federal prosecutors in San Diego on Wednesday named eight people, including the president of the San Diego Customs Brokers Association, who are accused of being part of the scheme.


    Goods in over 90 fraudulently processed container shipments included clothing from China, cigarettes from India and Germany and packages of the Mexican cactus dish nopalitos, officials with the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

    It amounted to at least $100 million in products and $10 million in lost customs duties, they said. The complaint says the companies "facilitated" about $500 million in trade between the United States and other countries over the last five years.

    The investigation "pulled back the curtain on a potentially costly fraud scheme operating in one of the world's busiest commercial centers," U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton told United Press International.

    Cheaper prices
    Because the goods were reported as simply passing through the Long Beach Port on their way to other countries, they were exempt from U.S. customs fees, prosecutors said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The defendants "could sell more goods at cheaper prices and for greater profits than their law-abiding competitors, including domestic American manufacturers of these same products," the complaint read. 

    The charges were brought against International Trade Consultants LLC and Tecate Logistics, based in Tecate, Calif., about 35 miles east of San Diego and immediately north of the Mexican border. The third company, M Trade Inc., is based in Los Angeles.

    Complete US coverage from NBCNews.com

    Among the eight people charged -- including the owners or operators of the companies -- some lived in southern California and some were in Tijuana, Mexico.

    Local business leader among those charged
    One of the accused, Gerardo Chavez, is president of the San Diego Customs Brokers Association and the owner of Tecate Logistics and International Trade Consultants, prosecutors said.

    Calls to M Trade and International Trade Consultants were not answered, and an employee at Tecate Logistics declined to comment. The defendants will have their first court appearance on Thursday in federal court in San Diego.

    Messages left for the Customs Brokers Association late Wednesday evening were not immediately returned.

    Local news coverage from NBC affiliate NBC 7 San Diego

    All the defendants were charged with conspiracy to defraud the United States, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison if convicted.

    Some of the defendants were also accused of importing goods by means of false statements and obstruction of justice.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    41 comments

    NBC (and the rest of the mainstream media) should do to wealthy, white-collar criminals what they routinely do to poor, blue-collar criminals: NAME THEM!

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    Explore related topics: mexico, china, fraud, customs, california, san-diego, gerardo-chavez
  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    6:17pm, EDT

    Report: Apprehensions for immigration violations drop to 40-year low

    By NBC News staff and The Associated Press

    The number of apprehensions of people for federal immigration violations has dropped to its lowest level in 40 years, reflecting a decline in the northbound traffic of illegal immigrants from Mexico, according to a government report released Wednesday. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The report, released by the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, said such apprehensions stood at 1.8 million in 2000, but declined dramatically to 516,992 in 2010, the lowest level since 1972. 

    "Most people don't want to leave (their home county)," said Lisa Garcia Bedolla, a University of California-Berkley social and cultural studies associate professor. "Things aren't that bad in the Mexican economy right now."


    Meanwhile, arrests for criminal immigration offenses are rising. Suspects arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service for federal criminal immigration offenses increased from 8,777 in 1994 to 82,438 in 2010. 

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    Most arrests and apprehensions in 2010 were concentrated on the Southwest border sectors. 

    The most common offense, according to the report, is illegal re-entry followed by alien smuggling and misuse of visas. 

    Mexican citizens made up 83 percent of deportable aliens in 2010, down from 94 percent in 2002. 

    Read the full report here

    However, the number of deportable aliens coming from Central America increased from 3 percent to 12 percent during an eight-year period ending in 2010.  

    The number of Border Patrol officers doubled from 10,819 in 2004 to 20,558 in 2010, with most located along states that abut Mexico.  

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    The study classifies immigration apprehension as a case where a foreign national is caught in the U.S. illegally, while an arrest refers to the booking of an individual by the U.S. Marshals for violating federal immigration law.

    Both terms represent events rather than individuals because a person can be apprehended or arrested more than once, the report explains.

    NBC News' Louis Casiano contributed to this story.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    33 comments

    The report, released by the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics With Holder in contempt of congress and Obummer refusing to cooperate anyone that DOES believe this is a complete idiot-oh that's right I forgot who got him elected. We shall take care of that real soon.

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