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Humanitarians Disgrace Memorial Day

Sunday, May 29th, 2011

Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day and officialy proclaimed on May 5th 1868, was first observed on May 30th of that year when flowers where placed on both Union and Confederate graves at Arlington National cemetery. The South had a different day until after WWI when the holiday changed from just honoring those that died fighting in the Civil War to Americans who died fighting in all wars. Now it is observed on the last Monday of May because of the National Holiday Act of 1971 to allow for 3 day weekends. This has caused some debate as to the distraction of the solemn meaning of a memorial day lumped into merely a 3 day weekend. To resurrect the importance of this day, the National Moment of Remembrance was passed in December of 2000.  It asked that all Americans to pause what they are doing at 3 pm on this day of remembrance and and think about the honor of those that have given their lives in the service of this great country of the United States of America.

 

Photo by Karl W Hoffman

Humanitarian Organizations have decided to start their own remembrance on this important day by having a press conference and  launching the official start of “The Migrant Trail” a 75 mile walk to honor illegal immigration and the deaths in the desert as a result of  criminal behavior.  I convey my personal sympathy for those you have lost their lives sneaking into the United States and the broken system that surounds every aspect of the immigration and border security debacle. I have dedicated the past 7 years of my life to raising border awareness through objective presentations, exposing the hidden agendas of  groups capitalizing on the migrant targets and media sensationalism through my documentary “Living on the Border” and my website www.livingontheborder.com. Without debating the immigration issues here because I have chastised all sides at different times, I must say that it breaks my heart to see that we the people of both nations are at the mercy of right wing radicals, left wing activists, politicians, organized crime, humanitarian organizations, hate groups and government greed and we are now  in a place where no compromise is allowed and solutions are all or nothing.

Many of marchers are anti government activists, open border advocates, and bleeding hearts, and the same ones demanding that hispanic studies be taught and their culture respected. I don’t have a problem with that, ones roots are important, but it is a two way street and respect is earned not demanded. Respect this country, it’s laws and history and you just may get respect. Unfortunately the groups listed below don’t feel they have to respect their own county, The United States of America, and there  is where the problem  lies.

 

The Migrant Trail
Arizona Border Rights Foundation

 

A 75 mile walk from Sásabe, Sonora, MX to Tucson, AZThrough Sonoran Desert Brings Attention to Migrant Deaths

The precarious reality of our borderlands calls us to walk.  We are a spiritually diverse, multi-cultural group who walk together on a journey of peace to remember people, friends and family who have died, others who have crossed, and people who continue to come.  We bear witness to the tragedy of death and of the inhumanity in our midst.  Lastly, we walk as a community, in defiance of the borders that attempt to divide us, committed to working together for the human dignity of all peoples.

Press Conference

Monday, May 30, 2011

10:00 AM

317 W. 23rd Street

Tucson, Arizona

Tucson, AZ-    On May 30, 2011, a diverse group of more than sixty individuals will begin a 75 mile walk to call attention to the human rights crisis occurring on the southern border. The eighth annual Migrant Trail: We Walk for Life is a joint endeavor of community groups and individuals from both sides of the border walking in solidarity with migrants to demand an end to the deaths in the desert.

“For the eighth year we stand together in solidarity with migrants and call for an end to the tragic deaths and division of communities along the U.S.-Mexico border,” says Kat Rodriguez of Derechos Humanos.  “Thousands of men, women, and children have died due to border policies that have funneled them into the most hostile and desolate areas of the Sonoran desert.  This must stop.”

Since the 1990s, it is estimated that more than 6,000 men, women and children have lost their lives crossing the U.S./Mexico border.  As the summer approaches, and Arizona begins to experience triple-digit temperatures, the number of migrants encountering medical distress or death increases dramatically.  Many will die the horrible death of dehydration and exposure. These deaths, a direct result of U.S. border and immigration policies, must be prevented.

The Walk will begin Monday, May 30 at 2:00pm in Sásabe, Sonora.  Carpools will depart at 11am from Southside Presbyterian (317 W. 23rd Street).  Participants will arrive on Sunday, June 5th at 11:00am at Kennedy Park, Ramada #3, for a closing ceremony. The Migrant Trail is a non-violent event, and is free and open to the community.  Participants and organizers of the Migrant Trail call on all people of conscience to stand in solidarity with our migrant sisters and brothers.

“The Migrant Trail is an important spiritual witness to the challenging reality of our borderlands today,” says Dan Abbott of University Presbyterian Church in Tempe, Arizona.  “It is a moral imperative that we stand in solidarity with our migrant brothers and sisters, demand humane border policies of our government, and call all people of conscience to take immediate action.”

Sponsors of the Migrant Trail: Coalición de Derechos Humanos, BorderLinks, Casa Maria, JPIC Office of the St. Barbara Province Francsiscans, Shalom Mennonite, Tucson Buddhist Meditation Center, Migrant Workers Solidarity Network (MWSN), Newman Center at UA, Green Valley/Saguarita Samaritans, Church of the Good Shepherd, No More Deaths- Tucson, REA Communications, Restoration Project, Humane Borders, St. John’s Episcopal Church of Mount Pleasant, Shalom House- Philadelphia, Mennonite Central Committee-US, Calpolli Teoxicalli, Coloradans for Immigrant Rights, AFSC Colorado, Principe de Paz Church, Café Justo, University Presbyterian Church, Tucson SOA Watch, No More Deaths- Phoenix, Southside Presbyterian Church, and Tucson Samaritans.

Migrant Trail Bears Witness to Human Rights Crisis:

The Migrant Trail

c/o Arizona Border Rights Foundation
P.O. Box 1286 Tucson, AZ 85702
Tel: 520.770.1373
migrant_trail@yahoo.com

www.derechoshumanosaz.net

Contact: Marisol Flores-Aguirre: 520-622-2190

Derechos Humanos: 520-770-1373

 

The Migrant Trail Walk Sponsored by Arizona Border Rights Foundation is a slap in the face to every American who has served this country in the past and the very present  along with their families. Will the walk even stop at 3pm for the National Moment of Remembrance ? I doubt it.

 

Photo by Karl W Hoffman

On this day we as Americans honor all of the brave men and women who have given the greatest sacrifice  to protect this country and the freedoms of it’s people. Memorial day is a nationally observed day and as a part of our American heritage it should be observed and respected with the deepest of reverence.

Karl W Hoffman
Documentary Film Producer
Freelance Photojournalist
Multimedia Reporter

For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: www.skullcreekmedia.com

 

Who can stop Mexico’s torture and death?

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

 

Mexican Ranchers must leave their land or be killed by the Cartels. Drug wars are rampant with indiscriminate shootings of innocent people. Kidnaping for ransom is now common place. Whole towns are cut off, looted and held hostage, with its people brutally murdered and dying of starvation.

Photo by Karl W Hoffman

A small town in Mexico bands together with machetes, sticks and a few guns taken from the corrupt police. They are no match for the well armed Cartels who also control the illegal lumber business. Arizona Daily Star These towns people cover their faces and stand defiant behind crude barriers blocking the roads and are determined to fight to the death in order to save their way of life.  The rapidly increasing power of the Cartels who rule by torture and violence is plaguing Mexico and it’s corrupt government. Local police and politicians are either on the take or intimidated by death are quitting or cashing in. The military, bought and paid for in many parts of the country, are used to escort drug shipments.

Covering their faces and taking to the streets, some brave citizens of Nogales Mexico march to demand an end the violence. Sadly the Mexican people wanting change are powerless and are putting their lives and the lives of their families at risk to make  such a bold statement. Nogales International

While our neighbors are crying out for help what are we doing here but arguing about immigration reform, tax dollars, votes and politics.  Sadly the right and left can only see their own agendas.  What are the activists doing to organize and really aid the Mexican people in Mexico where no one has any rights at all?  What are the conservatives doing besides flying the American flag and watching Fox News?

Shocking Photos of Violence along the United States / Mexican Border

Nazi Germany, Mexico, and Cuba, the list goes on and on where the people of a country have been suppressed and made powerless.  Here is a prime example of just how gun control works in favor of a corrupt government and organized crime. Thank God the writers of the US Constitution added the 2nd amendment so we as citizens can protect our selves, our families and our neighbors, who choose not to have firearms. You may think that it will never happen here but what if it did. With all the global fighting and destruction I would like to know that in the worst case, my grandchildren could go to the closet and dig out their grandfathers assault rifle, yes an assault rifle with a high capacity magazine, because that’s what it will take, and defend their town and their family. None of us ever think that the worst will happen but we still buy all kinds of insurance. Nice to have a little back up in the closet because we just can’t see into the future.

The United States Of America has the most liberal firearms laws on this planet and is the freest and the safest, but we have become a nation of bickerers.

Educated adults, college students, and hard workers, there are millions of Mexican people here in the United States who would love nothing more that to return to their country, rebuild and prosper in their own land with their families, but defenseless and with out help, death and destruction are their only rewards. So who will stop the violence?  Maybe recognizing it is the first step to a long overdue solution.

 

Karl W Hoffman
Documentary Film Producer
Freelance Photojournalist
Multimedia Reporter
For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage,
Border Tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view
Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: skullcreekmedia

Drug runner turns to No More Deaths after robbery and murder

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

In a troubled area in the desert west of Tubac, border crime and violence continues to spill over into the US. Although border cities and towns are safer than they have ever been, the rugged terrain of the high Sonoan Desert is a hot bed of illegal activity. One would never know by the increased tourism in local businesses that not to far away, human and drug smuggling, rape, robbery and murder are on the incline while a turf war is brewing.

 

 

BP chasing Drug runners north of Nogales, Photo by Karl W Hoffman

A suspected drug smuggler, commonly called a” mule”  along with other smugglers in his group bring illegal drugs into the US, was reportedly ambushed Sunday by armed bandits. In a remote area west of I19 and 20 miles north of the border  near Aliso Springs Canyon. According to statements from one of the survivors made to Santa Cruz Sheriff’s Department, One of the smugglers tried to run but was gunned down. Then the  bandits forced the survivors to burry the murdered mans body at gunpoint in exchange for their lives. According to Sheriff Estrada one of the alleged smugglers-turned-murder witness found a No More Deaths camp. One of many a so called humanitarian aid camps scattered through out the border region that aids illegal border crossers and criminal activate.

Several volunteers went to call 911 from an area that had cell service.

Santa Cruz Sheriff’s deputies along with Border Patrol Agents and searching the area for the body.

Updates Coming soon

 

Drug storage room, Nogales CBP Station, Photo by Karl W Hoffman

Karl W Hoffman
Documentary Film Producer
Freelance Photojournalist
Multimedia Reporter

For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: www.skullcreekmedia.com

Arizona steps forward and addresses border trash as a serious issue

Friday, January 7th, 2011

The environmental impact caused by illegal immigration, and the trash left behind or placed along the American/Mexico Border, is increasingly being found in areas that are more fragile and remote.

Border trash has gotten out of hand with more than 2000 tons of trash discarded anualy along the 370miles of the Arizona border. Illegal  immigration is directly  responsible for the discard of containers, clothing, vehicles, backpacks, hygiene and medical products,  and human waste not to mention food containers and water jugs, left by the 10s of thousands, on human smuggling trails by humanitarian groups. This trash left behind is creating an adverse impact on vegetation, wildlife,  natural erosion and causing water shed degradation.

photo by Karl W Hoffman

In an attempt to draw attention to the trash the State of Arizona has established a website azbordertrash.gov for information and to seek volunteers to participate in cleanup efforts. The web site is funded by the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality.

Photo by Karl W Hoffman

Arizona Department of Environmental Quality.

Apprehensions of individuals by the U.S. Border Patrol as a result of illegal immigration vary every year. Current Border Patrol statistics indicate that about 110,000 border crossers will be captured during the current fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30, and doesn’t count the many others who get through. The border crossers leave approximately six to eight pounds of trash in the desert during his or her journey. The cost of disposing of this trash is high for local communities. Landfill fees range from $37 to $49 per ton in Southern Arizona. These fees do not include costs for materials, equipment, labor and transportation for the collection and transfer of the trash to the landfill.

Characterizing the Impact

Accumulated border trash has been shown to affect human health, the environment and economic wellbeing. Impacts include:

  • Strewn trash and piles
  • Illegal trails and paths
  • Erosion and watershed degradation
  • Damaged infrastructure and property
  • Loss of vegetation and wildlife
  • Campfires and escaped fires
  • Abandoned vehicles and bicycles
  • Vandalism, graffiti and site damage (historical and archaeological)
  • Occurrence of bio-hazardous waste
Karl W Hoffman
Documentary Film Producer
Freelance Photojournalist
Multimedia Reporter

For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: www.livingontheborder.com

ABC and John Quinones Exploit Tucson

Sunday, December 19th, 2010

And So arrive the Carpet baggers and the Dime Store Novelists


The Border and immigration crisis is one of the toughest internal struggles that contemporary America is facing. It is not only testing our core values as a country but it is deeply affecting economic and social structure of two neighboring countries. How we as a society are progressing though the governmental/humanitarian/mafia/hate group maze of the immigration and border debacle with only the sensationalism of a hungry media and few manipulative groups is a horrendous injustice, not only to the American and the Mexican people, but global cultures inspired by the dreams of a democracy that we as a nation have portrayed to the world. If times are not confusing enough, we must now deal with cheep shot exploitive TV shows.  This is real life down here and Arizona is doing it’s best to sort through an ugly situation that the government has turned it’s back on and the majority of  America is kept in the dark to.  ABC and John Quinones and the restaurant, that has allowed this repulsive show on their property, has not only taken advantage  of an unfortunate situation with a disgusting display of exploitation, but they have slapped the face and insulted the integrity of all people. Shame on You!!!

TV’s ‘What Would You Do?’ tackles SB 1070 here

Brady McCombs Arizona Daily Star

“What Would You Do?” will be the second national TV appearance for BK Carne Asada and Hot Dogs in less than a year. In April, the restaurant was featured on the Travel Channel show “Food Wars,” in a competition to see whether BK’s or Guero Canelo made better Sonoran hot dogs.

When a man dressed like a security guard demanded “papers” from two Hispanic patrons at a local Mexican restaurant recently, Andrea Morken stood up.

“Excuse me. I don’t think you can do that,” Morken said loudly enough for the rest of the diners at BK Carne Asada and Hot Dogs to hear.

The Anglo guard struck an aggressive pose and repeated his demand.

“Actually you can’t do that and that’s not going to happen right now, right here, today,” said Morken, who owns a day spa in Tucson. “So you just need to get on out of here now.”

Others agreed, telling the security guard to leave the men alone.

“I am an American citizen,” he shot back, “and I have the right to see if these two are illegals or not.”

The man eventually left – to the applause of the diners – but he returned shortly and said he had called the authorities to come pick up the two men.

Fed up, Morken offered the patrons a ride. The older of the two stood to comply, then took off his sunglasses.

“Do you know who I am?” he asked.

It was ABC’s John Quiñones. The man eating with him and the security guard were both actors. And the entire incident was being filmed by hidden cameras inside BK, 2680 N. First Ave., for an upcoming episode of the ABC show “What Would You Do?”

The episode is to air early next year, likely in February, said Quiñones. The show uses actors and hidden cameras to see how people react in provocative situations.

Focusing an episode on the emotions and confusion surrounding Arizona’s controversial new immigration law was a no-brainer, Quiñones said during a phone interview this week from New York. While some episodes are whimsical, the veteran investigative journalist said he likes to keep a hard edge on the show.

“It’s a story that is close to my heart as a Mexican-American and a big issue nationally,” Quiñones said. “It just lends itself perfectly to ‘What Would You Do?’”

The crew re-enacted two scenes over and over again on Nov. 11-12 at the Tucson eatery known for its Sonoran hot dogs. The “guard” questioned either two men eating together or a couple and their 7-year-old daughter.

The actors weren’t playing illegal immigrants, but rather Hispanics who spoke little English and didn’t carry citizenship documents or visas, Quiñones said.

ABC expected the scenario to elicit support for both the security guard and the Hispanics, he said. But only a couple of people applauded the security guard over the course of the two days. Everyone else reacted in support of the Hispanics being questioned, said Quiñones and BK owner Benjamin Galaz.

“All the people reacted against the racism,” Galaz said. “They all knew about the law (SB 1070) but that it wasn’t the time or the place to disrespect that family.”

The ABC crew filmed a similar episode at a deli in New Jersey, where a worker refused to serve Spanish speakers. During that filming, the reaction was much more mixed, Quiñones said.

ABC officials approached Galaz in October about filming an episode at the restaurant, near East Grant Road and North First Avenue. Galaz also owns the original BK restaurant on the south side, at 5118 S. 12th Ave., but ABC wanted the north-side location because it’s in a more ethnically mixed area and they figured they would find people on both sides of the issue, he said.

Galaz didn’t decide for a week, weighing the potential pitfalls of getting involved in a hot-button political issue. Ultimately, he said yes because he wanted to showcase to the country that Hispanics and non-Hispanics get along just fine in Tucson. While most of his workers are Hispanic, a large portion of his patrons are non-Hispanics, he said.

An ABC crew worked overnight for three days to equip the restaurant with hidden cameras and microphones, Galaz said. They did it while the restaurant was closed to ensure only Galaz knew.

Not everybody enjoyed being part of the show. The staged scenario is not the proper venue to explore SB 1070′s effect on Arizona, said Peri Conley, 32, who witnessed the events on Nov. 11.

She initially signed an ABC waiver allowing her face to appear on the show but later rescinded it. She was told her face would be blurred if she appears in a scene.

The scenarios were not realistic enough to draw conclusions about how Arizonans would react, Conley said. For starters, such an encounter would more likely occur during a traffic stop or on the streets with nobody around to react.

Conley was at the restaurant during two re-enactments. She missed the first one because her back was turned to the scene. Before the next re-enactment, ABC officials asked her not to react since she already knew it was staged. She said several people who were portrayed as diners that day were with the show, making her question how many people were actually able to react.

“It was very staged,” Conley said. “Every element of this was very fake to me.”

Her biggest concern is that several people left before they learned the incident was staged. They might have told family and friends that security guards can ask for people’s papers, spreading misinformation.

“I’ve lost many nights of sleep thinking about this and I’m white,” Conley said. “If this affects me, how can this affect somebody who is not white at this time, right now, when everybody is on edge about it?”

“She Felt so strongly”

Morken, who Quiñones said had the strongest reaction during the two-day shoot, wasn’t thinking about politics when she intervened on behalf of the two patrons being questioned.

“It felt like an angel walked into the scene,” he said. “It was amazing that she did this. She felt so strongly about this. … It was funny, but it was also heartwarming.”

After Quiñones stood and leveled with Morken, he started to ask her, “With all of the controversial laws in Arizona currently on the table …”

Morken cut him off. “It wasn’t about that,” she said.

“Then why do you do what you did?” Quiñones asked.

“I figured those guys probably had some wives and there were some little children involved, and I just didn’t want to see their families torn apart today.”

Documentary Film Producer
Freelance Photojournalist
Multimedia Reporter

For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: www.livingontheborder.com

The Dream Act, Blatantly Selfish?

Friday, December 10th, 2010

Your country is a wreck, your relatives are being, kidnapped, extorted and murdered. Your own people are being deported to your country with no hope of survival while you listen to activists, demonstrate and demand citizenship for free. People all over the world are fighting for their freedom and you want it given to you.

Photo By Karl W Hoffman

Activism: is it really a necessity to keeping a country in balance or is it just a frustration to the absence of a real revolution? I am sure there are enough directionless activists here in the United States and in Mexico that would join a good honest rebellion. Speaking of rebellion, it seems that some students have no problem gathering together for demonstrations, laughing in the face of a riot squad or arrogantly defying the status quo. These are all great qualities when applied to a definite direction, for a real cause or maybe a real movement for the freedom and peace of a truly suppressed people.

Photo By Karl W Hoffman

We have educated 100s of thousands of young Mexicans that where brought here illegally and many millions more who came here illegally. Most of them have worked very hard. We have taught them how democracy works and what a better and more prosperous life can be. We taught them our history and how we fought for freedom, equality and how we ousted a tyrannous government and the honor that comes with such an accomplishment. We as a nation have done the best we could to prepare a generation of Mexicans to return to their country with the tools to rebuild a great nation of their own and prepare it for their returning parents who will be very proud of them. Just for a moment can you imagine if this new generation banded together and asked the United States Government, politely, for the funding, the training and the protection to go home to rebuild their country? Would the House and the Senate argue about this? Probably just the politicians and lobbyist connected with drug money.  Besides solving the border and immigration debacle, and reuniting their families, nothing is more profitable than a good war and especially one that gets lots of support or just maybe, even has a good reason.

Cleaning up a country ruled by an upper-class system, corrupt leaders, police and military that are controlled by warring Cartels with a rapidly growing middle eastern terrorist presence should provide plenty of opportunity in constructive areas for humanitarian organizations and excite and motivate the most dedicated activists while weeding out the posers and easy street freeloaders.

Then, with great satisfaction, Mexicans could attend their own universities, teach their own people, enjoy a more balanced and growing economy, be truly proud of their own country and we all could become better neighbors.  This should be their Dream Act.

Of course it does take dedication, hard work and sacrifice to bring the dream of a fee country to fruition, something that people have been doing for their own countries for thousands of years.

Karl W Hoffman
Documentary Film Producer
Freelance Photojournalist
Multimedia Reporter
kwharizona@gmail.com
For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer visit livingontheborder.com

When Humanitarian Aid Really Does Become a Crime

Friday, October 15th, 2010

The Truth About Two Humanitarian Organizations

Several faith based humanitarian organizations in southern Arizona have joined forces. Their slogan is “Humanitarian Aid is never a Crime”. Funded by churches,

they recruit volunteers who venture into the deserts along the borders of America and Mexico to give life saving aid to illegal border crossers caught in an economical and political cross fire, or so they would like you to think. What is their real agenda? Are they really a subversive anti government cult like group of smugglers using the various churches to fund their illegal operation?

While there are many humanitarian groups and organizations involved in the border arena and doing very positive work both in the field and politically, helping people and raising awareness for immigration reform and change on both sides of the American/Mexican border. I would in no way want to cast a shadow on their work or create a stigmatism for the good they are achieving.

So lets take an in depth look at two particular groups, No More Deaths and the Samaritans. Many of these two organization’s key members go back decades to the earlier Sanctuary Movement of the 1980′s involving El Salvadorian political refugees whom the Regan administration refused to give asylum. They took the law into their own hands, and led by the Reverend John Fife (also involved in the 1960s university anti war demonstrations and riots), the Sanctuary Movement began at the South Side Presbyterian Church in Tucson, Arizona. Its purpose was to smuggle undocumented immigrants from El Salvador in to the United States. Guerrilla fighters, rebels and criminals, who were fleeing to escape execution were included in this literal underground railroad, that smuggled illegal immigrants not just from El Salvador but it gathered immigrants along the way through Central America and Mexico. Then through a network that stretched all the way to Canada, it eventually provided a safe haven to tens of thousands of illegal immigrants and involved over 500 churches and synagogues nationwide.  This movement would create a foothold for illegal immigrant families and provide a destination point for other family members and continue to attract illegal immigrants for another generation.

With out any screening process or controls over who was being smuggled into the United States, just one of the major adverse effects was a large very undesirable element that was relocated to our inner cities and formed the most notorious street gang in the history of our world. The Salvadorian gang MS13 (Mara Salvatrucha 13) is one of the most violently dangerous gangs and one of the most organized. This gang has grown to international proportions, with an estimated number of 70,000-gang members today, in the US alone and is a direct result of the Sanctuary Movement.

Including the arrest of the Reverend John Fife, eight activists where convicted on various federal charges in the 1990′s. Several years ago, the same individuals that were involved in the sanctuary movement resurfaced to form the groups No More Deaths and the Samaritan Patrol later to be called the Samaritans. These groups are now walking a fine line between humanitarian aid, which should not be a crime, and indiscriminate but organized smuggling, which is a crime even if you are a church. Considering the past and the present, it is of no surprise that contemporary government agencies are reluctant to work with groups that have such a subversive past and thrive on illegal activity and anti government agendas.

No More Deaths continues to operate out of the South Side Presbyterian Church in Tucson, but moves it’s meetings regularly to different church locations around Tucson. Day workers continue to gather  daily at the church parking lot, flagging down vehicles in an attempt to find day laboring work but it is becoming increasingly difficult and the risks are running higher.

Controlling the media was very important, so not only did they bring in their own international media teams sympathetic to their cause but they began carefully screening journalists who wanted to cover their work in the field and any that are approved, are assigned special media persons and given a false tour with no interaction with volunteers who have not been briffed or illegal migrants.  They also realized that right wing conservative news won’t criticize faith based humanitarian groups and left wing liberals are supportive of it with out asking to many questions. This puts government officials and politicians in an uneasy spot.  So with decades of experience No More Deaths and the Samaritan’s leaders who were no strangers to organizing anti government tactics, began their new agenda by first creating a cloud of false government persecution in which to operate under. First there is “Abuse Documentation” or stories they have heard or made up that will foster sympathy for their cause and open a can of worms for any government agency that takes to close a look at their activities. Playing this abuse documentation angle also keeps them very well funded, with large grants from the Unitarian Universalistic Funding Program and tens of thousands of tax free dollars from other churches and non profit activist groups under the disguise of the Social Justice Ministry. The term they like to use for their actions is “Civil Initiative”, nothing more than a gentle  for euphemism for revolutionary or anarchist.  To give this trump card an air of validity, they even published a book in

The Book Crossing the Line

September of 2008, “Crossing the Line” with over 100 pages of the most horrendous accusations, in the form of written accounts and affidavits, based solely on hearsay, against U.S. Border Patrol Agents working in the field and detention facilities that had never been visited. Down load PDF version of the book “Crossing the Line” This hearsay documentation was actually presented at Congressional briefing in Washington D.C., hosted by Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.). The U.S Border Patrol says that these allegations are false. Rep. Grialva has long been a supporter of No More Deaths and the Samaritan’s work as well as their cause. Now that his campaign is in trouble and the fact that they need his pull, No more deaths has issued an immediate call to action in support his campaign.”We cannot afford to lose his representation in congress” This is not only unethical but should cause their church tax exempt status to be reevaluated.

From: Nancy Myers <nmyers@igc.org>

Subject: Re: [NMD Local] Support Grijalva – His Reelection May Be At Risk!!

Date: October 13, 2010 5:01:31 PM MST

To: Hannah Hafter <hehafter@yahoo.com>, Gene and Sue Lefebvre <coregroup@nomoredeaths.org>

Reply-To: Nancy Myers <nmyers@igc.org>

 

 

Think of Raul as part of a cause or movement, not just a candidate.
Nancy
Sent: Wednesday, October 13, 2010 4:38 PM
Subject: [NMD Local] Support Grijalva – His Reelection May Be At Risk!!
Hi everyone! This is a message from Brissia Perez, who has been active in No More Deaths in the past and is currently working on Grijalva’s re-election. Scary news, and they need us all! I don’t typically think No More Deaths should be a forum for specific candidates but Raul has done SO MUCH to support our work in particular, I would like to support him back – and we need him here in AZ.
From Brissia:
Raul’s district is in trouble and it is in trouble because he took a strong stand against 1070 to protect us. Multiple polls are showing him at either 2 point above or below Ruth McClung. We have Raul’s toughest race since 2002 on our hand. We cannot afford to lose his representation in congress. With only 3 weeks left we need all the people that Raul speaks up for to speak up for him–to fight for him. Just stop by our campaign office any day (452 S. Stone ave) and we’ll put you to work.
Our immediate need and call to action is for TODAY, wednesday the 13th. Raul is debating Ruth McClung at the pima community college desert vista campus at 4:00pm, but before that, the tea party is having a rally to cheer on our opponent at 3:30. We need a lot of bodies to make noise and show Raul support before his debate and to counter the tea party efforts. We’re meeting there with signs at 3.
Thanks everybody!


 


 

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In my photojournalistic capacity I have accompanied both the humanitarian organizations and the Border Patrol in the field, I have also toured and photographed these facilities during actual operation, and can honestly say from experience that they are clean, well maintained and not as described by the No More Deaths accusations. Many other accounts will collaborate on these findings.

No More Deaths then developed a very sophisticated system of high tech data collection. Gallon water jugs are put along migrant paths close to the border and marked withtheir own coded GPS coordinates.  Volunteer groups farther north pick up empty water bottles and record the GPS coordinates of where the water

bottles where found, along with the location where they were first set out, this comparative data is all entered into a custom computer-mapping program. There is now a very up to date record of major migrant traffic routes and collaborated with detailed field reports that are turned in at the end of each day by volunteer patrols. This should explain the adamancy for putting out literally tens of thousands of one-gallon water jugs. They claim that they also pick up water old water jugs, a nobel act of trash removal but in actuality they are refilling the ones picked up and putting them out again until they don’t come back. Water jugs are also placed in remote desert locations away from know illegal traffic routs, where advance information would be paramount to the preplanning of illegal activity.

No More Deaths is fully aware that the water they put out along the border region, is not just helping illegal migrants at the mercy of the cartels, but also available to criminals coming here for illicit activities, smugglers and drug runners. Controlling the water on the desert smuggling routs gives these two groups a great deal of power over illegal activity.

Expanding their operation while relying on long established connections throughout Mexico and Central America these groups have now expanded into

Mexico by renting an apartment in Nogales Mexico where key members can stay and work freely on their agendas while providing cell phone service for illegal activity and communication with humanitarian patrols on the U.S. side. NMDs has recently acquired two shelter locations in Nogales Mexico that will provide approximately 25 to 30 beds each and has set up a camp on the Mexico side of the Mariposa port of entry the sleeps 60-80 people.

Continuing their propaganda No More Deaths has developed a recruitment plan to attract student volunteers from around the world and charges them $20 per day, per volunteer, with detailed instructions on applying for school funds.  During college spring breaks as many as 150 students per week, donating $100 each will come to the border completely naive to any hidden agendas. Prior to arrival, students are given suggested reading on politically orientated topics related to the group’s core social ideology and their Social Justice Ministry.  They are then given several days of orientation to the oganizations own philosophies, including legal presentations on their rights in the field and preparations for confrontations with Border Patrol Agents. A field manual is given to them with numbers for 24 hr legal, medical, supervisor’s numbers, and a direct line to the Mexican Consulate. Unfortunately these students begin their border experience with a very biased attitude toward the US Government. Every member in the field carries a legally prepared note to present to any government authority that confronts them. The heading reads “Humanitarian Aid is Never a Crime” and it states as follows:

To whom it may concern:  My name is______, I am a volunteer for the humanitarian organization No More Deaths, I am in the process of providing sealed jugs of water for persons traveling in the arid desert. I am engaged in this activity because I have a right and responsibility to provide humanitarian aid and assistance to those who are in danger of great bodily harm or death due to severe dehydration. Any further questions may be directed to my lawyers: Bill Walker (520-907-1291) Margo Cowan (520-850-0058)

Charging students to stay at camps set up by No More Deaths in the Coronado National Forest in April 2010 requires special permits. Continuing to disregard the law and the honor of this country (while flying the Mexican Flag over their camp), it should be of no surprise that they where under the watchful eye of the US Forest Service.

Continuing to establish a foothold on college campuses, the approach has been to strong-arm universities by digging into the backgrounds and practices of their business clients in an attempt to pressure universities (U of A included) to sever certain financial ties to corporations that do not have a code of conduct and standards consistent with No More Deaths alleged domestic and international labor and human rights standards. Pressure has also been directed toward university staff through the formation of various subversive student groups including, UA La Raza Studies’ Social Justice Education Project.

In 2008 NMD’s backed an effort by the UFCW (United Food and Commercial Workers) to unionize a chain of Food City grocery stores here in Tucson. Their particular interest was to protect illegal workers who where being let go when found out. I shop at Food City along with other multi cultural families because of the low prices there. Food City, Bashas (a huge contributor to local food banks) and AJ’s have created a unique business plan where they can serve very diverse economic communities by offering price and quality levels that give food shopping opportunities to a boarder section of families in our area while reducing waste, compared to the all union food markets with high overhead and proportionate high prices with larger amounts of waste. Food City has even provided the public with a choice of two web sites, English or Spanish. Undermining their contributions and upsetting this plan affects the economic balance of many communities for no other purpose than selfishness, greed and hidden political agendas. I must ask how this can be considered a humanitarian act? A legal battle that Food City eventually won, cost them millions of dollars, forcing them to raise the price of all their products across the board, but no union representative etc, is allowed on the property for 5 years. NMDs, with no concern for consumer costs, are now organizing a boycott of Food City Markets.

Along with their own legal team, and branching off into Europe and the middle east, No More Deaths and the Samaritans are gaining power at an alarming rate by forming cozy alliances and collaborating with, politicians, and government officials. Recently a special investigator began to look into the actions of  No More Deaths and the Samaritans and was immediately transferred.  Other influential organizations such as the Sierra Club ,with their 1.3 million members, has provided information on NMDs with space on their website, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants  with No More Deaths members masquerading as official human rights observers.  A special link on NMDs website is provided for in depth alleged abuse documentation against United States Government agencies and employees but no verification from the submitter is required. In reality it merely becomes undocumented accusatory statements but to this group and its followers it becomes a cult like reality. This may seem harsh and in no way excuses the horrific reality of death in the desert, but let us keep in mind a very important fact, crimes in the desert arena on United States land such as rape, robbery and murder as well as those left behind to perish in the desert with out water, are committed by the victims own countrymen from Mexico, who they have either brought with them for hire or are here to profit off the actions of their illegal immigration actions.

Choosing Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge as their battleground for breaking the law under their own rationalization with the taxpayers footing the bill is justanother instance of their disregard for for the American system of government.  Based on the information above, these anti government groups should not be allowed to put water in any form in the Sornan Desert as the act is in reality not humanitarian aid but by all rights it may be considered treason. Considering the steadily escalating violence in Mexico that is spilling across the border, illegal migrants, who are now being guided by coyotes working for the cartels, smugglers and drug runners, criminals traversing the border to commit crimes in our communities, are all using the water and poses a serious risk to the citizens of the United States as well as a danger to people using the border lands for legal purposes, and creating stress on the wildlife and more litter on the land. The groups, known as No More Deaths and The Samaritans, have expanded their illegal operation into Mexico and increased their cross border communication through a network of cell phones, making them a threat to US security. Humanitarian groups and activist organizations should be doing all they can to discourage illegal immigration which will save migrant lives, so protective legislation can be passed to help families already here while implementing a guest worker plan.  The long-term effects of leaving water bottles and food is causing a false hope of making it across the desert and has contributed to the catastrophic rise in migrant deaths, this does more to harm chances for a comprehensive immigration reform which should be the major objective.

In these times of continuing threats of terrorist attracts, a neighboring country with a collapsing government ridden with drug violence and murder that is dangerously close to being run by war lords, the US government and the American people must stand ever vigilant to protect it’s self from subversive anti government groups.

We are in a new era where radical religious organizations are gaining political power and all to turning to different forms of  terrorism to make their messages heard, while trying to control governments.

Is this a more powerful and better organized sanctuary movement and a serious threat to national security?

Is the very survival of this country at stake?

Is there a point when Humanitarian Aid really does becomes a crime?

Karl W Hoffman

Documentary Film Producer

Freelance Photojournalist
Multimedia Reporter
kwhphoto@gmail.com
For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: www.livingontheborder.com Other links     No More Deaths American Border Patrol

Putting the National Guard on the border is not just a snap your fingers and they appear

Sunday, October 10th, 2010

Written by Hugh Holub

Photographed/Filmed by Karl W Hoffman

Exclusive Video From Skull Creek Media

National Guard observation point, Nogales Arizona

Recently US Customs and Border Protection held a media event showcasing the deployment of the National Guard at the US-Mexico border. The National Guard deployment at the Arizona-Mexico border was completed October 1st.

Karl W Hoffman with Skull Creek Media  covered the event.

The mission of the National Guard deployment, called Operation Copper Cactus, is to detect and deter suspected illegal entry between ports of entry along the international border. The Guard is functioning in a support capacity with the Border Patrol.

US Border Patrol officials made it clear that immigration law enforcement activities remain the responsibility of the Border Patrol

The National Guard does not have a law enforcement role in the apprehension or custodial care of undocumented aliens.

550 Arizona National Guard were authorized to the border mission, of which 532 are being deployed at the border, and 28 have been assigned to intelligence analysis.

At  one of the National Guard observation posts just west of Nogales, National Guard  Col. Jill Nelson,  Commander of Operation Copper Cactus, went into detail about staging thedeployment of the National Guard at the border.

Photograph by Karl W Hoffman

Here is an exclusive video of Col. Nelson’s description of what it takes to deploy National Guard to border duty:

CREDIT: Southwest Independent Media
CAPTION: National Guard on the border of Southern Arizona

One does not just snap their fingers and make hundreds of National Guard soldiers appear at the border.

Southwest Independent Media is composed of   Karl W Hoffman, multimedia director, who provides media outlets with  freelance border issues coverage and media tours of the border region.
Karl W Hoffman

Documentary Film Producer

Freelance Photojournalist

Multimedia Reporter

kwhphoto@gmail.com

520-820-9630

P.O. Box 759

Arivaca, Arizona  85701-0759

www.skullcreekmedia.com

For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: Living on the Border

Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, Guns against Water Bottles

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Fed’s say it ‘s OK to carry firearms (even concealed is now permitted) on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge and militant groups are making the most of it. A little known bill took affect last February placing firearm laws on all National Parks, Monuments and Refuges, in the hands of the states they are in. US Citizens will now be able to protect them selves on federal land along the Border. Drug runners and people smugglers will not be the only ones to have guns on Federal Land. In the past, several presidents have tried to ban firearms from all federal land. Former President Clinton banned guns from many National Monuments. This new law keeps future administrations from passing national gun laws blanketing all federal lands and puts the power back in the hands of the states. This was a huge win for the National Rifle Association.

Most of the individual web sites have been changed such as Coronado National MonumentOrgan Pipe Cactus National Monument,  and Saguaro

National Park, but BANWR has not yet updated their website to the new regulations. Tumacacori National Historic Park is one facility  that has circumvented the new law. The visitor center through which all visitors to the park must pass to access other areas and facilities of the park is the only public entrance, and clearly marked with a sign indicating that firearms are prohibited. The exception to the “firearms prohibited” rule are those areas of the park that are accessible only via the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail.

BANWR Law Enforcement Officers are concerned about growing friction between No More Deaths and the Samaritans Humanitarian Organizations, who continue to put out water bottles to aid  illegal activity, and patrolling militia groups claiming to protect our borders from illegal activity.  Several clashes have already occurred.  Adding to the mix is the start of hunting season and unless you have a valid hunting license, It is still illegal to discharge a firearm on BANWR. So shooting up illegal water bottles is illegal.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Announces Firearms Rule Change for Possession in National Wildlife Refuges

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that effective February 22, 2010, the rules governing possession of firearms on National Wildlife Refuges will change as a result of legislation enacted by Congress. After this date, the law allows an individual to lawfully possess a firearm within the boundaries of a National Wildlife Refuge in accordance with federal, state and local firearms laws.

As directed by this new law, the Service will look to the laws of the state and locality in which the refuge or refuge unit is located to govern possession of firearms on the refuge. Visitors will be allowed to possess firearms on National Wildlife Refuges provided they comply with applicable provisions of federal, state and local law. Persons with so-called firearm “carry” permits will be able to possess firearms on a refuge in accordance with the provisions of the state issued permit. The new law applies to all 551 units of the National Wildlife Refuge System, as well as the National Monuments and the 392 units of the National Park System.

While the law will change the application of rules regarding possession of firearms, it has no impact on the authorized uses of firearms on National Wildlife Refuges. The law does not allow visitors to fire or discharge the firearms in any way, brandish the weapon in the view of others, or any other use of the firearm. Enforcement of regulations concerning firearms use remains under the purview of the Department of the Interior.

While possession on a refuge may generally be allowed under state law, possession of firearms will remain prohibited in Federal facilities. Examples include: visitor centers, refuge administrative office buildings, refuge maintenance offices and workshops, field and backcountry offices, ranger stations and fee collection stations.

Refuge visitors wishing to possess firearms on any unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System should carefully read and understand the laws of the state in which the refuge they plan to visit is located – as well as applicable local and county laws and ordinances that derive from that respective state’s law. The laws of the states in which they reside, or from which they may have received firearms permits, do not apply when they are away from those states, although some states offer reciprocity and allow possession based on another state’s permits.

Hunting, trapping and fishing are considered to be a legitimate, traditional recreational and wildlife management use of renewable natural resources on refuges. However, this new law does not change or expand hunting opportunities on national wildlife refuges or exempt hunters from state or federal hunting regulations.

Each person who hunts on a National Wildlife Refuge must have the required state license(s) required by the refuge, as well as any permits and/or user fees. The National Wildlife Refuge System Act of 1966, other laws and the Fish and Wildlife Service’s policy permit hunting on a refuge when it is compatible with the purposes for which the refuge was established and acquired. For additional information, go to: http://www.fws.gov/refuges/hunting/.

The law does not differentiate between concealed handguns under state permit and long guns (rifles, shotguns, muzzleloaders) and it applies to all firearms, which are defined as a weapon designed to fire a projectile by the use of an explosive charge. All Federal firearms statutes remain unchanged.

Nearly 40 million people visit National Wildlife Refuges each year, generating almost $1.7 billion in sales for regional economies. In additional to wildlife observation, many refuges provide rich opportunities for hiking, canoeing, hunting and fishing. To learn more about visiting a National Wildlife Refuge go to: http://www.fws.gov/refuges/visitors/.

The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with others to conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. We are both a leader and trusted partner in fish and wildlife conservation, known for our scientific excellence, stewardship of lands and natural resources, dedicated professionals and commitment to public service. For more information on our work and the people who make it happen, visit www.fws.gov.
-FWS-

Just a little background information on water bottles.

No More Deaths has developed a very sophisticated system of high tech data collection. Gallon water jugs are put along migrant paths close to the border and marked with their own coded GPS coordinates.  Volunteer groups farther north pick up empty water bottles and record the GPS coordinates of where the water bottles where found, along with the location where they were first set out, this comparative data is all entered into a custom computer-mapping program. There is now a very up to date record of major migrant traffic routes and collaborated with detailed field reports that are turned in at the end of each day by volunteer patrols. This should explain the adamancy for putting out literally tens of thousands of one-gallon water jugs and then refilling the ones picked up and putting them out again until they don’t come back. No More Deaths is fully aware that the water they put out along the border region, is not just helping illegal migrants at the mercy of the cartels, but also available to criminals coming here for illicit activities, smugglers and drug runners. Controlling the water on the desert smuggling routs gives these two groups a great deal of power over illegal activity.
Karl W Hoffman

Documentary Film Producer

Freelance Photojournalist

Multimedia Reporter for The Tucson Citizen

kwhphoto@gmail.com

520-820-9630

P.O. Box 759

Arivaca, Arizona  85701-0759

www.skullcreekmedia.com

For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer or for more information please visit: www.livingontheborder.com

Kino Border Initiative

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Two film makers come together in Southern Arizona, on the U.S. – Mexico border, for eight days to work on a very special seven-and-a-half minute documentary short film. Honing our skills and combining our diverse cultural backgrounds, we straddled the border to bring together a heartwarming view of the Kino Border Initiative, people helping people through their darkest moment.

In this a place that mainstream media has continually sensationalized and exploited, there are good people putting aside political agendas and offering true humanitarian help through multicultural camaraderie, offering a simple meal and spiritual support to people caught in the world winds of collateral damage in the border debacle. The KBI has also been instrumental helping deported migrants readjust and return to homes and villages in their own country and in protecting vulnerable deportees from the people smugglers (coyotes) from hustling them back across the border.

Karl W. Hoffman is internationally recognized for his extensive photographic work on the U.S. – Mexico border, his lectures and his newly released feature length film “Living on the Border.”

Christian Rodriguez is a talented young filmmaker with an extensive technical and artistic background. The son of a documented migrant mother, he was born Los Angles and raised in Northern California, in the heart of agricultural industry, this has given him a compassionate insight to the Hispanic community. Christian is currently working on his own feature length documentary “Citizen Me: The Forgotten Class.”

“There is a 30 year age difference between us, but a magical phenomenon happened through this friendship, both spiritually and technically. We are both bringing our work to a higher level,” said Hoffman. “With out a lot of words to sway opinions we wanted to create a different more simplistic view, we wanted put aside the politics to look into the eyes and hearts of just one of the many sides of the immigration issue. It’s a start.”

The Kino Border Initiative is an innovative and cooperative effort between six major religious organizations that strive to accompany migrants and communities affected by the consequences of migration. The KBI is strategically located in the twin cities of Ambos Nogales (southern AZ and northern Sonora), which is a major port of entry and deportation for migrants in the southwest.
ONE MINISTRY, THREE DIMENSIONS -Humanitarian Assistance: On the Mexico side of the border, the KBI offers immediate assistance and pastoral accompaniment to migrants who have been deported from the US. At the Centro para Atención a los Migrantes Deportados (CAMDEP), the KBI offers meals, basic medical assistance, and clothing to the recently deported. At the Casa Nazaret shelter, the KBI offers safe room and board to unaccompanied women and children who are otherwise extremely vulnerable to exploitation and abuse. 

-Education & Formation: In local parishes on each side of the border, the KBI offers workshops and leads discussions on local border reality in light of the Christian faith and Catholic social teaching. We have also curriculum appropriate for short-term immersion groups from parishes, high schools, and universities.

CREDIT: Karl W Hoffman producer from the Living on the Border documentary series www.livingontheborder.com
CAPTION: Kino Border Initiative
Kino Border Initiative
People helping people through their darkest moments.

For more information visit www.kinoborderinitiative.org or www.jrsua.org/kino

For various ways to support the Kino Border Initiative; Presentations, Food, clothing and clothing donations for the aid center or the women’s shelter, and volunteer opportunities, contact Fr. Sean Carroll, S.J. Executive Director at P.O. Box 159 Nogales, AZ 85628-059. Office 520-827- 2370 email kino@calprov.org

To help support The Kino Border Initiative send donations to:

Jesuit Refugee Service/USA
1016 16th St NM, Suite 500
Washington, DC 20036

Karl W Hoffman is a Documentary Film Producer, Freelance Photojournalist, and Multimedia Reporter for the Tucson Citizen.
kwhphoto@gmail.com
P.O. Box 759
Arivaca, Arizona 85701-0759
www.karlwhoffman.com
For information on photography exhibits and prints, lectures, interviews, photo usage, border tours and to order the documentary on DVD and view Living on the Border documentary trailer please visit: www.livingontheborder.com