Workers release migrants for money
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO - Two workers for a Border Patrol contractor were arrested
for allegedly conspiring to release illegal immigrants for $2,500 apiece
instead of returning them to Mexico.
Christopher Saint Lucero and Manley Lamont Smith work for Wackenhut
Corp., which holds a contract to escort illegal immigrants to Mexico after
they are captured by Border Patrol agents in California, Arizona, New Mexico
and Texas.
It was unclear how long the alleged scheme lasted and how many illegal
immigrants were released on U.S. soil. According to court documents, Saint
Lucero told a colleague that he had been involved in about 10 smuggling
attempts.
The men were arrested Sunday after Saint Lucero allegedly escorted
a group of illegal immigrants from the Border Patrol's Chula Vista station
in suburban San Diego to the border in Tijuana, Mexico. According to a
statement of probable cause, Mexican authorities refused to admit two who
identified themselves as Salvadorans. One was an undercover agent.
Authorities say Saint Lucero then brokered the deal to get the two
men to Los Angeles. Smith allegedly met them at the Border Patrol station
in a company vehicle and offered to hide them.
Saint Lucero and Smith were expected to make an initial court appearances
Wednesday, said Debra Hartman, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office
in San Diego. The charge against them, conspiracy to transport illegal
immigrants, is a felony.
Hartman did not have contact information for their attorneys, and neither
man had a San Diego telephone listing. Wackenhut has suspended both men.
Marc Shapiro, a Wackenhut senior vice president, said the smuggling
arrests are the first since the contract began in 2006.
Wackenhut has escorted illegal immigrants back to Mexico more than
1 million times. "This has to be put in context of those numbers," Shapiro
said.
Wackenhut is a subsidiary of British-based security giant G4S PLC.
According to its Web site, the Border Patrol contract is for $250 million
over five years.
Wackenhut, based in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., is cooperating with investigators,
Shapiro said. Hiring background checks turned up no criminal history for
either employee.
A Border Patrol spokesman, Richard Smith, declined to comment.
The arrests are the latest in a string of corruption cases that have
unsettled the Border Patrol and Customs and Border Protection, which oversees
border crossings. A border inspector in San Diego was charged last month
with allowing motorists to pass through his booth with illegal immigrants
and marijuana in their vehicles.