Friday, April 1, 2016

AZMEX SPECIAL 1-4-16

AZMEX SPECIAL 1 APR 2016

Note: Could not be a more appropriate day for this one. Video at link (spanish)


Suspected smugglers caught on video scaling Arizona-Mexico border fence
KTAR.COM
April 1, 2016 @ 12:44 pm

http://ktar.com/story/993498/suspected-smugglers-caught-on-video-scaling-arizona-mexico-border-fence/

TUCSON, Ariz. — A Mexican journalist got some unusual footage when she spotted two suspected drug smugglers scaling a tall border fence from Mexico into Arizona and then promptly climbing back after they realized they were being filmed.

Journalist Carolina Rocha of Azteca Noticias in Mexico City was in Nogales, Arizona, reporting on the U.S. Border Patrol's use of force March 16 when she spotted two young men in black t-shirts and jeans climbing down the fence in daylight.

Footage — which is above but is in Spanish — showed them carrying large backpacks that were likely holding drugs, walking while hunched over and then hiding behind some bushes and talking on what appears to be a phone before realizing the camera was recording.

"Don't record," one of the men says.

But Rocha was already rolling and not willing to stop. She told the men she was just doing her job.

"It was shocking. This is happening in front of me? And we didn't' stop recording," Rocha said in Spanish during an interview with The Associated Press.

Rocha said she did not feel endangered by the smugglers, but only after the reality of what she had seen sunk in.

The cameras rolled for about three minutes before the men climbed back up the fence and returned to Mexico without delivering the suspected drugs.

Rocha said she was stunned at how quickly they scaled the fence, which is over 20 feet high. The men were gone within seconds.

"It really was amazing," she said.

She was also struck by the fact that there were three U.S. Border Patrol trucks within yards of the incident. No agents approached the men.

Border Patrol spokesman Mark Landess said it's not uncommon for smugglers to scale the steel fence, especially around Nogales, which is a busy drug smuggling corridor.

Landess said it's impossible to know why the agents didn't respond or whether they even saw the men.

"They might be waiting for something else to happen. There's no way to make an educated comment on that," Landess said.

In a statement sent to KTAR News, John Lawson, a Border Patrol official who oversees operations in Arizona, said agents had "positioned themselves in locations to make enforcement actions safer for all parties involved."

The agency also said it could not authenticate the news video, but the alleged smugglers were caught on its cameras.

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