How rapists prey on vulnerable border crossers
By Jerry Seper
JACUMBA, Calif. -- Among the thousands of women who will illegally cross
into the United States this year from Mexico, some will be raped by the
same men who demanded $1,500 to $2,000 for safe passage -- their underpants
often hung on a border fence as a trophy.
"I thought the wailings we heard at night were the
coyotes barking at the moon," said Tim Donnelly, who headed the Minuteman
Civil Defense Corps border vigil here. "I didn't know until later that
those sounds were the cries of women being raped in the Mexican desert,
some less than a hundred yards away from the border.
"There was absolutely nothing anyone could do about
it," said Mr. Donnelly, grimacing as he turned away to hide his emotions.
"It's something you never forget."
The women, according to U.S. law-enforcement authorities,
have no realistic recourse, because they are foreigners seeking to enter
the United States illegally. Separated from other illegals just south of
the border, the smugglers take them into the desert where they are raped
or sodomized.
U.S. authorities said some Mexican border police
have taken part in the violence, often targeting migrants headed to the
United States from Central and South America.
The rapes are part of what the U.S. Border Patrol
said is a growing pattern of violence on the U.S.-Mexico border from California
to Texas, including a rising number of assaults and robberies of illegals
and a dramatic increase in attacks on Border Patrol agents and other law-enforcement
personnel along the 1,940-mile border.
The incidents of violence and the intensity of the
attacks, the authorities said, continue despite an ongoing and expensive
effort by the Department of Homeland Security in the wake of the September
11 attacks to gain "operational control" of the border.
Alien and drug smugglers -- many armed with automatic
weapons, global-positioning units and night-vision scopes -- have become
increasingly aggressive in protecting their illicit cargoes, the authorities
said, adding that attacks on Border Patrol agents have risen fivefold in
the past year.
The State Department issued a warning earlier this
year to Americans traveling into the northern border regions of Mexico,
saying they should be "aware of the risk posed by the deteriorating security
situation," including killings, kidnappings and sexual assaults.
The National Border Patrol Council (NBPC), which
represents the agency's 10,000 nonsupervisory personnel, has blamed the
increased violence, in part, on Homeland Security's "restrictive enforcement
policies," saying border agents often are prohibited from actively pursuing
those involved.
NBPC President T.J. Bonner, a 27-year Border Patrol
veteran, said the enforcement policies have emboldened alien and drug smugglers
to become more aggressive in challenging competitors, protecting themselves
from detection and arrest and attacking illegal aliens.
But for Mr. Donnelly, a 38-year-old plastics salesman
from Twin Peaks, Calif., who is married to a Hispanic woman and has five
children, the violence is intolerable. He said the migrants who "cross
every day into the United States through this rugged and dangerous terrain
are the victims."
"They've been abused and abandoned by their own government.
How can we not be outraged and ashamed that we allow these people to risk
their lives -- and sometimes die -- in search of a better life?" he said.
"What in the world is going on in our country that we will allow this to
continue?"
More than 200 civilian volunteers signed up for
the California vigil, standing watch along a rugged and isolated section
of the U.S.-Mexico border about 70 miles east of San Diego. The monthlong
event in October was part of the Minutemen's "Secure Our Borders" initiative,
with volunteers in Vermont, New York, Washington state, California, Arizona,
New Mexico and Texas.
"The Minutemen are not vigilantes or racists, just
Americans asking that the law be enforced, that our borders be protected
against drug dealers, alien smugglers and terrorists," Mr. Donnelly said.
His involvement with the Minutemen began in April
in Arizona, but Mr. Donnelly said he considered "long and hard" whether
to take part in the border watches, worrying about whether President Bush's
label of "vigilantes" was correct and whether those who signed up were
racists and troublemakers.
He said he wanted no part of a group that would
stand against migrants and human rights, adding that he carefully watched
as the April vigil unfolded, listened intently to those who had organized
the event, stood watches on the border and talked with "everyone I could
about why they had come to Arizona."
In September, he accepted the job as head of the
Minuteman operation in California.
"In the sea of exploited humanity that moves across
our open borders every day in pursuit of a false promise, all sorts of
ugly things can and do happen," he said. "I just don't want them to happen
on my watch."