Cartel Soldiers Invade U.S. Soil
Seize Small Town America
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Image provided by Judicial Watch
This significant security lapse is underreported, yet local, federal, and state law enforcement have provided Judicial Watch with detailed accounts, diagrams, and photos, highlighting the terrorization of residents in an Arizona town near the Mexican border. They blame the Biden administration’s open border policies for the escalating issues.
Santa Cruz and Pima County regions in southwestern Arizona are experiencing a surge in violence and crime fueled by Mexican cartels involved in drug and human smuggling. Fourth and fifth-generation cattle farmers are finding dead bodies and drug paraphernalia on their properties, alongside thousands of illegal immigrants captured on security cameras since President Biden took office. A veteran law enforcement official reported that violent activity has drastically increased over the past three years, with American citizens in the communities of Amado and Arivaca feeling much less safe compared to the Trump administration era.
Key Issues:
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- Unmanned Border Patrol Checkpoints: An unmanned checkpoint east of Arivaca raises significant security concerns, yet DHS has no plans to deploy agents.
- Organized Movements: Local and law enforcement sources confirm an influx of young men, likely organized by Mexican cartels, dressed in camouflage military uniforms and equipped with camouflaged backpacks and carpet booties to hide footprints.
- Rancher Reports: Ranchers report a tenfold increase in illegal immigrants on their properties, with over 3,560 recorded since Biden became president. Border Patrol presence is scarce due to the overwhelming number of migrants.
- Environmental Impact: Large piles of discarded carpet booties and plastic waste litter the area and pose hazards to cattle, which often ingest the trash and fall ill or die from traces of drugs left behind by smugglers. Mexican cattle crossing into the U.S. further threaten to introduce diseases to American livestock, posing a risk to the U.S. food industry.
- Community Impact: The violence and environmental degradation are causing the populations of small towns like Arivaca to dwindle rapidly. From a population of 1,200 a few years ago, only about 600 remain, with many relocating to Green Valley or Tucson. The U.S. Forest Service has ceased monitoring certain areas due to safety concerns.
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Law enforcement officials and residents believe the situation will worsen if Biden is reelected. Similar issues are seen in other small towns, such as those in Cochise County, where human and drug traffickers, including U.S. citizens recruited by Mexican cartels, create dangerous conditions by evading the limited Border Patrol force.
When are these militarized cartels going to start formally taking possession of cities and carving out territories as they’ve already done in Mexico, Central America, and most of South America? Reports have already surfaced that Venezuelan gangs are running some cities in Texas.
Organized, uniformed soldiers are marching across our borders! This is the legal definition of an “invasion,” and very dangerous.
All states must declare an invasion and protect their borders. This action is justified by invoking both Article IV, § 4, which mandates the federal government to "protect each [State] against invasion," and Article I, § 10, Clause 3, which affirms "the States’ sovereign interest in protecting their borders.” In addition, Congress must designate the Cartels as a terrorist organization.
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