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HSI Works to Protect Borders from Bandits and Gangs
You'll
find them in Arizona's
most remote areas, brandishing firearms and bullet-proof vests. They are on the
hunt for weapons traffickers or drug smugglers. But they're not law enforcement
officers. They are bandit crews – criminals – who will do anything to make a
profit, which often means murdering and stealing from other criminals in the
desert.
"Mexican
drug smuggling organizations sometimes use bandit crews to police their desert
smuggling routes and rob from competitors," said Kevin Kelly, assistant
special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in Nogales, Ariz.
The
prevalence in bandit crews has resulted in a surge of violence throughout the
Southwest corridor. Two men were murdered in the desert near Eloy, Ariz.,
and three individuals were allegedly robbed and held against their will while
their families were extorted for money. In an effort to curb this trend, HSI
and the U.S. Border Patrol have partnered to investigate bandit crews and
disable their operations. Law enforcement authorities are currently
investigating the murders, and a criminal complaint has been filed in Arizona federal court
against an alleged bandit.
As
a direct result of the HSI and U.S. Border Patrol partnership, two individuals
were recently sentenced to five years in federal prison. Border Patrol agents
arrested them in the mountains of southern Arizona in June after they were spotted
carrying a loaded AK-47 assault rifle and bullet proof vest. The men admitted
that they intended to rob groups of drug smugglers carrying backpacks of
marijuana through the Arizona
desert.
"Thanks
to great teamwork with our Border Patrol partners and federal prosecutors, we
were able to take these two bandits out of the desert and put them in
prison," said Kelly.
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