Note:  "key" word  "statistics"  garbage in garbage out.  A report  
with an agenda.  Number 1?  Don't know,  Babeu, like all elected  
officials does spin things to suit.  Those who live here know a whole  
lot making it past the border and into Maricopa and Pinal counties,  
and then into the rest of country.
Statistics don't support Pinal Sheriff Babeu's statement on trafficking
by Dennis Wagner - Apr. 10, 2011 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2011/04/10/20110410pinal- 
sheriff-babeu-trafficking.html
In mid-February, officers from more than a dozen police agencies  
swarmed the drug-trafficking corridor in western Pinal County's  
notorious Vekol Valley.
They got into wild vehicle chases, arrested 102 suspected smugglers,  
illegal immigrants and drug traffickers, and seized 3,200 pounds of  
marijuana.
When it was over, Sheriff Paul Babeu issued a news release declaring  
that Pinal County is "the No. 1 pass-through county in all of America  
for drug and human trafficking."
It's a line the sheriff has used countless times - most recently on  
Thursday in testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland  
Security - as he criticizes the federal government for failing to  
secure the border.
There's just one problem: There is no data to support the assertion.
In fact, an Arizona Republic analysis of statistics from local, state  
and federal sources found that, while sheriff's officials do bust  
smugglers and seize pot, Pinal County accounts for only a fraction of  
overall trafficking.
The newspaper also found that other headline-grabbing claims by Babeu  
are contradicted by statistical evidence or greatly exaggerated.
For example, the charismatic first-term sheriff raised eyebrows two  
months ago when he predicted that his deputies would get into a  
gunbattle with cartel members in the desert during the next 30 to 60  
days. The forecasted encounter did not happen.
Although critics, including the Department of Homeland Security and  
some border mayors, have challenged Babeu's veracity and questioned  
his motives, the sheriff shows no sign of tempering his claims.
In an undated letter seeking donations for a legal battle against the  
federal government, Babeu says "things are just going from bad to  
worse now that our own federal government has sided with the  
criminals instead of law enforcement."
Babeu, through a spokesman, declined to be interviewed, saying he was  
too busy. He did, however, respond to questions sent via e-mail. He  
wrote that Pinal County residents have reported such rampant  
increases in smuggling activity that they are terrified to leave  
their homes.
By contrast, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano and others in the Obama  
administration point to statistical evidence that America's border is  
more secure than ever. They have drawn support from some border  
officials who publicly accuse Babeu of conducting a fear campaign.
Some county residents are concerned that the sheriff is overstating  
the crime rates in Pinal County. A group called Pinal County  
Residents of Responsible Leadership has been making automated phone  
calls in the area, with a male speaker criticizing Babeu's  
"irresponsible" rhetoric about border-related crime. Listeners who  
want to lodge a complaint with the sheriff's "political office" are  
transferred to the Arizona Republican Party.
Extent debated
No one disputes that Pinal County, which lies 70 miles from the  
border, emerged as a smuggling channel during the past decade.
Up until the 1990s, smugglers and illegal immigrants could enter the  
United States almost anywhere without worry.
Then, gradually, border enforcement increased. Routes into California  
and Texas were squeezed until crime syndicates began relocating to  
the Sonora-Arizona line.
At first, crossings concentrated near Nogales, Douglas and other  
municipalities where roads were relatively accessible. As the  
crackdown expanded into those areas - with more agents, technology  
and fencing - smugglers were forced deep into the outback, trekking  
several days to evade an enforcement gantlet.
Federal officials say the plan all along was to make illegal  
crossings more difficult.
Today, much of the traffic moves through the Tohono O'odham  
Reservation and north into Pinal County, where smugglers and illegal  
immigrants can meet waiting vehicles near Interstate 8.
Now, federal officials say, the final squeeze points are under  
assault by task forces in places like Vekol Valley, where hundreds of  
human trails zigzag through the jagged mountains and thorny desert  
and where bandits sometimes prey on those who enter.
For years, a single deputy was assigned to patrol the entire western  
part of the county. Then, last year, Babeu, who oversees 700 full- 
time employees, including 210 deputies, announced a dramatic  
increase, telling KGUN9 TV in Tucson, "We're sending out three  
different teams of eight to 15 deputies in each that are heavily  
armed, even with sniper teams, out to the desert at all hours of the  
day and night."
Besides those deputies, law- enforcement task forces have flooded the  
area with agents and officers from the Border Patrol, Bureau of Land  
Management, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Drug Enforcement  
Administration, Arizona Department of Public Safety and police from  
Casa Grande, Eloy and the Tohono O'odham Nation.
But is Pinal, an area larger than Connecticut with about 341,000  
residents, "the No. 1 pass-through county in all of America" as Babeu  
claims?
The data showing amounts of drugs seized and numbers of illegal  
immigrants arrested in Arizona does not support his assertion -  
unless Babeu does not consider border counties "pass-through" areas.
DHS records for last year show that the Border Patrol seized 18 times  
as much marijuana and arrested 15 times as many illegal immigrants in  
Pima County as in Pinal. In Santa Cruz County last year, the agency  
seized nearly 10 times as much marijuana and arrested six times as  
many illegal immigrants as it did in Pinal. The agency also says 90  
percent of all drug interdictions occur within 5 miles of the border  
and says only 3 percent of marijuana seizures made in its Tucson  
Sector occur in Pinal County.
In his e-mail, Babeu responded that "DHS and U.S. Border Patrol  
should expect to see higher numbers of drug seizures anywhere they  
have increased manpower, which historically has been along the border."
Claim check
To assess Babeu's claims, The Arizona Republic obtained public  
records from the Pinal County Sheriff's Office, DHS and other federal  
agencies.
Among the findings:
- Babeu told the Berkshire (Mass.) Eagle in February, "Out of the  
3,000 counties in the nation, Pinal County ranks No. 1 when it comes  
to smuggling drugs and humans across the border."
That claim appears to be incorrect.
Although Babeu is often identified as a border sheriff, his  
jurisdiction is 70 miles removed from the Mexico line. Moreover, DHS  
records show Pinal County accounts for a tiny fraction of drug and  
immigrant captures, fewer than any of the three border counties  
within the Tucson Sector.
Last year, for example, agents recovered 527,667 pounds of marijuana  
in Pima County. That's 18 times as much marijuana as they captured in  
Pinal County. They also made 15 times as many arrests in Pima County.  
In Santa Cruz County, the Border Patrol reported nearly 10 times as  
much marijuana seized and six times as many arrests as in Babeu's  
jurisdiction.
Jeffrey Self, head of the Border Patrol's new Joint Field Command  
office in Tucson, said nine out of 10 undocumented-immigrant arrests  
in Arizona occur within 5 miles of the border. Only 2 percent of all  
illegal crossers are captured in Pinal County.
In his e-mail, Babeu said federal enforcement is stronger along the  
border, so arrest and seizure totals are higher there.
- On Fox News, the sheriff told host Greta Van Susteren he's facing  
"one of the highest crime rates in America" and crime is "literally  
off the charts in Arizona."
That claim also appears to be inaccurate.
Pinal County does not have the highest crime rate in Arizona, which  
is listed 16th among the states for violent offenses, according to  
the Statistical Abstract of the United States.
An analysis of U.S. Census data and Department of Public Safety  
records shows 11 of Arizona's 15 counties have crime rates higher  
than Pinal County's. Residents of Maricopa County are victimized  
nearly twice as frequently as their neighbors to the south.
Pinal County records show violent crime plummeting over the past few  
years in every major category except homicides, where numbers are too  
small for statistical significance. Aggravated assaults in Pinal  
County decreased 29 percent since 2007. Armed robberies are down 41  
percent. Border Patrol records indicate that illegal-immigrant  
apprehensions in Pinal County have declined every year since 2008.
In his e-mail, Babeu acknowledged that crime is down in the area but  
said that decrease would be greater if the border was protected.
- In his letter to border mayors, and elsewhere, Babeu has said that  
federal intelligence analysts identified "75 to 100 mountains or high- 
terrain features that are occupied by Mexican drug cartels" in Pinal  
County.
According to Self, that tally represents the number of possible  
vantage points, not locations manned at any one time by cartel scouts.
In his e-mail, Babeu agreed with that clarification.
Critics say some of Babeu's other claims spread fear unnecessarily.
Babeu says the Arizona border is so porous that national security is  
in jeopardy, based on arrests in Pinal County of undocumented  
immigrants from terrorist-linked nations.
In the past decade, there is no known record of a terrorist entering  
the United States via Arizona's border. Since 2008, according to DHS  
and sheriff's records, only one undocumented immigrant - a Cuban -  
was detained from a nation on the State Department's list of state- 
sponsored terror nations. Three others were from Afghanistan and  
Sudan, countries with significant terrorism issues.
In his e-mail, Babeu said he is concerned that the entire border of  
nearly 2,000 miles remains open to intruders. "Even if only a few  
(non-Mexicans) were caught, how many more got through undetected?" he  
asked.
Still work to be done
Babeu, who says cartels have put a green light out for his  
assassination, is hardly alone in bemoaning federal efforts along the  
border. Napolitano constantly complained about the same issue during  
her tenure as governor of Arizona.
Security has improved under her watch, though: The U.S. Government  
Accountability Office reported last year that control of the border  
has grown by 126 miles per year. Border Patrol staffing has more than  
doubled since 2004. Arizona now has 4,900 agents, plus 900 Customs  
and Border Protection officers and 561 National Guard troops. The  
result, according to DHS: a nearly 40 percent drop in the number of  
immigrants caught entering Arizona unlawfully.
But there is still work to be done. The same GAO report said 56  
percent of the U.S.-Mexico line is still not under "operational  
control."
Babeu said in his e-mail that having less than half of the border  
controlled amounts to "a failing grade," and government efforts are  
too little, too late.
"If this administration was truly committed to securing the border,  
they would have already implemented the . . . 10-Point Border  
Security Plan" advocated by Republican Sens. John McCain and Jon Kyl  
of Arizona. That proposal calls for more National Guard units, fences  
and other deterrents.
Independent experts say rhetorical exchanges and media sound bites  
often preclude rational approaches to border security.
Rick Van Schoik, director of the North American Center for  
Transborder Studies at Arizona State University, said Babeu may  
sincerely see Pinal County in a public-safety crisis based on his  
personal law-enforcement experience. At the same time, he said, "the  
border really is safer than it has been in a long time."
Van Schoik complained that vital issues, such as border trade and the  
threat of smuggled nuclear materials, get lost amid political  
posturing. He added that enforcement has improved, illegal crossings  
are down, drug seizures are up and border communities are generally  
safer. "By almost any metrics, CBP and DHS have accomplished a lot."
In Nogales, the biggest border city leading into Pinal County's  
smuggling pathway, no murders were reported in 2010 or 2009. In  
February, Mayor Arturo Garino and his counterparts in Douglas and San  
Luis wrote to Babeu, asking him to stop painting the border as crime- 
infested.
"Creating panic where only vigilance is warranted helps nobody," they  
wrote. "While your misstatements about efforts to keep communities  
along the U.S.-Mexico border may keep national media coming to  
Arizona, at the same time your consistent inaccuracies hurt cities  
and towns like ours" by sabotaging commerce.
Weymouth Fogelberg, who generated the automated phone calls  
criticizing Babeu, said he's 92 and tired of seeing elderly residents  
frightened by false rhetoric. "He's a very charming, intelligent  
man," Fogelberg said of the sheriff. "But he's using us for the  
furtherance of his political career."
Thayer Verschoor, communications director for the state Republican  
Party, said the phone strategy didn't work. "We've gotten some  
calls," he noted, "but most of them are actually pretty positive"  
about the sheriff.
Babeu said in his e-mail that he represents the people who elected  
him. "The citizens of Pinal County and Arizona have demanded help" in  
combating border-related crime, he wrote, adding that smugglers in  
his jurisdiction "will be met with a heavy law-enforcement presence."
Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/ 
2011/04/10/20110410pinal-sheriff-babeu-trafficking.html#ixzz1J89mPjgB
 
 
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