AnotW seeks to know how many more will be killed?
Illegal is illegal, and criminals are criminals!
Correct?
Are U.S.A. citizens any safer today?
Who are all the illegals in the U.S.A. and do ANY of them have ties to criminal activity back home?
After-all, they came illegally, many openly state they are taking back their country and most steal work away from U.S.A. citizens.
Do not hate, nor be nasty as them, but help them know of and stop the harm they do unto others.
How can we know if we do not even know who they are?
Illegal is illegal, and criminals are criminals!
Correct?
Are U.S.A. citizens any safer today?
Who are all the illegals in the U.S.A. and do ANY of them have ties to criminal activity back home?
After-all, they came illegally, many openly state they are taking back their country and most steal work away from U.S.A. citizens.
Do not hate, nor be nasty as them, but help them know of and stop the harm they do unto others.
How can we know if we do not even know who they are?
Oct. 2 9:16 AM EDT
The agents were shot while patrolling in Naco, Ariz., at about 1:50 a.m. MST Tuesday, according to the Border Patrol.
The wounded agent was airlifted to a hospital after being shot in the ankle and buttocks, according to Homeland Security.
Authorities have not identified the agents who were assigned to the Naco, Ariz., station about 100 miles southeast of Tucson.
The last U.S. Border Patrol agent fatally shot on duty was Brian Terry, who was killed in a shootout with Mexican bandits near the border in December 2010. The shooting was later linked to the Fast and Furious gun smuggling operation.
The border patrol station in Naco was recently named after Terry.
And from FoxNews, their take:
Published October 02, 2012
FoxNews.com
The identities of the agents were not immediately released, but the shooting occurred at the Brian Terry Station near Naco, Ariz., which is just south of Tucson. The station was named after an agent who was killed in the line of duty in December 2010. The area is considered a remote part of the state and sources tell Fox News that the shooting occurred about 8 miles from the border.
The injured agent was airlifted to a hospital with nonlife-threatening injuries. The injured agent was shot in the ankle and buttocks, the Department of Homeland Security said.
The search for the killer is being led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Cochise County Sheriff's Office.
Two weeks ago, the station was named after Brian Terry, who died in a shootout in December 2010 not far from Tuesday's shooting.
In Terry's shooting, two guns found at the scene were bought by a member of a gun-smuggling ring that was being monitored in the Fast and Furious investigation. Critics have knocked U.S. federal authorities for allowing informants to walk away from Phoenix-area gun shops with weapons, rather than immediately arresting suspects.
Below is some info relating to Brian A. Terry the U.S. Border Patrol agent who was fatally shot in December 2010:
LATEST INFORMATION:
RIO RICO - U.S. Border Patrol agents are still searching for a fifth suspect in the killing of agent Brian Terry. Three suspects are in custody, and one is in the hospital for surgery, following the shooting and killing of the agent late Tuesday night.
40 year old Terry, was waiting with three other agents in a remote area north of Nogales late Tuesday night when a gun battle with the bandits began, said National Border Patrol Council President T.J. Bonner.
No other agents were injured, but one of the suspects was wounded in the shootout. FBI sources tell News 4 the bandits were heavily armed and were waiting for a drug load.
Terry had served in the military and was a Border Patrol agent for about three years. He died early Wednesday.
Bandits have long roamed border areas, robbing and sexually assaulting illegal immigrants as they cross into the country.
Bonner, whose group represents 17,000 agents, said the fatal shooting shows that the border is still dangerous. "This is a sign that the politicians and bureaucrats are overly optimistic in their assessment that the borders are more secure now than at any point in our history. It showed just the opposite," Bonner said.
Terry is the third Border Patrol agent to be killed in the line of duty this year, the Customs and Border Protection agency says. Thirty-four agents have died in the line of duty in the last 15 years, according to agency figures.
NEWS LINKS
RIO RICO - U.S. Border Patrol agents are still searching for a fifth suspect in the killing of agent Brian Terry. Three suspects are in custody, and one is in the hospital for surgery, following the shooting and killing of the agent late Tuesday night.
40 year old Terry, was waiting with three other agents in a remote area north of Nogales late Tuesday night when a gun battle with the bandits began, said National Border Patrol Council President T.J. Bonner.
No other agents were injured, but one of the suspects was wounded in the shootout. FBI sources tell News 4 the bandits were heavily armed and were waiting for a drug load.
Terry had served in the military and was a Border Patrol agent for about three years. He died early Wednesday.
Bandits have long roamed border areas, robbing and sexually assaulting illegal immigrants as they cross into the country.
Bonner, whose group represents 17,000 agents, said the fatal shooting shows that the border is still dangerous. "This is a sign that the politicians and bureaucrats are overly optimistic in their assessment that the borders are more secure now than at any point in our history. It showed just the opposite," Bonner said.
Terry is the third Border Patrol agent to be killed in the line of duty this year, the Customs and Border Protection agency says. Thirty-four agents have died in the line of duty in the last 15 years, according to agency figures.
NEWS LINKS
And below is more info concerning the evil U.S.A. Border Patrol agents face:
A Border Patrol agent fatally shot a 32-year-old mother of five Friday
in suburban San Diego as he rode on the hood of her car after she ran
into him, authorities and family members said.
The agent fired after being driven several hundred yards on the hood, Chula Vista police Capt. Gary Wedge told The Associated Press. The woman was later identified in a police statement as Valeria Alvarado.
The shooting occurred about five miles north of the Mexican border as plainclothes agents were looking to serve a felony warrant in the area to someone other than Alvarado, Border Patrol Deputy Chief Rodney Scott told U-T San Diego.
Scott said the agent was stuck atop the car as Alvarado drove.
"Fearing for his life, he discharged his weapon to get the vehicle to stop," Scott said. No other agents fired.
Alvarado was declared dead at the scene, and the agent was taken to a hospital. His injuries were not clear.
After talking to investigators, family members including her husband and cousin told U-T San Diego that Alvarado was a housewife and mother of five children ranging from ages 3 to 17 who went by the name Monique.
"I love her to the fullest. That's my heart," husband Gilbert Alvarado said. "Where's the evidence my wife threatened a trained officer? I want justice."
Family members said Valeria Alvarado grew up in Chula Vista where the shooting took place but had been living about five miles away in the Southcrest neighborhood of San Diego, and they did not know why she was in her former hometown.
Hector Salazar, one of several neighbors who witnessed the incident, said he saw a man in civilian clothes on the hood of a black car aiming a gun at the windshield.
Salazar told U-T San Diego the man started pulling the trigger, and he heard about five shots. Moments later, other plainclothes agents approached the car, he said.
The person named in the warrant the agents were serving was not apprehended, Scott said.
The FBI and Chula Vista police are investigating.
Click the link below to be taken to a video report from Channel 8 News of San Diego, California:
http://news.yahoo.com/video/border-patrol-agent-shoots-kills-021300994.html
and here is a video report from NEWSY:
& below is more of what the men and women protecting U.S.A. citizens encounter:
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CHULA VISTA, Calif. September 29, 2012 (AP)
The agent fired after being driven several hundred yards on the hood, Chula Vista police Capt. Gary Wedge told The Associated Press. The woman was later identified in a police statement as Valeria Alvarado.
The shooting occurred about five miles north of the Mexican border as plainclothes agents were looking to serve a felony warrant in the area to someone other than Alvarado, Border Patrol Deputy Chief Rodney Scott told U-T San Diego.
Scott said the agent was stuck atop the car as Alvarado drove.
"Fearing for his life, he discharged his weapon to get the vehicle to stop," Scott said. No other agents fired.
Alvarado was declared dead at the scene, and the agent was taken to a hospital. His injuries were not clear.
After talking to investigators, family members including her husband and cousin told U-T San Diego that Alvarado was a housewife and mother of five children ranging from ages 3 to 17 who went by the name Monique.
"I love her to the fullest. That's my heart," husband Gilbert Alvarado said. "Where's the evidence my wife threatened a trained officer? I want justice."
Family members said Valeria Alvarado grew up in Chula Vista where the shooting took place but had been living about five miles away in the Southcrest neighborhood of San Diego, and they did not know why she was in her former hometown.
Hector Salazar, one of several neighbors who witnessed the incident, said he saw a man in civilian clothes on the hood of a black car aiming a gun at the windshield.
Salazar told U-T San Diego the man started pulling the trigger, and he heard about five shots. Moments later, other plainclothes agents approached the car, he said.
The person named in the warrant the agents were serving was not apprehended, Scott said.
The FBI and Chula Vista police are investigating.
Click the link below to be taken to a video report from Channel 8 News of San Diego, California:
http://news.yahoo.com/video/border-patrol-agent-shoots-kills-021300994.html
and here is a video report from NEWSY:
& below is more of what the men and women protecting U.S.A. citizens encounter:
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