Behind the Bastards - CZM Rewind: The U.S. Border Patrol Is A Nightmare That Never Ends
Episode Date: June 17, 2025Originally aired August 2020 Robert is joined by Caitlin Durante to discuss the U.S. Border Patrol. SOURCES: https://timeline.com/harlon-carter-nra-murder-2f8227f2434f https://theintercept.com/...2019/01/12/border-patrol-history/ https://www.texasobserver.org/texas-civil-rights-project-harrington-retire/ https://www.amazon.com/Migra-History-Border-American-Crossroads/dp/0520266412 https://www.salon.com/2012/07/20/cruelty_on_the_border/ https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/10/border-patrol-the-green-monster-112220 https://www.propublica.org/article/a-group-of-agents-rose-through-the-ranks-to-lead-the-border-patrol-theyre-leaving-it-in-crisis https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/15/us/border-patrol-culture.html https://books.google.com/books?id=mFQor2oScm0C&pg=PA29&dq=kicking+a+Mexican+male+who+was+handcuffed+and+lying+facedown+on+the+ground&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwinlJqK0r3fAhUSnFkKHdzJDD4Q6AEIKDAA#v=onepage&q=kicking%20a%20Mexican%20male%20who%20was%20handcuffed%20and%20lying%20facedown%20on%20the%20ground&f=false See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey everyone, Robert Evans here and we're doing a rerun episode because I need the time
to get caught up but I figured we do this, we'd rerun two of our old episodes, cut out a bunch of
extra ads and put them in as long single episodes and a couple of topics that are very important.
First off, we're going to be talking about the Department of Homeland Security, which
as an organization is as bastardy a bastard as we have ever discussed on this show.
So here, please listen up to a series of episodes that have unfortunately only gotten more relevant
as time has gone on.
You know, introducing a podcast is a little bit like making love.
It's not.
It's not at all.
I'm so sorry.
I'm Robert Evans, failing to introduce my podcast yet again. It's behind, it's not at all. I'm so sorry. I'm Robert Evans,
failing to introduce my podcast yet again.
It's behind the bastards.
It's about terrible people.
I'm so sorry, everyone.
I was trying to open with my folksy wisdom,
but I have none.
And I've got, now I've botched the start of this episode.
Here to attempt to take away some of my shame
is Caitlin Durante.
Caitlin, how are you doing today?
Oh, you know, I'm just barely keeping it together
at any moment, but otherwise, I'm okay.
Caitlin, can you think of any similarities
between introducing a podcast and making love?
Well, let me think about that.
Oh, I have one, I have one, I have one.
Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The audio levels can go up and down.
The audio levels can go up and down.
That's a good similarity, Sophie.
Thank you, thank you very much.
Sure, maybe an entire, not just introducing an episode,
but an entire episode, I think you could draw
some parallels between, because you've got, you know, there's like, the intro is sort of like the foreplay, and
then you've got, you know, usually a big climactic finish to the episode.
Well there you go everybody.
We figured it out.
We figured it out.
You wanted to compare a random episode of my podcast about bad people to making love.
Caitlin Durante has kind of made it easier, maybe.
Caitlin, how are you doing today?
I'm all right.
You know, I'm just.
You're in your closet recording.
I'm in my closet.
You're in your closet.
I'm looking at your luggage right now.
Nice luggage.
I see you go with the hard shell.
Thank you, yes.
It is a really nice closet, if I remember from the photos
you sent me, like it's a very good size closet.
It truly is, thank you so much.
You wanna hear a little story about me, Caitlin?
Please. Because I'm a narcissist?
Okay, so, you know, I travel a lot too, Caitlin,
and I have refused my entire traveling life
to have like a hard shelled, rolly suitcase, even though they're much more comfortable to use at the airport than a backpack.
Because as a young man with an indestructible spine, I was like,
only stupid old people use the rolly backpacks. I'm going to be a young
adventurer forever and I just get to wear a backpack. And now I just hurt myself every
time I go to the airport out of pride and that's why men shouldn't be
allowed to hold political office. I couldn't agree with you more. Yeah you
mean you carry around one of those like big like backpacking? Yeah big ol big ol
backpacking backpack. Yeah. Horrible., horrible. Sometimes they carry a duffel bag, even worse.
That's absurd.
Yeah, it's a terrible idea.
But you know, it does tie in with the theme
of today's episode, because what do you do with,
what do you do with backpacks and rolly suitcases, Caitlin?
I mean, you bring them with you to travel?
You bring them with you to cross?
Borders?
Yeah, and today we're talking about the the motherfucking migra the border patrol. Oh boy
And I just want to say nice job. Yeah, that's great
Thanks, it's been a long journey to starting the episode this week. Yeah, I think we got there
Yeah, sorry to everyone who's been um, you know, this has been a little bit of a weird run
of Behind the Bastards, the uprising episodes.
We're still going to be doing the dictators and grifters, you know, that are our bread
and butter.
But I keep getting obsessed with different law enforcement agencies, particularly the
ones, you know, shooting at me.
And so I started just kind of reading a bunch about Customs and Border Patrol this last week or so.
And I couldn't stop.
And so I wrote a lot about them.
And now we're all going to talk about Border Patrol.
Because, Caitlin, did you know the Border Patrol kind of problematic?
Wait a minute. What do you mean?
Yeah, not nice dudes, as it turns out.
And have kind of been dicks for like a hundred something years or like a hundred years
They've been dicks for a long time very close to a hundred years. Okay, 96 years. All right
Yeah, which you know, they still have time to change, you know
I a lot of people have their best their best, you know, their second act after age 96
Yeah, I would say that applies to a large number of people.
A lot of tortoises at least.
A lot of tortoises go on to do very cool things
after age 96.
Yeah, trees as well.
There's a lot of old trees
that are doing really important things.
A lot of great trees.
Border Patrol could be like a Sequoia.
Yeah, but I don't know how likely I think that is.
So we're going to talk about, we're going to talk about La Migra today because they're
terrible.
And I don't think most people know how terrible they are and their terribility is important
because it is tied in with a lot of horrible things about this country and the very concept
of whiteness.
So how are you feeling about that, Caitlin?
You know, I don't feel good about it.
I really don't.
That's good, because my cunning plan has been to blame you personally
for all of the historical crimes of the US Border Patrol.
Well, I did invent them.
You launched the Immigration Act of 1924.
That's Caitlin Durante's, that's on your resume.
Yeah, I didn't want that to be my legacy,
but here we are.
Yeah, a lot of people don't know this,
but you used to be all of Congress in the early 1920s.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, pretty impressive when you think about it.
Yeah, no, it really is.
Yeah, Congress Durante. Yeah, you were about it. Yeah, no, it really is. Yeah, Congress Durante.
Yeah, you were, instead of Caitlin,
you were Congress Durante.
That's true.
If we're gonna talk about the border patrol,
we've gotta talk about the border.
And given that the territory we currently know
as like Texas, New Mexico, Arizona,
and even Mexico is all land
that was stolen from indigenous people,
this is not like a case
where there's a lot of good guys to choose from.
If you're talking about like conflicts
over the US Mexican border,
you're talking about like a bunch of different states
that kind of sucked fighting each other
for land that wasn't theirs.
Like that's the whole deal, right?
Yes.
So the US Mexican War of 1846 to 1848
is the conflict that gained our nation most of the modern Southwest.
It was a naked war of imperialist aggression against another nation that brutally subjugated indigenous peoples.
One can argue that Mexico was like a broadly better country than the U.S. at this point, since it didn't allow slavery.
But both countries not not great to anyone.
but both countries not great to anyone,
any like indigenous peoples or whatever. Just bad, bad, bad governments.
So at the end of the US-Mexican War,
the United States wound up occupying Mexico City
and that nation was forced to cede 50%
of its Northern territory in the resulting treaty.
And I think a lot of Americans who grow up
kind of outside of the Southwest
don't really
have a clear idea of how much land the United States got as a result of the U.S.-Mexican
War.
But we took a shitload of land from Mexico.
It's fucking crazy how much of this country used to be Mexico, like up into Oklahoma.
Yeah, I don't have a good gauge on that because I grew up in Pennsylvania and that just wasn't
something that they bothered to tell us in history class.
Yeah, we were like most of the Southwest was kind of at one point or another part of Mexico.
And so yeah, we took about 50% of Mexico's Northern Territory and a new US Mexican border
was redrawn along the Rio Grande from the Gulf to El Paso
and then along more or less an arbitrary line
further west up the Pacific.
Now this meant that a huge number of people
who'd previously lived in Mexico
and had been able to travel freely around territory
that was all part of one nation
now found themselves living in between two nations.
This included roughly 180,000 members of indigenous tribes as well as about 150,000 Mexicans.
So these 300,000-ish non-white folks owned most of the land in like the territories in
the Southwest that became Texas and some of the surrounding states.
And the decades after the US-Mexican War are kind of best viewed as a gradual process of
white people taking this land from non-white people.
Some of it through purchase, some of it through like violent threats and intimidation, some
of it as a result of the reservation system kicking indigenous people off of their ancestral
land, and some of it through just like good old, you know, good old, good old fashioned
genocide, Caitlin, just like, just like really getting your boots in it, you know?
I mean, those are the main principles that the U.S. was founded on, right?
White people stealing land from non-white people and genociding them.
You're gosh darn right, Caitlin.
You're gosh darn right.
And that's why when I get up in the, I'm just thinking of like a Folgers coffee commercial,
you know, one of those old ones where it was like a cowboy
getting up on the range, sipping a Folgers coffee
and then just like stepping into a pile of bones
and just being like, ah, nothing like a nice morning
walking barefoot through a pile of bones.
The thing that I do every day as a cowboy.
Yeah, why wasn't that their ad campaign for Folgers?
Folgers?
Folgers will murder everybody.
Coffee helps.
Oh, I was drinking coffee and it went down the wrong hole, Caitlin.
Oh no.
Wow.
See, coffee can't be stopped from attempting genocide.
Even coffee wants to murder.
Coffee wants nothing but to murder.
So as we discussed in our last episode
of the Behind the Police mini-series that we just did,
the Texas Rangers was kind of the first border patrol
type force in the Southwest.
And they began their history as a group,
like a paramilitary organization to protect white settlers in Texas.
They were formed by a local mayor
named John Jackson Tumlinson,
who was part of the old 300 white families
who first settled in Texas with Stephen F. Austin.
Now, it wasn't a popular decision
for these 300 families to settle in Texas,
and the Comanches, Tonkawas, Apaches, and Karankawas,
who already resided in the area
got kind of angry and started murdering them.
So Tumlinson ordered the formation
of a roving defensive patrol.
This patrol became the Texas Rangers,
but Tumlinson never got to see it formed
because he was almost immediately killed by Karankawa
and Huaco indigenous people before he got off the ground.
Cause yeah.
Well, that sounds like karma to me.
Yeah, it sounds like it's fine.
Like a shame they didn't get more people.
So the Rangers were kind of this country's
first border patrol force.
And the primary method of action for them was just,
again, really just straight up genocide.
In the early days, they were like a paramilitary army.
They acted as scouts for actual militias.
They would swoop in and force indigenous people
out of their homes and onto reservations, but would also just burn their villages sometime and murder
their women and children.
Cause you know, whatever, sometimes you come into the office and you want to do things
different.
Um, I don't know.
Yeah, they also engaged in the murder and intimidation of Mexicans in border communities,
and by the early 1900s, the indigenous folks had mostly been forced off of their land
and the Rangers had become a police force
focused mainly on Mexicano communities on the border.
The primary strategy was what's known to historians
as revenge by proxy.
And for an example of how that looked,
I'm gonna quote from the American Crossroads book, Migra.
Quote, on June 12th, 1901, a Mexicano rancher
named Gregorio Cortez stood at the gate of his home
in Cairnes County, Texas.
There he resisted arrest for a crime that he did not commit.
The sheriff persisted, drew his gun,
and shot Gregorio's brother in the mouth
when he charged at the sheriff to protect Gregorio.
Gregorio shot back and killed the sheriff,
an act that was sure to bring the Texas Rangers
to his doorstep.
When they came, Gregorio and his family, including his wounded brother, were gone.
All that remained was the dead body of the sheriff.
The news of Gregorio's deadly defiance quickly spread across southern Texas.
And yeah, for ten days, the Texas Rangers and posse's numbering up to 300 men hunted
for him.
When they could not find him, they sought revenge by proxy, arresting, brutalizing,
and murdering an unknown number of Mexicanos.
So that's like how the Texas Rangers kind of worked
for a while is a Hispanic person commits a crime
or a perceived crime, and if they can't catch him
to murder him publicly, they just kill a bunch
of other random Mexicans so that like people
don't get uppity.
That's the first border patrol.
Horrible.
Pretty bad, Caitlin.
Pretty bad.
Don't like it.
I don't like it one bit.
Okay, so you are on the record now about not being in favor of murdering random people
as part of a fear-based system of law enforcement.
Yes, and I am happy to be on the record
of staking that stance.
That's a bold stance.
That's a bold stance.
I know.
Gonna lose you some advertisers, Caitlin,
especially our big advertiser, Raytheon.
Yeah.
When you really need a group of people
intimidated by violence, there's no other option
but Raytheon, Raytheon.
It's not even time for an ad break.
You're just doing this for fun.
I know, that's a free one.
Raytheon just had to lay off a lot of employees, Sophie,
and I for one have a sense of loyalty,
so I'm trying to help Raytheon out with some free ads.
So look, if you've got a couple billion extra dollars
that you need to spend on missiles
that are filled with knives in order to assassinate
insurgent leaders in Yemen.
Look, don't go to Lockheed Martin, go to Raytheon, okay?
It's just better knife missiles, right?
That's all I'm gonna say.
Brave.
I have a sense of loyalty.
So for the first 20 years of the century,
the US-Mexican border was policed
by a mix of Texas Rangers and local sheriffs.
Such enforcement was always piecemeal with hundreds of
miles of borderland operating basically autonomously, as it
had for generations.
The idea that we would police our border didn't exist until
pretty recently.
For most of American history, it was just like, well, yeah,
you've got this big empty chunk of country, and eventually it
becomes Mexico, and's nobody's nobody
really gives a shit.
Yeah, you see all these communities had existed for forever for hundreds of years in a lot
of cases and you know they had family who would be up in Mexico or up in the United
States and it would have seemed like it would have seemed like madness to try to to try
to split these communities up based on an arbitrary borderline that nobody could even
see. But yeah, in the 1920s, that started to change. In 1924, the Immigration Act was
passed and the Immigration Act banned all immigration to the United States from Asia
and it massively reduced immigration in from the southern, from southern and Eastern Europe.
The goal of the act was for the first time to enshrine in law the federal government's
preference for Nordic whites above non-white people when it came to immigration.
So basically set up a quota system.
Yikes.
Yeah, have you heard about this?
This is when we decided that only one kind of white people were allowed in the country.
This is the Italians aren't white enough law.
But people used to really care about that, right? In the 1924 immigration act,
a big part of it was stopping Italians,
or as they would have called them, I Italians,
which used to be, I think, more racist than it is,
and is now just a funny old timey way
of making fun of Italians, which I'm always
I'm always in favor of Caitlin
That my last name is Durante and that I am partly Italian yes, oh my that's why it's okay good
All right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Are we are we white?
How's that? How's that work?
I have heard
Slightly varying things, but I think by and large Italian people are considered white. Yes
I was looking at a Nazi cartoon the other day because I do things like that
For my mental health and it was like the point it was making is that like social justice advocates are always white
and fascists are actually really diverse.
And so like, it was a bunch of white people lecturing
Hitler, Mussolini and Hirohito.
But because it was drawn by a fascist,
they drew in Mussolini as a black man
because they don't think Italians are white.
So it's just like, there were a lot of layers of wrongness there to parse through.
It was one of those things that looked very confusing to people who don't
immediately recognize, oh, these are the kind of racists who don't even
think Italians count as white.
Um, it's very funny, but in the 1920s, that was all of Congress.
Sure.
And they were like, we got to pass a law to stop these
Italians from coming in. So yeah, the immigration act in 1924, bans all Asian immigration and
tries to kind of restrict to only the right kind of white people. And the one real exception
to this, the only kind of like non white folks who were allowed into the country under the
immigration act without any kind of restriction, were Mexicans.
And this is because of hardcore labor or lobbying by the agricultural industry, right? Because
basically you had all these ranchers and farmers in Texas, particularly, and in the Southwest, who
were like, our entire industry doesn't work without these people, so you have to let them in.
work without these people. So you have to let them in. So the 1924 Act does kind of make an exception for that. It's very heavily based on race science. And in fact, like a
big factor in what got the act passed was a bunch of bogus studies conducted by the
eugenics research office at Cold Spring Harbor that kind of provided intellectual justification
for the law by arguing that the wrong kind of immigrants would leave the surges in violent crime and declines in IQ.
Yeah, you just don't like the sound of that.
No, this is bad.
This is bad.
And the 1924 Immigration Act is what establishes
the US Border Patrol for the very first time.
So this fundamentally racist law written by people
who justified it explicitly with like bad like, like bad race science is
where the Border Patrol is initially established. So literally born in an orgy of racism. Uh,
and in fact, the, the 1924 immigration act that established the Border Patrol was so
nakedly racist that Adolf Hitler took inspiration from it. Uh, in 19-
Oh.
Yeah, it's bad. It's really bad, Caitlin. This is where Border Patrol comes from.
Oh, no.
Yeah, it's not great. In 1928, Hitler wrote this of the law.
There is currently one state in which one can observe at least a weak beginnings of
a better conception. This is, of course, not Germany, but the American Union. The American
Union categorically refuses the immigration of physically unhealthy elements
and simply excludes the immigration of certain races.
So wait, Hitler in the 20s took a look at what we were doing in the US and was like,
I like the looks of that. Let me copy paste and do that in Nazi Germany.
Yeah, that's exactly what happened. That's exactly what happened.
Oh dear.
That's exactly what happened. And he wrote extensively about how inspired he was by US
immigration law, which was like the most racist in the world at the time.
Holy shit.
You want to know something else cool, Caitlin? This is a neat story. You're going to love
this.
Please tell me the story.
So, you know, El Paso, great town, solid tacos.
A lot of immigration in El Paso, right?
Always has been because it's the past, right?
You know, that's just where it's located.
Back in like the 20s and 30s, when immigrants would come in,
racist white people were so worried about how dirty they thought Mexicans were
that they would mandate delousing baths for everybody who entered the country,
and they would just douse them in a pesticide.
And the pesticide that they chose was Zyklon B.
Wait, what is that?
That's what they killed all the Jews with
in the concentration camps. Oh my God.
Yeah. Wow.
That's another thing the Nazis were like,
oh, this seems like something we could modify a little bit
to make better for us. Isn't that cool? Jesus. That's good stuff. It's not thing the Nazis were like, oh, this seems like something we could modify a little bit to make better for us.
Isn't that cool?
That's good stuff.
It's not.
Holy shit.
It was super flammable
and sometimes people burnt horribly to death.
Good stuff on the border.
Kind of always a nightmare.
Kind of, if you study the history of the border,
maybe the only reasonable conclusion
is that borders are fundamentally toxic.
But.
And completely made up.
They're just-
Yeah, and total bullshit.
Constructs of like horrible, usually racist ideology.
They're just lines.
Racist lines we draw on a map that murder tons of people.
It's awesome.
It's really good.
So yeah, the Border Patrol comes out
of is formed from a law that the Nazis look at and go, that's a good law, says we the Nazis.
Sweet stuff, Caitlin. So because the Immigration Act was passed alongside a surge of racist
nativist fear about those dastardly non-white immigrants, it mandated that the new Border
Patrol be established quickly.
The first version of the force was basically built overnight,
from May 28th to July 1st,
so rapidly that there was no time for the patrol to actually create
any kind of qualification exam for its new recruits.
The first wave of men to wear the service's green uniform
were instead required to pass the Railway Mail Clerk Civil Service Exam.
Which I'm sure is basically the same thing.
Uh huh.
Yeah.
So as a result, and this is something we'll talk about in part two, this, this
winds up being a long trend in the border patrol is every decision they make.
They have to like immediately adopt it and they never have time to train anybody
to do the job that they're going to do.
And everyone's just fine with this and it persists for 96 years.
So the whole thing, every like,
decisions are made all willy nilly,
people are brought in with no training,
things are being implemented
with basically no thought given to it.
They're just like, here's what we decided
and we're not gonna take a second to examine this at all.
We're just going to do it.
Yeah.
I mean, the current DHS secretary, Chad Wolf, uh, has no law enforcement
experience, was never in the military.
And I think went to college on like a tennis scholarship.
Um, so it's great.
It's cool how things are always exactly the same forever.
how things are always exactly the same forever. Because yeah, again, if people ever learn a single lesson from history, the world will
explode.
So we have to not do that.
Anyway.
But there's also a conundrum there too, right?
Because so much of history that gets taught, at least in schools schools is so horribly whitewashed and revisionist
that like how can anyone learn anything from it?
Yeah, yeah. You know, that's a good point, Kaitlyn. And that's why as I see all these kids in the street
who just aren't going to school anymore and are instead spending their nights drop kicking the doors of a federal courthouse
to try to taunt the agents inside to attack them.
I think probably fine.
Probably learning about as much, right?
True.
So yeah, the very first border patrol men
were mostly male clerks.
And obviously male clerks
maybe aren't super meant to be tromping around the desert hunting people, and about a quarter
of everyone in the Border Patrol quit in their first month of the job. Turnover remained
incredibly high for basically the whole history of the organization, particularly its early years,
and this made it kind of impossible for it to develop any kind of functional internal culture at the start. By 1927, the Border Patrol had been forced to hire inspectors who
could not even pass civil service exams. The agency tried desperately to recruit military
veterans and men with law enforcement experience, but the vast majority of their new hires were
just unemployed men who lived in border towns. These were white working class folks who'd
had trouble keeping a job and were kind of
desperate for a leg up and the regular income that a law enforcement career would allow,
as well as kind of the respect and pride or respect that you would get as a member of
law enforcement, right?
Like they wanted some power.
These were like poor working class whites.
Don't give anybody power.
It never goes well.
No, especially not poor white men in the country.
Yeah.
So immigration from Mexico into the United States had not traditionally been like a major
subject of national political debate.
People in Texas, you know, there were folks who cared about it, but like really on a national level, if you'd like run based on your plan to build a wall around Mexico,
99% of Americans have been like, what the fuck is your problem? Like, why do you give a shit about
that? Everyone is dying of diphtheria and the economy is permanently crashed. Please, please stop.
Which I guess now we're back at, so maybe that'll help.
I mean, wow.
The parallels.
I don't hear as many people giving a shit about the border these days.
I'll say that much.
That's true.
Maybe it's because nobody wants to come here anymore.
We did it, Caitlin.
We finally stopped it.
Just turn the US into a disease ridden hellhole.
All it took was a runaway plague
that we completely give up any hope of ever dealing with.
Yay.
You know what?
President Trump figured it out.
Good for him.
You know what President Trump didn't figure out?
Oh, the products and services that support this podcast. That's right. We keep them a secret from the president.
Yeah.
But if you listen in, it can be a secret that you and I share and hide at all costs from the administration.
I want to be one of the world's biggest drag queens. You've heard the name Marsha P. Johnson,
trans icon, revolutionary, saint.
They call me a legend in my own time.
But who was she, really?
She's strutting up there,
waving to the policemen in the cars,
pay it no mind.
I'm a woman, a real woman.
Marcia also survived homelessness, sex work, and police violence.
And in 1992, her body was found in the Hudson River.
Her death remains unsolved.
Marcia was pulled out of the water, right over the edge here.
Afterlives is a podcast about how trans lives we've lost
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Jan Marcelek was a model of German corporate success.
It seemed so damn simple for him.
Also, it turned out, a fraudster.
Where does the money come from?
That was something that I always was questioning myself.
But what if I told you that was the least interesting thing about him?
His secret office was less than 500 meters down the road.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Certain things in my life since then have gone terribly wrong.
I don't know if they followed me to my home.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story, because this ties together
the Cold War with the new one.
Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts. show and that's why you're a loser. He was the first and the original shock shock. That scratchy and reverent kind of way of talking to people. You're as dumb
as the rest. That's I can't take anyone. I don't agree with you all the time. I
don't want you to. I hope that you pick me apart. His voice changed media, his
death shocked the nation. And it makes me so angry that he got himself killed
because he had a big mouth. KOA morning talk show host Allen Berg reportedly was shot and killed tonight in downtown Denver.
He pointed to the Denver phone book and said, well, there are probably two million suspects.
This guy aggravated everybody.
From iHeart Podcasts, this is Live Wire, the loud life and shocking murder of Allen Berg.
Listen on the iHeart Radio app,, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Explore the winding halls of historical true crime with Holly Frye and Maria Tramarchi, hosts of criminalia, as they uncover curious cases from the past.
The legend of the highwayman suggests men dominated the field, but tell that to Lady Catherine Ferrer's, known as the Wicked Lady, who terrorized England in the mid 1600s. Her legend persists nearly
400 years after her death. Hear the story of the gentleman robber, the romantic
darling of the ladies, and a tale about a wager over a sack of potatoes, but you'll
have to tune in to learn who won that one. Some highwaymen were well-mannered or faked it.
People were concerned about the romanticism of robbers, but most were just thugs.
Highwaymen are in the hot seat this season.
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Listen to stories about historical crimes on Criminalia now, plus the cocktails and
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Listen to Criminalia on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're back! Oh my gosh, I for one love that Trump for America bought up all of our advertising space.
bought up all of our advertising space. Um, when I think of president, I think of the president.
Anyway, uh, so immigration from Mexico had not traditionally been a big, big political
debate issue, right?
The wealthy agribusiness owners in Texas preferred simple immigration from Mexico, and they fought
to ensure that Mexicans were not subject to the same harsh immigration restrictions as
other immigrants in the 1924 bill.
One business owner put it simply, without the Mexicans, we would be done.
Which hasn't really changed, you know?
And it's like, we'll talk about this a little bit later on, but it is it is this kind of one of the things that you I didn't even realize was like really problematic when I was a young person kind of dealing with the mix between outwardly hateful racists in the Southwest
and nice people who don't realize they're racist is like the nice people, the outwardly
hateful people are like the Trump type folks that you know who want to build a wall and
kick all the rapist Mexicans out.
Sure. They're easy to spot. Yeah.
Yeah, and then you have this chunk of people who are like,
well, I hate what Trump's doing and like I'm happy to have Mexicans here
because you know they do great work and you know they're great at this
and they're good at that and they're good at...
And it's this thing where like, especially like, you know, you don't necessarily notice,
especially as like a young white person who's like 18, 19, like what's actually being said
there, which is like the commodification of non-white bodies, which is like not cool.
But we're going to talk more about that later because this is where that all starts in an
organized way, which is awesome.
So the white working class in Texas, so obviously like these kind of landowners,
the kind of aristocracy in Texas in this period, right?
Like the ranchers and stuff, they were broadly,
like they wanted more Mexicans
and they could never get enough
because like they needed people to actually work their farms.
But the white working class in Texas
and the white working class even in rural areas,
really had nursed a growing hatred of Mexican people,
and had been for years.
And this was based on a mix of fear
that Mexican immigrants would take their jobs,
that was always a core part of it.
And also based on good old fashioned racism.
One labor union official in Texas at the time noted,
"'I hope they never let another Mexican "'come to the the United States. The country would be a whole lot better off
for the white laboring man if there weren't so many inwards and Mexicans.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah. Well, and this is one of those things, if you're like kind of squaring yourself with
the history of labor, you know, I'm a big fan of labor history and I think there's a
lot of wonderful stuff there. You do have to square with the fact that like a lot of those dudes who were right about a lot of
important things were incredibly racist and hated non-white people because they saw them
as a threat to white working class people.
I mean, which that all stems from capitalism, more or less.
Yes, absolutely. Where if there was any fairness or parity when it came to income and labor, people wouldn't
have to be worried about other people.
There wouldn't be this fear of like, who is my job in danger?
Who's going to take my job?
Because a more just,
just socialized economy would eliminate that fear. Absolutely.
Yep.
So the actual laws on the books in this period of time
had been written largely by the rich landed gentry
who needed Mexican immigrants.
But now that the border patrol existed post 1924,
the men enforcing those laws were working class whites who really
just hated Mexicans and they honestly didn't give a shit about the needs of farmers.
In fact, a lot of them saw being able to police undocumented migrants as a way of equalizing
their level of social power with farmers because they were poorer than these guys. They didn't have property.
Uh, but now they had the ability to, to arrest these dudes workers.
And like that gave them a level of power in their culture and a level of power
of these people who had kind of previously been the bosses, um, and you
know, kind of for a lot of these guys who became the first border patrol workers,
these were obviously, these were white men, but they were men whose kind of
sense of whiteness had been hanging on by a thread prior to this
this opportunity coming around. And I'm going to quote again from the book Migra, quote,
early officers may have lived in white neighborhoods, worshiped at white churches,
and sent their children to white schools, but as salesmen, chauffeurs, machinists, and cow punchers,
they had labored at the edges of whiteness in the borderlands. The steady pay and everyday social authority of US immigration law
enforcement work dangled before them the possibility of lifting themselves from a
marginalized existence as what Neil Foley has examined as the white scourge
of borderland communities. Policing Mexicans, in other words, presented
officers with the opportunity to enter the region's primary economy and, in the
process, shore up their tentative claims
upon whiteness.
As immigration control was emerging as a critical site of simultaneously expanding the boundaries
of whiteness while hardening the distinctions between whites and non-whites, the project
of enforcing immigration restrictions therefore placed border patrol officers at what police
scholar David Bailey describes as the cutting edge of the state's knife in terms of enforcing
new boundaries between whites and non whites.
So that is the border patrol in this period, the cutting edge of the state's knife, you
know, cleaving the boundaries between white and non white people.
The way to look at it, very picturesque.
Yeah.
Now this has made a lot more complicated by the fact that a chunk of the early border patrol were Mexican-American.
And these guys, in a lot of cases, saw their ability, their career in law enforcement, as a way of separating themselves from non-white people.
The League of United Latin American Citizens, or LULAC, specifically stated that Mexican-American association with colored races is what held them back
from full acceptance by white society
in this period of time.
And the book Migra includes the story of one early officer,
Patrol Inspector Pete Torres,
who was marked by a colleague for being Mexican.
In response, he shot at the man's feet and yelled,
"'I am not a Mexican, I am a Spanish American.'"
Yeah, so this is like.
We're seeing some internalized racism.
Yeah, it's a complicated history here.
And I'm not going to go into tremendous depth
about this aspect of the history
because I'm not at all the right person to do so.
The right person to do so in fact,
is probably Kelly Little Hernandez, author of the book,
Migra, A History of the US Border Patrol.
She does talk about this in more depth
and I really recommend her book.
But you should know that's like an aspect
of what's going on here.
And as a rule, one of the things that starts to happen
in particular around like the 40s is kind of
a growing Spanish or Mexican
American community who are very pro immigration enforcement and pro like harsher immigration
laws and laws against illegal immigration. They start to like solidify as a bloat voting
block in the Southwest in this period too. And they still are to this day. It's a lot
of people are like shocked when they see Hispanics for Trump and stuff, and there's actually pretty deep roots
for a lot of that stuff.
Yeah.
So, most early border patrol men though, were white dudes,
and it would probably be fair to call them white supremacists.
And as the years went by, our government gave them
increasing powers to exercise racism
with state authority behind it.
From a write-up in The Intercept, quote,
"'While the 1924 immigration law spared Mexico a quota, a series of secondary
laws, including one that made it a crime to enter the country outside of official
ports of entry, gave border and customs agents on-the-spot discretion to decide
who could enter the country legally. They had the power to turn what had been a
routine daily or seasonal event, crossing the border to go to work, into a ritual
of abuse. Hygienic inspections became
more widespread and even more degrading. Migrants had their head shaved, and they were subjected
to an increasingly arbitrary set of requirements at the discretion of patrollers, including literacy
tests and entrance fees. The patrol wasn't a large agency at first. Just a few hundred
men during its early years, and its reach along a 2,000-mile line was limited. But over the years,
its reported brutality grew as the number of agents deployed increased.
Border agents beat, shot, and hung migrants with regularity.
Two patrollers, former Texas Rangers, tied the feet of one migrant and dragged him in
and out of a river until he confessed to having entered the country illegally.
Other patrollers were members of the resurgent Ku Klux Klan, active in border towns from
Texas to California.
Practically every other member of El Paso's National Guard was in the Klan, one military
officer recalled, and many had joined the Border Patrol upon its establishment.
So not great, ideally, you know, if you ask me.
We keep coming back to the KKK and how it repeatedly infiltrated law enforcement. Mm-hmm.
Someone maybe ought to do something about that.
So for its first 10 years of existence, the Border Patrol operated under the authority
of the Department of Labor.
And when FDR was elected, he appointed Frances Perkins to be Secretary of Labor, and she
tried to curtail the violence of the Border Patrol and reform it.
And this didn't really work out in the long run.
She attempted to cut down on warrantless arrests.
She mandated that detained migrants had a right to receive phone calls.
She fought to provide migrants with at least some version of the civil rights they lacked as non-citizens.
But before long, FDR was pressured by the agricultural industry
to put the Border Patrol under the control of the Department of Justice.
Now, this might seem surprising at first, because like these rich farmers
were the same folks
who'd fought to ensure Mexican immigrants
wouldn't be subject to quotas in the 1924 immigration law.
But there's a reason behind it
because these folks had wanted these, you know,
ranchers and stuff had wanted Mexicans here
to work their farms,
but they hadn't wanted these people
to actually stay in the United States.
Lobbyist S. Parker Frizzell had told
Congress in 1926, the Mexican is a homer, like the pigeon he goes home to roost. And
Frizzell's promise had been that Mexicans weren't really immigrants, and thus they should
be exempt from the USA's white supremacist immigration laws. They were birds of passage,
he argued, just hanging around for a little while to work. But by the turn of the decade, as we hit, like, start going into the 1930s, Mexicans
had started to settle all across the Southwest, buying homes and starting communities in places
like Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California.
In 1900, only about 100,000 Mexican immigrants had lived in the United States.
By 1930, there were one and a half million Mexican immigrants in this country.
So this starts to freak out a lot of white agriculturalists, right?
And it kind of, you know, they had been okay with these people coming into work, but at the end of the day, there were the same kind of white supremacists as the border patrolmen.
They were just a little bit more refined. And once it started to look like these Mexicans
were coming in and actually going to be contributing
and changing the demographics of the nation, they panicked.
And the only thing they could really think of to do
was give the border patrol more power
to enforce how many Mexicans could enter the country.
And there was a real big debate over this, right? Because you still needed, as
these farmers, you still needed a certain minimum amount of migrants coming in every
year in order to actually keep your farms working. And the guy who kind of figured out
a solution to this problem was Senator Coleman Livingston-Bleas. He was a white supremacist
congressman who first took office in 1925. His solution was rather than creating a system
of quotas and caps that would have reduced manpower in American fields, he just wanted
to criminalize unmonitored border crossing. This is the very first time that it becomes
illegal to cross the US-Mexican border without doing it at a border station.
That's 1929, that law is passed.
And I'm going to quote from an article in The Conversation explaining what happened
here.
According to Bleece's bill, unlawfully entering the country would be a misdemeanor while unlawfully
returning to the United States after deportation would be a felony.
The idea was to force Mexican immigrants into an authorized and monitored stream that could
be turned on and off at will at ports of entry. Any immigrant who entered the United
States outside of bounds of the stream would be a criminal subject to fines, imprisonment,
and ultimately deportation. But it was a crime designed to impact Mexican immigrants in particular.
Neither the Western agricultural businessmen nor the restrictionists registered any objections.
Congress passed Blise's bill, the Immigration Act of March 4th, 1929, and dramatically altered
the story of crime and punishment in the United States.
With stunning precision, the criminalization of unauthorized entry caged thousands of Mexico's
birds of passage.
By the end of 1930, the U.S. Attorney General reported prosecuting 7,000 cases of unlawful
entry.
By the end of the decade, U.S. US attorneys had prosecuted more than 44,000 cases.
Now, Blee's law applied technically to Canadians as well,
but basically everyone prosecuted under it was Mexican.
And it was mainly used as kind of a method of
mostly nonviolent ethnic cleansing.
Like I don't even know if I'd say mostly nonviolent.
It was used for ethnic cleansing. Throughout the 1930s, Mexicans made up at least 85% of all immigration prisoners.
Sometimes, some years, they made up 99%. Three new prisons were built on the border to hold
them all. And over the course of the decade, somewhere around 1 million Mexicans were deported
from the United States. And most of these people were US citizens.
Historian Francisco Baldorama argues that 60%
of the million people who were deported
were US citizens of Mexican descent.
And border patrol forces would call the,
what was happening here repatriation
to make it seem voluntary.
But what was really happening in the 30s
was border patrol was just rounding up
all of the Mexicans they could get
and throwing them across the border and kind of accusing people of unlawful like
crossing of the border basically as a justification for for kicking them out.
So that's cool.
I just the the resources that get used and spent to enforce these laws and build prisons and maintain the prison.
All of that costs so much time and is so much effort.
It would be so much easier if we would just let immigrants come and then just let them live and be a
part of the community.
I mean, I know why.
Because yeah, racism.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's absurd.
Yeah.
The Border Patrol's pretty lame, Caitlin.
You know, this is like, but like this, this is what it is from the beginning.
Like one of the first things the Border Patrol ever does is deport a million people more than half of whom are US citizens
And it just lies about what it's doing
Because it's from the beginning its job has never been to actually enforce the rule of law or even protect the border
Its job is to protect whiteness, right? Yep
So the very the primary method of action
for border patrol agents from the beginning up to now
was violence.
The force was always undermanned and underfunded
with a handful of officers responsible
for thousands of miles of rugged terrain.
There was little to no oversight
and agents generally used violence at their discretion
as this anecdote from the book Migra illustrates.
Quote, one day in 1928, explains Stovall, who was a border patrol agent, he was patrolling
alone near San Elizario, Texas, when he decided to drive through town.
San Elizario was this little Mexican town on the Rio Grande, said Stovall, who remembered
that when he got to town that day he saw a Mexicano come out from behind the bank of
a drainage ditch and then duck back.
Stovall admitted to knowing the man, but stopped the car and asked him,
"'What do you have there in your bosom?'
The man reached into his shirt pocket
and pulled out two bottles of beer
and put them down on the bridge and broke them
so he wouldn't have any evidence.
Reflecting upon the incident, Stovall wondered,
"'Why didn't I pull out my gun and fire at that Mexican?
"'I don't know.
"'I don't know why.'
Instead of reaching for his gun and firing,
Stovall fled. "'I got in my car of reaching for his gun and firing Stovall fled
I got in my car and got away from there remembered Stovall because it was in daylight about one o'clock if I had pulled my
Gun and fired there would have been 50 Mexicans around me that quick
According to Stovall God spared his life that day by taking charge of his hands and preventing him from shooting at the Mexicano
so this is this is
shooting at the Mexicano. So this is 1928 and kind of a common attitude.
Like this border patrol agent approaches a guy
who's got illegal alcohol
and the dude breaks the bottles on him.
And the man's lingering question
that he's wondering for years afterwards is,
why didn't I shoot that man to death?
Like, yeah, cool stuff.
What some people think justifies killing another person is something I will never comprehend.
Yeah, I don't think they thought they were people.
Yeah, true.
Yeah, and it's probably worth noting how common brutality was, like open brutality was among
US law enforcement officials, even at pretty high levels in politics at this time.
In May of 1954, Herbert Brownell, the attorney general,
Eisenhower's attorney general,
gave a speech where he asked US labor leaders
for their support in the event that border patrol agents,
quote, shot wetbacks in cold blood.
So again, not saying like,
hey, we might have an accidental shooting
and I need your support,
because what we're doing is hard and you know, people are going to mess up.
He's like, you know, my guys might murder some some Mexicans, you know, my guys are absolutely going to commit murder in cold blood and I need you to like have my back.
Right.
That's the Attorney General of the United States.
1954.
Grief.
Cool stuff.
You know what else is cool stuff?
I don't, Sophie.
I can't imagine what you're going for here.
That's fine.
What is cool stuff?
That's fine.
Don't, that's fine.
I'll just leave.
You know who isn't the Attorney General of the United States?
Hopefully.
The products and services that support this podcast.
So racism's not good. You know who else isn't good?
The head of the Border Patrol in the 1950s.
Another good pivot, nice.
Yeah, a great pivot.
So the guy in charge of the Border Patrol,
as we turn into the 1950s,
is an outright monster by the name of Harlan Carter.
Now, Carter was, by the time he became the head
of the border patrol, a convicted murderer.
Like, ooh, yeah.
In 1931, as a teenager, he'd shot a Mexican boy
in the chest at point blank range with a 12 gauge shotgun.
And the two had been having an argument
and the Mexican boy had a knife,
but he was not actively threatening Carter.
And in fact, he'd laughed at the
Boy's gun because he just kind of seemed to think it was silly that they were having a
Fight at all and Carter shot him to death because he was angry for being laughed at he was convicted of murder and sentenced to three
Years in prison, but he was let out after two owing to a technicality
So back in 1931 by the way you could shoot a man in the chest with a 12 gauge and get three years
That's neat.
I love laws.
Yeah.
So our justice system is cool.
Yeah, he got rehabilitated.
He went on to become the head of the Border Patrol and also was the head of the NRA.
Oh, Harlan Carter's an interesting piece of shit. Um, so throughout the forties,
uh, apprehensions by the border patrol were kind of ad hoc and disorganized and they were
mostly the result of individual agents seeking out undocumented immigrants by catching them
in transit. This meant that large numbers of people were almost never apprehended at
a time. It was more just like agents kind of going out and hunting people down and grabbing
a couple of folks.
This was an easy system for dumb violent men to like figure out, you know, you just kind
of it's like hunting basically.
And it appealed to the kind of folks who became border patrol agents.
But starting in 1950, a young agent named Albert Quillen began to change things.
He was intelligent and ambitious.
And when the chief supervisor of border patrol demanded that he and his colleagues increase apprehensions, Quillen began experimenting with bold new
strategies.
At 5 a.m. on February 11th, Quillen took a detail of 12 patrolmen with two buses, one
plane, one truck, and nine automobiles.
The men drove out to a small station in Rio Hondo, Texas, and then split into two groups
to clean as well as possible a certain section of illegal aliens.
The plane acted as a spotter
while the buses were used to quote,
haul wets to the border.
A hundred people were apprehended in short order
and they were deported the next day.
Quillen soon moved on with his force
to a series of farms near Los Fresnos, Texas.
They found 561 wets,
which is again always the term they use for the,
do you understand where that term comes from?
I don't know that I actually know the source of it, no.
Yeah, so basically the idea is that there were kind of
two options for Mexicans at this time.
There was the bracerro program, which was a program
by which they could kind of enter the country quasi legally
and get like legal working rights to be like a laborer
or something like that. And then there was, you could just cross the border,
right, illegally.
And that usually meant crossing the Rio Grande,
which is a river, right?
So you wind up wet on the other side of the river.
So they call them wetbacks.
Like that's still to this day,
a racist slang term for particularly Mexicans,
but kind of all people of Hispanic descent
and a lot of Texas.
Like you hear it a lot from races there. And the border patrol, it is their standard term
for these people. This is like on all of their professional documents and everything. This is
what they call migrants. Yeah. So Quillen's forces catch 561 wets on their second day.
And on their third day, they catch 264. On the fourth third day they catch 264 on the fourth day they catch
134 in less than a week
They captured and deported more than a thousand undocumented laborers and this was like unprecedented the border patrol had never caught this many people this quickly
It was seen as an astonishing achievement by Quillen superiors and they began setting up other raids in imitation of his
border patrol supervisors noted that these new task forces,
as they started being called, were, quote,
"...pounding away on these wets."
Cool dudes.
Soon, multiple task forces had been established throughout California and Texas, carrying
out constant raids and netting huge numbers of undocumented persons. On some single days,
more than 5,000 Mexican nationals would be apprehended and shipped to temporary detention
camps before being sent back across the border.
Patrolmen handed deportees notes that read, quote, you have entered the United States
illegally and in violation of the laws of your land and those of the United States.
For this reason, you are being returned to your homeland.
If you return again illegally, you will be arrested and punished as provided by law.
We understand that the life of a wetback is difficult.
Wetbacks are unable to work for more than a few hours before they are apprehended and deported. Remember these words
and transmit the news to your families and countrymen if you want to do them a favor."
So that's fun.
Yikes.
Nice letter there.
Terrifying.
The language. Also, you had said, um, alien, that that was something that had been and still gets like that language is still
used and it's just the most dehumanizing word to refer to simply someone who travels to
another place and wants to stay there. It's pretty crazy because we don't use that word for,
I don't know, us.
I'm excited for when we have finally the big civil war
that we're all planning to have
and suddenly a shitload of middle class white people
who have always. I'm not excited for the next civil war
we have, but continue.
Yeah, I'm excited for the people who treated
Syrian refugees and treat Guatemalan and Honduran
and Mexican refugees like shit.
And I'm excited for them all to, I don't know,
get gunned down by Canadian border guards
as we deserve as a nation.
I don't know.
I'm angry all the time, Caitlin, sorry, that's not right.
Likewise, so am I yeah?
Anyway, it'll be up to Canada to be racist then and then eventually Alaska and then the biosphere will die
So, you know what won't die Caitlin?
Do your podcast.
I know I went off on a really sad rant and so I decided to throw in a Raytheon ad because
everybody likes thinking about Raytheon.
So back to the Border Patrol.
So the Border Patrol would like pick up all these folks, huge numbers, thousands in a
day sometimes, and they would put them in these like temporary camps and then would take them into Mexico where the Mexican military
would basically dump them in the middle of the country, as far away from the border as
possible.
And these were generally places where there was no work and where these migrants had no
family connections.
And it was just a horrible situation for most people.
As a result of these new tactics between 1950 and 1953, the number of Border Patrol apprehensions nearly doubled from 469,000 to almost
840,000. This caused immediate problems for ranchers and farmers who started to
realize that the new legal powers they'd given the Border Patrol had
vastly realigned the organization's power in a way that allowed the white
supremacists who ran it to harm agribusiness by wiping out their workforce.
At stake was also a sort of cultural readjustment.
Farmers and ranchers were used to occupying a position at the top of society, but now
border patrol men could exercise the power of deportation again and take away their workers.
In Texas border towns like Marfa, farmers hired armed guards, hired lookouts, and booby-trapped
farm gates in order to protect their workforce.
There were gunfights with border patrol, with these white farmers trying to defend their
workforce.
And as the conflict between the farmers and border patrol grew uglier, white border town
farmers suddenly found themselves facing off against the same men who'd hunted their workers.
The book Migra tells the story of D. of DC Newton, whose family were border patrol farmers who
posted guards to warn about raids.
They went to sleep one night in 1952 and woke up to find that dozens of border patrol agents
had snuck in with their headlights off to surprise everyone sleeping in the farmhouse
and adjacent quarters.
The Newton's oldest son was faster though, and he succeeded in warning the undocumented
migrants staying on the farm, which gave them the time they needed to run like hell and hide in the
trees.
When the Border Patrol men came up empty in their search, they went after the white folks
who actually owned the farm.
They entered Newton's parents' bedroom and began shining the flashlights in my mother's
eyes and my father's eyes, telling them to, get up, we're going to go out and find where
your Mexicans are. With my father in his pajamas, my mother
his mother in a nightgown and no one wearing any shoes, the officers forced
the family out of the house while pushing, physically pushing my mother in
the back, pushing my father in the back and demanding to know where the wetbacks
were. Most of the workers had fled including Newton's nanny Lupe for whom
the officers claimed to be searching in particular. She had heard the arrival of
the patrolman and climbed out of the window on the second
floor of the farmhouse, rolled down onto the roof of the garage, and run off to the southeast
and was gone.
Although the Newtons believed they had outsmarted the Border Patrol by alerting the migrants
to the raid, the head Border Patrol inspector still led 53 apprehended workers away, saying, see how you handle your groves now. Now, that's like a bad story and everything.
But what's interesting here is, I guess,
how horrible Newton's family is here, too,
because the interview with him goes on and he makes it clear that when he kind of
when his dad explained to him what was happening with the border patrol,
his dad compared the conflict to the Civil War.
And the side that
he identified with was not the good side.
Quote, Newton's father believed that by taking away their workers, the damn Yankee
Border Patrol were splitting up a household. As he explained it to his son, the South Texans
protected their homes, their families, their property, and their way of life from the Border
Patrol raids. He was the master. The Mexican illegals were equivalent to the black slaves, and together they formed a household,
a system of labor relations, and a world of tightly bound intimacy and inequity.
The Border Patrol threatened their household by reducing the farmers' control over Mexico's
unsanctioned migrant workers.
So as the Southerners had rebelled against intrusions upon their labor relations and
plantation lives, the Newton family had to defend itself against the US border patrol.
Newton's brother took the lesson to heart.
When the border patrol raided on another night,
he stood in the family driveway
with a shotgun aimed at the officers.
Startled by the hostile 12-year-old boy,
the officers left the property and returned on another day.
So yeah, what's happening here is really complicated.
Right, there's an important thing to remember here, which is that even of the, like,
white ranch farm owners who are maybe not in favor of their workforce being
sent back to their country of origin, they are still exploiting these workers, these migrant workers,
and you know, probably not paying them well, probably not offering them, you know, good
benefits, etc.
No, and probably like keeping them in very primitive living situations, often like little
more than a shack,
often like kind of nightmarish situation.
These guys did, these migrants often did live
very similarly to slaves, right?
It wasn't quite that bad, but it was bad.
And these farmers are, like the border patrol agents
want these migrants out because they're racist as fuck.
And these farmers are also racist as fuck.
They just want the migrants to stay because it is-
Because they can exploit them.
The basis of their power, exactly.
Right.
So again, no one to root for here
other than like these migrants,
but they seem to mostly get just fucked over by everybody
and that's not fun.
Yep.
So yeah, it's important to remember that kind of the struggle between Border Patrol
and these border farmers in Texas was a struggle between two different groups of white supremacists.
And one group of white supremacists was broadly in the right, because I guess it's worse to
round up thousands of people in cattle cars and buses and throw them back across the border
for no good reason.
But there's no one you should be rooting for here.
But what's really interesting, what I find fascinating about this whole conflict, is
that these racist plantation-owning white border farmers wound up fighting the border
patrol by kind of co-opting the language of social justice.
Starting in the 1950s, ranchers began to argue that Mexican nationals were being unfairly
targeted for deportations.
They complained that the buses, planes, and trains used to take migrants away were cruel,
inhuman, and outrageous practices trading in human misery.
They began to argue that hiring Mexicans was an act of kindness by American ranchers.
Mexican laborers deserved the chance to win a better life by working low-paid jobs as
domestic servants and laborers.
The Border Patrol was, in fact, actually fostering communism by sending these men and women back
to the interior of Mexico, where they would no doubt live on in miserable poverty and
join some leftist guerrilla movement.
So-
Yeah, because their lives being exploited, farm hands in the US is so much better.
What?
Oh my gosh.
Yeah, it's pretty cool how naturally that came to these farmers.
I like it.
So the Border Patrol obviously didn't listen to the protest against them.
They continued to, in their own words, pound away in the borderlands,
raising apprehensions. The increased workload necessary necessitated more men in facilities,
and in 1953 the Border Patrol attempted to hire 240 additional officers and made plans
to build two new detention centers at the lower Rio Grande Valley. This enraged local
farmers and one, quote, threatened to arm his wetback laborers against the border patrol,
threatening that there is liable to be a couple of dead border patrolmen.
Death threats against patrolmen became a daily occurrence,
and farmers in the Lower Rio Grande lobbied their congressmen
to deny the appropriation requests necessary to fund the new men in facilities.
These farmers insisted they weren't lobbying for their own benefit,
but were doing it for migrants who were victims of the patrol's cheap vindictiveness, a great hunger to rule or ruin, to control, to govern,
anything to carry a point, reckless of the consequences to the poor workmen which they
heard around as cattle.
And they weren't wrong in this.
The facility the Border Patrol wanted to build was essentially a concentration camp.
Eventually, Congress listened and the appropriation request was denied, So like the protest of all these guys in Texas worked.
The Border Patrol had to send its 240 men back home and cancel construction.
According to the book Migra, quote, one month after losing the supplemental appropriation,
Chief Kelly announced the Border Patrol's withdrawal from the Rio Grande Valley to a
new defense line 10 miles to the north of Kingsville, Falfurious and Hebronville.
Rather than fight a losing battle in the lower Rio Grande Valley, the Border Patrol decided
to pull out of the area because with limited forces, we can best control the wetback invasion
as at the line farther north.
It's one of those things I guess I like, I always kind of debate when you've got like
something that is essentially a slur is a slur, um, in an episode of like this, how
often to say it.
And it's one of those things where I kind of feel like cleaning up the border
patrols, official statements in the matter would be, I don't know, making it
seem like they were less of a naked force for white supremacy than they were.
Sure.
Like if you, if you, if you replace that with Mexican nationals, that's not
really what they're saying.
Right.
Yeah.
I don't know. That's yeah. I mean, that puts you in a pretty tricky position.
Yeah, I don't know.
Yeah, they use it a lot.
The Border Patrol are cool guys, and we're about to hear it used again in another big
way.
So the men of the Border Patrol did see the immigration of Mexicans into the US as an
invasion, and they sought to repel it with military force as kind of
that language above, right?
Referring to it as a defensive line and stuff like they're defending whiteness
again, and they see the encroachment of these, um, these undocumented migrants as
like an assault on, on white blood more than anything else, um, in 1953 with the
rebellion of the Texas ranchers in full swing,
Harlan Carter, who's again the murderer who became the head of the Border Patrol,
sat down with two U.S. generals to ask for their help. He wanted the military and the
National Guard to assist the Border Patrol in a nationwide purge of undocumented Mexican nationals
called Operation Cloudburst. The first step for this would be an anti-infiltration campaign to seal the border with the help
of 2,180 troops.
Border Patrol would station soldiers at strategic locations and build several long fences to
block areas of heavy traffic.
This part of the operation is fairly standard, aside from the presence of US troops.
Part two, though, would be a containment operation, which would involve roadblocks on every major
highway from the southwest to the interior of North America. These checkpoints would be used to
search vehicles for illegal migrants around the clock. Part 3 was the mopping up phase,
and this would involve a massive series of raids in northern locations, places far from
the border like San Francisco, where groups of migrants were believed to have gathered.
Businesses and camps would be raided, and the arrested migrants would be airlifted
or sent by train to the interior of Mexico.
Now again, using the military,
this was essentially he wanted to bring in the army
to carry out a military action
to purge the United States of Hispanic people.
That's what the head of border patrols trying to do here.
And all of the military guys he talked to are like,
this sounds like a great idea.
We'd love to help.
But it's illegal, right?
Posse comitatus means you can't use the army for shit like this.
The only way around it is a presidential proclamation.
And Dwight Eisenhower was actually initially all on board with issuing that proclamation.
But in the end, he kind of backed away.
And instead he appointed a general, Joseph Swing, to be the new commissioner of the Immigration
and Naturalization Service and was basically like, we can't use soldiers for this because
it's unconstitutional, but I'm going to promote a general to be in charge of the INS.
And you figure out a way to do the same thing with the resources Border Patrol has.
Yeah, yeah. I still want a military operation to clear out these Hispanic people. out a way to do the same thing with the resources Border Patrol has. Like, use your... Oh.
Yeah, yeah.
I still want a military operation to clear out these Hispanic people.
I just can't use soldiers.
So that's cool.
Oh, good grief.
Yeah.
The mental gymnastics that...
What?
Yeah.
...that these people do to justify their horrible actions.
Anyway, sorry.
Go ahead. Yeah. sorry, go ahead.
Yeah, it's pretty great.
I don't know.
So one month after joining INS,
General Swing announces that he's gonna be leading
the Border Patrol in a new paramilitary campaign
based on the tactics pioneered by Albert Quillen.
The new operation is given the name Operation Wetback.
Again, that's the Border Patrol's official name for it.
That's what all these guys call it.
That's what it's written up in in the documents and stuff.
Jeez Louise.
Yeah, they just didn't have a fuck to give on this matter.
So true to form, Border Patrol was only given four weeks
to prepare for what would become the largest operation
in their history.
The plan was to engage in an unprecedented sweep,
deporting hundreds of thousands of people
No one received any training or specialized equipment to actually do this though all that most agents had on June 9th
1954 when the operation began was a letter from General Swing order ordering them to purge the nation by
Removing the huge number of Mexican nationals who were in this country in violation of the immigration laws
Always good to hear about a purge.
Yikes.
So in its first day, California and Arizona agents apprehended nearly 11,000 migrants.
The flood of people only accelerated after that, and the sheer number of deportees overwhelmed
the border patrol's capacity to hold or carry them.
People were left in primitive, exposed concentration camps for days. A sheer number of deportees overwhelmed the Border Patrol's capacity to hold or carry them.
People were left in primitive, exposed concentration camps for days.
The Border Patrol turned Elysian Park in Los Angeles into an open-air concentration camp.
Yeah, that's neat.
Go to Elysian Park.
It's good.
I've been there before and I'll never go again.
A lot of the men who were interned there, men and women, got sick and sometimes died of sunstroke
because there was no care given to their health
and it can get very hot down there.
25% of all deportees were transported by boats,
many of which were so cramped and filthy
that their occupants later compared them to slave ships
or penal hell ships.
So that's great.
The Mexican government's capacity to take and transport all these people broke down
almost immediately and they were like, we need you to not send these people to us so
quickly because we can't handle them.
And the US government said, we don't give a fuck and kept just shotgunning people on
over there.
And the sheer scale of deportations
began to fuck with American industry.
But Border Patrol didn't really give a shit about this either.
I'm gonna quote again from the book Migra.
Between June 17th and July 26th, 1954,
2,827 of the 4,403 migrants apprehended
by the task force assigned to the Los Angeles area
had worked in industry.
After Border Patrol raids during the summer of 1954, three Los Angeles brickyards were
left without sufficient numbers of workers and temporarily closed down their operations.
Similarly, Border Patrol officers paid close attention to the hotel and restaurant business,
which routinely hired undocumented Mexican immigrants as busboys, kitchen help, waiters,
etc.
Officers reported apprehending such workers at well-known establishments such as the Biltmore Hotel, Beverly Hills Hotel, Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, Los Angeles
Athletic Club, and the Brown Derby. At times, the Border Patrol raids created moments of
chaos at popular restaurants when migrants attempted to escape by running through the
serving area.
The raids were public and regularly drew significant attention from the press, and this was part
of the point. The reason the border patrol focused so much on Los Angeles
on like raids and big Hollywood locations
is because they were trying to make a point to these like
these ranchers who were still fighting them in South Texas.
And the message was, if we're willing to do this shit
in fucking Hollywood, you'd better believe that one day
we're gonna come to your ranch and fuck you up, right?
Like if we'll do this to the Biltmore, we'll ruin you.
Like we don't give a shit, we're the border patrol.
And in the end, Operation Wetback was responsible
for the deportations of somewhere between a quarter
of a million at the low end
and about 1.5 million people at the high end.
And at the end of the day, yeah, it kind of ended
in retreat by the border patrol.
Part of this was that around the same time, the US government reformed the Bracero Program,
which allowed Mexican nationals to get legal working status in the US.
And that became much more popular after this time.
So a lot of these ranchers and farmers started making sure that their workers kind of went
through a legal path to gain working status in the United States.
And some of it was just that like, there was blowback to this program,
it wasn't very popular, all of the massive public raids,
and kind of as a result, border patrol apprehensions
plummeted the next year in 1955.
The task forces that had once captured thousands of migrants in a day
were disbanded and demobilized.
And for a little while, it seemed as if the border patrol
had gone into hibernation.
Of course, that, Caitlin, was not the case.
And in part two, we're going to talk about the fact that we haven't even talked about
any of the worst shit that the Border Patrol gets up to in this episode, because that's
how much worse it gets.
Oh, yay.
Can't wait to hear about it.
So how are you feeling?
I feel pretty terrible. That's good, I love it when people feel terrible.
I'm always like, oh, I can't wait to be a guest
on Behind the Bastards.
And then every time I do it, I'm like, oh, yes,
I'm reminded by how horrible people have been to each other.
Yes, and you were the one who picked this topic
with a text message,
LOL, I think the border patrol sounds fun.
She did not.
There you are, Caitlin.
She did not.
That did never happen.
No.
But yeah, I mean, it's good to be informed
about these things.
So I appreciate learning and being further informed about it.
So yeah, thank you.
Thank you for that.
Yep.
You're welcome, Caitlin.
Thank you for coming on.
Is there a place as people might be able to find you, listen to you, ways to support your work?
Well, there certainly are places to do that, starting with, you can follow me personally
on Twitter and Instagram at Caitlin Durante.
You can also check out my podcast right here on this network.
It's called The Bechdel Cast.
I co-host it with Jamie Loftus and we talk
about the representation of women in film and just film in general, examining
it through an intersectional feminist lens. So that is what we do and you can
yeah check it out. Are you doing any screenwriting classes right now? Oh, yes, yes I am.
Thank you so much for bringing that up.
I also teach screenwriting on account of a master's degree in screenwriting that I absolutely
hate to mention or ever just bring up.
But it does allow me to teach online classes, so if that's of any interest to anyone, go
to my website, CaitlinDurante.com, slash classes, and I usually have new sections coming up
starting soon at any given point.
And if you want to learn from me, I don't teach screenwriting, but I do teach screamwriting,
which is where you sit down with a pencil and paper
and I scream at you, and then eventually
you give me money to go away.
That sounds very educational.
Sounds like what I do.
Sounds like my full-time job.
We all have to have an extra couple of grishes.
So either pay Caitlin for an actual service
or pay me to abuse you either way
Don't love that as a line
But you know what Sophie look everybody look you gotta you gotta be mean to the audience Sophie you gotta
Don't know about you. I love them. I appreciate them
Wait, and I appreciate you Robert. So
kindness it is and I appreciate you Robert, so kindness.
Is there any way in which you think that like closing out
a podcast is similar to making love
just to bring things full circle?
Wow, good question.
Here's how closing a podcast is like making love.
Both of them are inherently disappointing and
that's the end of the episode. Both of them are inherently disappointing and... Uh... Uh...
That's the end of the episode.
You can follow Robert and I, right?
Okay, on Twitter, you can follow us at bastardspot
on Twitter and Instagram, we have a T public store.
Uh, that's it, bye.
Bye.
Bye.
I want to be one of the world's biggest drag queens. You've heard the name Marsha P. Johnson, trans icon, revolutionary, saint.
They call me a legend in my own time.
But who was she, really?
She's strutting up there, waving to the policemen in the cars,
pay it no mind.
I'm a woman, a real woman.
Marcia also survived homelessness, sex work,
and police violence.
And in 1992, her body was found in the Hudson River.
Her death remains unsolved.
Marcia was pulled out of the water, right over the Hudson River. Her death remains unsolved. Marsha was pulled out of the water,
right over the edge here.
Afterlives is a podcast about how trans lives we've lost
have reshaped our world.
Marsha will tell us who she was in her own words.
You're gonna be gagging.
Just get your heart ready for heart failure.
At a time when trans rights are under attack, her story is more urgent than ever.
Listen to Afterlives on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jan Masilek was a model of German corporate success.
It seemed so damn simple for him.
Also, it turned out, a fraudster.
Where does the money come from?
That was something that I always was questioning myself.
But what if I told you that was the least interesting thing
about him?
His secret office was less than 500 meters down the road.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Certain things in my life since then have gone terribly wrong.
I don't know if they followed me to my home.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story here,
because this ties together the Cold War with the new one.
Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
From iHeart Podcasts, before social media, before the internet, before cable news, there
was Alan Berg.
You dig what I do.
You have a need.
Unfortunately, you have no sense of humor.
That's why you can't ever enjoy this show, and that's why you're a loser.
He was the first, and the original shock shot.
That scratchy, irreverent kind of way of talking to people.
You're as dumb as the rest, that's, I can't take it anymore.
I don't agree with you all the time.
I don't want you to, I hope that you pick me apart.
His voice changed media, his death shocked the nation.
And it makes me so angry that he got himself killed because he had a big mouth.
KOA morning talk show host Alan Berg reportedly was shot and killed tonight in downtown Denver.
He pointed to the Denver phone book and said, well, there are probably two million suspects.
This guy aggravated everybody.
From iHeart Podcasts, this is Live Wire, the loud life and shocking murder of Alan Berg.
Listen on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Explore the winding halls of historical true crime
with Holly Fry and Maria Trimarchi, hosts of Criminalia,
as they uncover curious cases from the past.
The legend of the highwayman suggests men dominated the field, but tell that to Lady
Catherine Ferrars, known as the Wicked Lady, who terrorized England in the mid-1600s.
Her legend persists nearly 400 years after her death.
Hear the story of the gentleman robber, the romantic darling of the ladies, and a tale about a wager over a sack of potatoes.
But you'll have to tune in to learn who won that one.
Some highwaymen were well-mannered or faked it.
People were concerned about the romanticism of robbers, but most were just thugs.
Highwaymen are in the hot seat this season.
Call them robbers or bandits.
Some are legendary figures.
Listen to stories about historical crimes on Criminalia now,
plus the cocktails and mocktails inspired by each.
Listen to Criminalia on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello world, but specifically Australia.
This is Robert Evans, host the bastards And I just wanted my Australian listeners in particular to know that I stood up for you against Caitlin's
Cruelty just a minute ago
She pronounced the name of your greatest city
Melbourne Melbourne like a savage. Yeah, I said Melbourne and then yeah, okay. Well, what about the people who live in Sydney
or other cities in Australia?
There's one city in Australia,
its name is Melbourne,
and that's the end of this digression.
Hello, Caitlin Durante, guest for today's episode.
How are you doing?
Well, I would be doing better
if you would pronounce my last name correctly speaking of mispronunciation
Durante Caitlin yes, Durante Durante
I think we've all learned a lesson about maybe not judging each other because it's impossible to ever know how words are supposed to be
Said he thinks Ariana Grande his name is Ariana Grande
So, you know Sophie you've been giving me guff about that one for a while as it deserves
Mm-hmm.
Well, now I'm sad.
Don't be sad, Robert.
This is part two of our episodes.
If we didn't get to pick on a white man
at the beginning of an episode,
then like, what's the point?
Yeah, this is a whole episode about, I don't know.
Yeah, wait, Sophie. It's part two
of our Border Patrol series.
Let's pass the Bechdel test right now, Sophie.
Oh, Caitlin, I'm really enjoying the bluish shirt
you're wearing right now.
Oh my gosh, well, I'm so glad you brought it up
because it's a Paddington shirt that says,
migration is not a crime,
which is relevant to today's episode.
Oh, wow.
It really is relevant to today's episode
that we're recording.
It is, but then I said Paddington
and that messed up the Bechdel test.
I was like, are we gendering Paddington right now?
Cause that didn't-
Paddington is a non-binary asexual icon.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
So kind of passed the Bechdel test.
Okay, Robert, you wanna do almost your show
behind the bastards right now?
I don't actually know if we passed the Bechdel test there,
but you know what test we did pass
is the writing for many hours about the border patrol test,
which is a more important test, I think.
So, you know, this one, we're splitting up a little bit weirdly over the course of two
weeks because my entire life and schedule has been continually thrown into chaos.
So I do apologize for this one being done a little bit differently than others are done.
On December 6th, 2018, seven-year-old Jacqueline Call crossed the US-Mexico border near a place called Antelope Wells, New Mexico.
She was with her father, 29-year-old Neri Call.
Both were Kekchi Maya, and they'd lived most of their lives in the Alta Verapaz region of Guatemala.
Starving and desperate, she and her family turned themselves into the border patrol.
When Jacqueline was taken into their custody, she was already beginning to show signs of illness,
what would turn out to have been a streptococcal infection.
DHS maintains that they conducted an initial screening
and that there was no evidence
of health issues in the little girl.
Jacqueline was placed on a Border Patrol bus,
feverish and vomiting from severe dehydration.
Eight hours after being taken into custody,
she began to suffer seizures.
She died the next day. Gomez Alonso, age 8, crossed the AOS Mexico
border sometime around December 18th. He and his father Augustin were members of
the Chuj people, another Mayan group who came from the Huehuatenango region of
Guatemala. Gomez spent six days in border patrol
custody, shuttled around from New Mexico to El Paso, and then back to New Mexico to be interned in a detention
facility named near Alamogordo. He started to show symptoms of sickness on
the 24th. He was taken to the hospital where he was tested for the cold but not
for influenza, which he had. He was given medicine that could not help him and
sent back to jail where he died on Christmas Eve 2018.
Oh no.
Yep, good times.
That's awful.
Yeah, it's real bad.
The deaths of Gomez and Jacqueline
were briefly very big news in the United States.
It was believed that the two were the first child
immigrant deaths in border patrol custody since 2010.
In 2019 though, it was revealed that another child,
Daryln Cordova-Vall of El Salvador,
had actually died back in September 2018 under similar circumstances.
The Trump administration received a lot of blame both for covering this death up to try to influence the midterm elections and for their failure to
push DHS to take any meaningful action to stop kids from dying at the border.
Three dead children is a tragedy, but their little corpses are actually just the top of an iceberg of dead people,
many of them Guatemalan, that we can lay at the feet of Border Patrol agents.
And you might be surprised to learn how that whole situation came about. You want to hear about this,
Caitlin? You excited?
I guess I have to. Also, what colorful language you used in terms of the corpses are the
top of an iceberg? I mean, wow.
Yeah, you know, I think if you're gonna talk about dead kids,
you should do it with a little bit of panaz,
pizzazz, panache.
All right, I'm ready, keep going.
All right, so let's talk about the Border Patrol
and in Central America, we're gonna talk about
something I don't think a lot of people know about
because usually as a rule,
when we talk about how bad the Border Patrol is,
we talk about like how mean they are
to people who come up to the border.
But we don't talk about what a lot of Border Patrol guys did
in the countries that these people are fleeing from
before people started fleeing from those countries.
So this is gonna be fun.
Okay, I'm ready.
This is gonna be a good time for everybody.
So John P. Longan was a US Border Patrol agent in the 1940s and 50s.
He worked near the Mexican border close to where both Jaclyn and Gomez crossed over. Most sources you find on the matter will note that
he had a reputation for violence, but this was not at all uncommon among the men of the Border Patrol, nor is it uncommon now.
During Operation Wetback, when the Border Patrol reformed itself into a
paramilitary force to wage war on Mexican immigrants, Longan ran
the patrol's equivalent of a military intelligence service. Longan's base was
an unmarked building near Alameda. He and his men interrogated captured migrants,
extracted information, and used it to find and capture
other groups of migrants.
Few of the men who endured these interrogations
ever spoke about it, but a lot of what happened
in those cells probably verged
on what we'd consider torture.
Longin was good at his job,
and his performance in Operation Wetback earned him
a transfer to the State Department's Public Safety Program.
Now this was, in in reality a CIA operation,
geared at providing counter-insurgency training
and advice to allied nations
combating communist insurgencies.
The CIA handpicked a number of border patrol agents
to travel to places like Venezuela, Thailand,
the Dominican Republic, and Guatemala.
They particularly liked recruiting guys like Longan
because they were likely to speak Spanish.
Now, the way the State Department framed this program
was training law enforcement.
So, yeah, the State Department framed this program
as training law enforcement.
The reality though is that Longan
and his fellow border patrolmen were sent over
to places like Guatemala to create and train death squads.
During Operation Wetback, border patrol administrators
had described their work as fighting back against an invasion.
In Guatemala, where Longan arrived in 1965, he was finally able to wage a real war using real weapons.
I'm going to quote now from an article in The Nation.
Quote, Longan taught local intelligence and police agencies how to create death squads to target political activists,
deploying tactics that he had earlier used to capture migrants on the border.
He arrived in Guatemala in late 1965, where he put into place a paramilitary unit that,
early the next year, would execute what he called Operacion Limpieza, or Operation Cleanup.
Within three months, this unit had conducted over 80 raids and multiple extrajudicial assassinations,
including an action that, over the course of four days, captured, tortured, and executed more than 30 prominent left opposition leaders. The
military dumped their bodies into the sea while the government denied any
knowledge of their whereabouts. According to Stuart Schrader and his
forthcoming Badges Without Borders, How Global Counterinsurgency Transformed
American Policing, it was common practice during the Cold War to send
former border patrol agents like Longan to train foreign police through CIA
linked public safety programs, since they were more likely to speak Spanish
than agents from other branches of law enforcement.
In countries like El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala, they did the dirty work that Reagan's
envoys said needed doing.
Until the early 1970s, the United States, according to a 1974 Los Angeles Times report,
was flying its Latin American Death Squad apprentices up to the Border Patrol Academy in Los Fresnos, Texas to receive training from CIA instructors in
the design, manufacture, and potential use of bombs and incendiary devices.
Lungen himself in 1957 clearly described what he thought he was doing at the border.
We're fighting a war on a wide battlefront.
So that's good.
So they're just basically training kill squads.
They're just telling people to murder people.
Yeah. And they're pulling Border Patrol guys off the line to do some of the
training to be like, oh, you already are good at like tracking down these groups
of people who are trying to like facilitate movement of, uh, of migrants through
the United States. You can use those skills to track down political activists,
except that since it's in a foreign country,
you can just have them brutally murdered by death squads.
And these guys are happy to do it
because they wanna be murdering people anyway.
They just can't quite usually murder people
at the border.
I mean, they do it a lot anyway,
but they have to be a little bit careful,
but you don't have to be careful at all in Guatemala so that's great.
Oh gee whiz. Have you ever been to Guatemala Caitlin? I have not. Have you? It rules. Yeah it yeah I
spent a lot of time there. It's a great country, beautiful place, completely
dysfunctional government and you can see like signs of the horrible civil war
there all over the place just like you'll cross a street
and there'll just be a bunch of guys
who are all missing arms and legs.
You'll be driving through the middle of nowhere
and you'll see like businesses that have been like,
were shot up decades ago with mortars and stuff.
And it all kind of descends from this,
the series of political conflicts
that launch in this period of time,
particularly in the early 1980s, that are
backed by the United States and supported enthusiastically by the Reagan government
and these kind of networks of right-wing murder crews that were trained up and sent out by
the CIA and their buddies in groups like the Border Patrol.
This all starts now and it's cool.
It's great. And it's probably, it's, I mean, it's refugees from these conflicts that are seeking refuge
in the US. Right up to the today.
And then they get here and they're like, well, sorry, fuck you. We're either going to murder you or be negligent and let you die in our custody or send you
back to this war-torn country you're in.
Yeah, if you listen to right-wingers, they'll usually say something like, oh, they should
go back to their own country and fix its problems.
And the reality is that like, well, some of them tried to do that.
And then we trained death squads to murder them and throw their bodies in
rivers and stuff and the ocean and
That's why people are less willing to try to fix problems because they get killed and so do their children
Because of the guys that we hired and trained to kill them and their children when they attempt to fight for economic justice
Oops, it's good. It's really good is what I'm getting at. So Operation Limpieza, which Longin,
the border patrol guy orchestrated himself,
was a major moment in the history
of Guatemala's collapse into a nightmare.
The military intelligence system he helped to build
would eventually eliminate tens of thousands
of leftist activists, sympathizers,
and random people mistaken for either.
More than 200,000 people were massacred openly.
Tens of thousands more were tortured.
In this way, the brave men of the border patrol
wound up at both sides of a tragedy.
The genocide they trained right-wing Guatemalan militants
to execute fell heavily on various Maya peoples
of the region, including the Kekchi and the Chuj.
The right-wing dictator who helped to organize much
of this violence was General Afrain Rios-Mont.
He rose to power in 1981 and 1982,
cooing his way into command
with the help of his good friends at the US.
Ronald Reagan described him as a man of great integrity
who was totally dedicated to democracy.
The nation's write-up continues, quote,
On June 17th, 1982, Guatemalan soldiers
under the command of Rios Montt
entered the San Francisco cattle estate
immediately adjacent to Yalam Bolok.
The estate's owner, a military colonel,
had fled because of guerrilla activity in the area.
Soldiers went house by house,
rounding up workers and their families,
whom they accused of supporting the guerrillas.
They separated children from their parents
and killed them by slashing
their stomachs or smashing their heads against poles. Women were raped and then
burned alive. The soldiers killed them in with bullets or by beheading. After a
day of slaughter, 350 people were dead. A lone survivor made his way into Mexico
where Guatemalan anthropologist and Jesuit priest Ricardo Fala interviewed
him. The San Francisco massacre was highlighted in Guatemala's 1999 Truth Commission report. After the massacre, Yalambaloc
residents fled along with thousands of others, leaving the border corridor
between Guatemala and Mexico completely depopulated as government troops raised
their villages. Some were captured and killed by the army as they fled. Others
ended up in refugee camps or dispersed throughout Mexico's southern states.
Still others continued on to the United States, beginning the great movement of Guatemalans
to El Norte.
All told, 1.5 million people were displaced by the Guatemalan army's scorched earth campaign
in 1981 and 1982.
Guatemala's Commission for Historical Clarification called the violent displacement in the Mayachuj
region an act of genocide.
Young Felipe Gomez-Alazano's father, he was the little kid, one of the little kids who died.
Augustin Gomez-Perez was a child of 11 during that execute.
Yalan Balak's villagers stayed away for 14 years, returning only after the signing
of the peace accords in 1996.
So that's cool.
What can you say besides that's horrible?
You can say that like we're focusing on Guatemala right here because it's one where there's
a bit more documentation, but like this should happen in El Salvador.
It happened in a bunch of different parts of Latin and Central America where, you know,
refugees come from all the time now.
It was, it was, it's still in a lot of ways going on today.
If you want to read about like plan Columbia and stuff,
like there's aspects of this
that are very much still occurring
and that the border patrol still winds up getting tied up
and from time to time.
And that's great.
Good grief.
Yeah.
This is like the stuff that part of me
that like is optimistic wants to believe that,
oh, if people just knew this, like knew how this all,
how US policy and US plotting played into the tragedy
being suffered by these people
and like the insecurity of these regions,
they would have better attitudes
towards, you know, Guatemalan immigration and whatnot
into the United States.
And then the part of me that has been paying attention
for the last several decades knows that like,
no, actually people would cheer the murders of the folks
and the destruction of these areas
because Americans have been so thoroughly
broken by propaganda that the people who are still on the right and still broadly pro-American
can't be convinced by any reason that any amount of murder or violence is not justified
by the fact that America is cool as hell. It is this, oh, what a toxic mentality that we as Americans, or at least some of us have,
because like, and this is, I'm not about to say anything new or profound here, but the
fact that, you know, the white European settlers were escaping the same, you know, kind of civil
unrest or religious persecution or whatever it was that caused them to fled their countries.
And then we settled here by killing millions of indigenous people. And now we're like,
well, our borders are closed now.
Sorry, everyone.
And it's like, how can you live,
how can these people live with the hypocrisy
of that simple fact?
Because they're shit.
Anyway. They're shit.
So most of these death squads
were trained in the United States because like, like hey if you're gonna build a death squad for a foreign country you don't want to like train it there.
That's kind of gauche. So you bring them into your country to train them there because you're you're you know you're good at training death squads.
So the facility where they actually trained a lot of these death squads and again not just in Guatemala but for places like Columbia and El Salvador all throughout
fucking world the place where they would like take these men to teach them how to be terrorists how to make bombs and all this shit
Was the Los Fresnos, Texas Border Patrol facility. It was an existing base. It was in a good location
And the Border Patrol was perfectly happy to have men still over there to learn how to become murderous guerrillas,
and then set off terrorist bombs in the middle of their own countries, because they were like,
that sounds like a thing the Border Patrol should be involved with.
Now, the technical investigations course that was given to foreign police there was taught by CIA instructors. It lasted for weeks and it included curriculum like terrorist concepts, terrorist devices,
fabrication and functioning of devices, improvised triggering devices, incendiaries, and assassination
weapons, a discussion of various weapons which may be used by the assassin.
And when you read it like that, you can kind of trick yourself into thinking it might not
be like, it might be a reasonable thing for cops to learn, right?
Of course cops might need to learn about terrorist concepts
and the kind of weapons assassins use.
But these were not just informational courses,
they were instructed.
So the police who attended weren't just learning,
oh, here's weapons that assassins sometimes use.
They were learning like,
if you're going to assassinate somebody,
here's a variety of different weapons
that you can use to assassinate people.
They were just learning like,
here's different ways terrorists build triggers for bombs.
They were learning, here's how to build triggers
for the bombs you're going to make to kill people.
The reality of the whole program
came out during congressional investigations in the 1970s.
And I'm gonna quote now from a book titled
Instruments of Statecraft, US guerrilla warfare,
counterinsurgency, and
counterterrorism, which is available in full for free online right now.
Quote, during congressional investigations led by Senator James Albaresque in 1973, eight
officials admitted that the Los Fresnos sessions, what the press would call the bomb school,
offered lessons not in bomb disposal, but in bomb making.
The course is not designed to, nor does it prepare the student to be a bomber explosive technical disposal technician.
The rest of the instruction introduces trainees to commercially
available materials and home laboratory techniques and the manufacture of
explosives and incendiaries. Different types of explosive techniques and booby
traps and their construction and use by terrorists are demonstrated. And again
all these classes were taught at a border patrol facility and while the
main instructors were CIA agents, it was not just the
convenient location that made the agency use Los Fresnos. The border patrol had
always had within it the seeds of a national secret police force. Decades
before CBP agents were operating in unmarked snatch vans on the streets of
Portland, and it was Customs and Border Patrol who was doing that, they helped to
train foreign police to do the exact same thing and Border Patrol who was doing that. They helped to train foreign police
to do the exact same thing and much worse besides.
So that's fun.
Like I keep wanting to say like,
ah, what a fun thing.
What a, cause I don't know what else to say.
It's just like this kind of litany of horrors
that we've all just kind of blithely funded our entire lives
even though a great deal of information exists
on how bad this agency has always been.
Because the only real,
if you actually like get into it as we are today,
the only real conclusion is that like,
oh, maybe when you have people whose job it is
to police the border,
they're just going to be the worst people.
And maybe you shouldn't police the border at all
because this happened.
But I'm sure that-
Borders are completely arbitrary and mean nothing.
And why have we decided that crossing them is a crime?
Yeah, yeah, it's bad.
And the kind of people who decide that, like, they want to make their whole lives about punishing desperate people for the quote-unquote
crime of crossing a border are
Monsters and when you start giving them guns and power they use it to enable
Genocides and political oppression abroad and then inevitably do so back at home, which is what's happening now
So when it comes to government agencies that Americans,
particularly liberals, rage against,
Customs and Border Patrol has spent most of its history
kind of sliding under the mainstream radar.
But liberals who only started paying attention
to the agency after Trump took office
might be surprised to know that NYT reporter
or New York Times reporter John Crudson
won a Pulitzer Prize in 1980
for a series of articles about the Border Patrol
whose titles would not look at all out of place in 2020.
Titles like,
Border Patrol Sweeps of Illegal Aliens
Leave Scores of Children in Jails.
That sounds a little familiar.
The Intercept, summarizing his work, notes,
Patrollers, he reported, regularly engaged in beatings,
murder, torture, and rape,
including the rape of girls as young as 12.
Some patrollers ran their own in-house
outlaw vigilante groups.
Others maintained ties with groups like the Klan.
Border Patrol agents also used the children of migrants,
either as bait or as a pressure tactic to force confessions.
When coming upon a family,
agents tried to apprehend the youngest member first,
with the idea that relatives would give themselves up
so as not to be separated.
It may sound cruel, one patroller said, but it often worked.
Separating migrant families was not official government policy in the years Crudson was
reporting on abuses, but left to their own devices, border patrol agents regularly took
children from parents, threatening that they would be separated forever unless one of them
confessed that they had entered the country illegally.
Mothers, especially, an agent said, would always break.
Once a confession was extracted, children might be placed in foster care or left to languish in federal jails.
Others were released into Mexico alone, far from their homes, forced to survive, according to public defenders,
by garbage cans scrounging, living on rooftops, and whatever.
Ten-year-old Sylvia Alvarado, separated from her grandmother as they crossed into Texas, was kept in a small cinder block cell for more than three
months. In California, 13-year-old Julia Perez, threatened with being arrested in
a denied food, broke down and told her investigator that she was Mexican, even
though she was a US citizen. The Border Patrol released Perez into Mexico with
no money or way to contact her US family. Such cruelties weren't one-offs, but part
of a pattern, encouraged and committed by officers up the chain of command. The violence was
both gratuitous and systemic, including stress techniques later associated with the war in
Iraq.
I mean, wow.
What kind of truly inhuman monster do you have to be?
To join the border control? human monster do you have to be to use to be yes and more specifically to use children
as bait or to like snatch them first as just like I can't even form a sentence that is
yeah it's not great I mean the the sentence that you said, like,
I got teary-eyed with the mothers broke first or what?
Oh yeah, that was horrible.
No, it's, I don't know.
You know, when I talk about how this all
actually makes me feel, there's no way to do that
without repeatedly urging other people
to commit federal crimes
Up to and including assault and murder. So I'm just like gonna stop right there and continue talking about the Border Patrol instead
Because we shouldn't do that on a podcast
One tactic the Border Patrol came to adore was the locking of migrants in freezing cold rooms called hillieras or ice boxes
This goes back
at least to the 1980s, according to Crudson. Agents would tell prisoners, in this place,
you have no rights. Since these people had committed no crime beyond crossing a line
in the dirt, their detention served no real purpose beyond cruelty. Cruelty was the point.
Border Patrol agents throughout the 70s, 80s, and 90s were repeatedly documented torturing
migrants. A popular method was handcuffing them to squad cars and then making them run alongside the
video as it half-dragged them to the border.
Outright murder was common as well.
One patrol agent told Crudson that agents commonly,
pushed illegals off cliffs so it would look like an accident.
Much of the agency's behavior was indistinguishable from that of a straight-up gang.
Agents with INS, Border Patrol's parent agency at the time,
were caught trading Mexican women to the Los Angeles Rams
in exchange for season tickets.
What?
Yeah, that's the thing that happened.
Oh.
Yeah.
I can't.
Brave men and women of the border patrol.
Wearing the green.
Oh my God, it's time for an ad break
so that I can go vomit.
Yeah, you know who doesn't trade women for sports tickets?
Vomit, vomit, vomit, it's an ad break.
Products.
And services.
Products and services.
You've heard the name Marsha P. Johnson, trans icon, revolutionary saint.
They call me a legend in my own time.
But who was she?
Really?
She's strutting up there waving to the policemen in the cars, pay it no mind.
I'm a woman, a real woman.
Marcia also survived homelessness, sex work, and police violence.
And in 1992, her body was found in the Hudson River.
Her death remains unsolved. Marcia was pulled out of the water right over the edge here.
Afterlives is a podcast about how trans lives we've lost have reshaped our world.
Marsha will tell us who she was in her own words.
You're going to be gagging.
Just get your heart ready for heart failure.
At a time when trans rights are under attack,
her story is more urgent than ever.
Listen to Afterlives on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jan Masilek was a model of German corporate success.
It seemed so damn simple for him.
Also, it turned out, a fraudster.
Where does the money come from?
That was something that I always was questioning myself.
But what if I told you that was the least interesting thing about him?
His secret office was less than 500 meters down the road.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Certain things in my life since then have gone terribly wrong.
I don't know if they followed me to my home.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story.
Because this ties together the Cold War with the new one. Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
From iHeart podcasts, before social media, before the internet, before cable news, there
was Alan Berg.
You dig what I do.
You have a need.
Unfortunately, you have no sense of humor.
That's why you can't ever enjoy this show and that do. You have a need. Unfortunately, you have no sense of humor.
That's why you can't ever enjoy this show, and that's why you're a loser.
He was the first and the original shock shot.
That scratchy, irreverent kind of way of talking to people.
You're as dumb as the rest.
That's, I can't take anyone.
I don't agree with you all the time.
I don't want you to.
I hope that you pick me apart.
His voice changed media.
His death shocked the nation.
And it makes me so angry that he got himself killed
because he had a big mouth.
KOA morning talk show host Allen Berg reportedly
was shot and killed tonight in downtown Denver.
He pointed to the Denver phone book and said,
well, there are probably two million suspects.
This guy aggravated everybody.
From iHeart Podcasts, this is Live Wire,
the loud life and shocking murder of Alan Berg.
Listen on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Explore the winding halls of historical true crime
with Holly Fry and Maria Trimarchi, hosts of Criminalia,
as they uncover curious cases from the past.
The legend of the highwayman suggests men dominated the field, but tell that to Lady
Catherine Ferrer's, known as the Wicked Lady, who terrorized England in the mid-1600s.
Her legend persists nearly 400 years after her death.
Hear the story of the gentleman robber, the romantic darling of the ladies, and a tale about a wager over a sack of potatoes.
But you'll have to tune in to learn who won that one.
Some highwaymen were well-mannered or faked it.
People were concerned about the romanticism of robbers,
but most were just thugs.
Highwaymen are in the hot seat this season.
Call them robbers or bandits.
Some are legendary figures.
Listen to stories about
historical crimes on Criminalia now, plus the cocktails and mocktails inspired by each. Listen
to Criminalia on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back. Oh, we're having a good time.
And we're back. Oh, we're having a good time.
Mm-hmm.
So, INS agents were also caught supplying Mexican prostitutes
to congressmen and judges in exchange for political favors.
Over time, the border patrol found ways
to get over their longstanding conflicts
with Texan ranchers.
In numerous cases, they worked out deals with ranch owners
whereby they would hold off on immigration raids
until right before payday,
giving ranchers the use of migrant bodies
without the need to pay them.
Border patrol men got to hunt and fish for free
on their ranch as payment.
So this is kind of how they worked out
that little set of disagreements,
that little, the uprising in Texas
that had been sparked by a lot of this.
So they would exploit the labor
and then have an agreement with the border patrol
and be like, okay, seize them on this day.
Yeah, so that I don't have to pay them at all.
Oh my God.
It's good.
Yeah, Crudson, that New York Times journalist,
even documented that one of the ranches border patrol
worked out an arrangement with
was owned by President Lyndon B. Johnson
while he was president.
Oh, holy shit.
Good stuff.
Between 1985 and 1990, federal agents gunned down 22 migrants
just in the area around San Diego.
The Intercept reports, quote,
on April 18th, 1986, for instance,
patroller Edward Cole was beating 14-year-old Eduardo
Carrillo Estrada on the US side
of the border's chain link fence when he stopped and shot Eduardo's younger brother,
Humberto, in the back.
Humberto was standing on the other side of the fence on Mexican soil.
A court ruled that Cole, who had previous incidents of shooting through the fence at
Mexicans, had reason to fear for his life from Humberto and use justifiable force.
Such abuses persisted through the 1990s and 2000s.
In 1993, the House Subcommittee on International Law, Immigration, and Refugees held hearings
on Border Patrol abuse, and its transcript is a catalog of horrors. One
former guard, Tony Hefner, at the INS Detention Center in Port Isabel, Texas,
reported that a young Salvadoran girl was forced to perform personal duties
like dancing the lombada for INS officials. In 2011, Heffner
published a memoir with more accusations of sexual abuse by, as Heffner writes,
the INS brass. Roberto Martinez, who worked with the San Diego-based US-Mexico
border program for the American Friends Service Committee, testified that human
and civil rights violations by the Border Patrol run the gamut of abuse as
imaginable from rape to murder. Agents regularly seized original birth certificates
and green cards from Latino citizens,
leaving the victim with the financial burden
of having to go through a lengthy process
of applying for a new document.
Rapes and sexual abuse in INS detention centers
around the United States, Martina said,
seem to be escalating throughout the border region.
Okay, I have to talk through something here.
So, in theory, law enforcement is there to prevent crime, stop crime, find criminals,
et cetera.
We know that that's barely what they do, right?
But that's in theory, the purpose of law enforcement. And so by extension, border patrol,
if it is, since it is for some reason illegal to,
you know, cross a border undocumented
or without the proper documentation,
that is quote a crime,
according to ridiculous standards, right?
And I also understand in theory,
the concept of like punishing things that are actual crime.
That makes sense to me as long as it's done responsibly,
which it never is.
The idea of seeing crossing a border
without the proper documentation
and deciding that the punishment for that
crime warrants things like human trafficking, murder, sexual assault, all manner of other
horrible, horrible, unmentionable things.
Like where, I just, it is the most disgusting thing.
I think the problem here that you're having
is in thinking that the goal,
the purpose is ever to prevent crime.
Whereas the reality is the purpose is to protect,
it's to protect whiteness.
Exactly, yes.
Yeah, and it's to provide an outlet for
for fascists in this country to do horrible violence on people
in a way that is rather than being disorganized and sort of
being anti-state and being something that like causes disorder being
violence that they are allowed to carry out that that enforces the the kind of the state itself that like that like backs up the existence of the state.
Right like you have all these you have a least tremendously violent people right.
And you can do a couple of things to them, but they're there.
So either you try to like deal with them and de-radicalize them and make them less dangerous,
you kill them, or as we do, you give them guns
and make them unaccountable and allow them
to do horrible violence to large groups of people
who have no political agency.
Yes, that is exactly what it is.
People who are like, well, the general population thinks that being a member of a hate group
like the KKK is bad.
So I'm going to do the same exact things that the KKK does, but it's being masked as a
government agency.
Like basically this terrorist organization,
this hate group is protected and quote justified
because it is a government agency.
Even though they're committing the same heinous acts
in the name of under the guise of some kind of protection but truly it is the like
you said protection of whiteness and criminalizing being not white and that's the that's the
only way it's ever been and that's the only way it ever will be as long as we have a border and we consider
there to be some sort of fundamental value in the sanctity of that border. And that's
good.
I want to cry about it.
Yeah, it's good to do that sometimes. Other times, it's good to continue reading a podcast script. Yes, which I will now do okay
Because this is how I deal with problems
Mm-hmm. This is the only way that I deal with problems is by
Reading podcast scripts. I mean informing informing them the the the people helps
Yeah, that's that's a way that you can describe this is informing the people.
I don't know.
In 1979, Maria Contreras, nine months pregnant,
crossed back into the United States from Mexico
legally after shopping for food.
Border Patrol agents found this suspicious
and they tortured her to try to get her to reveal information
about undocumented migrants.
She died under interrogation, leaving six children behind.
This sort of thing happened all the time.
We have documentation about Maria Contreras's case,
but this is maybe even a daily matter.
And it's something that continues to this day
in dark and terrifying corners of the border
where such things are not documented most of the time,
but which we all pay for.
Throughout all of this, the Border Patrol and INS were sort of the redheaded stepchild of federal agencies with law enforcement powers.
They were barely funded because if you can imagine this illegal immigration was not something people cared about so for most of these period this period while all the horrible things we've been talking about have been happening border control has.
Border Patrol has basically no money and very few agents considering like what it's supposed to be watching in its purview. It's just kind of a place where we keep all of our most violent law enforcement officers and they don't have the money to do much,
but nobody's watching them.
So they can carry out horrific acts of violence.
And that's the Border Patrol and really INS too, for the most part.
and really INS too for the most part. Yeah, border states probably had, you know, not probably,
border states had debates on the matter
of illegal immigration.
It was certainly like, you know, a political issue
in Texas and New Mexico and stuff.
But random people in Duluth, random Americans in Duluth
or, you know, Wichita or Bumblefuck, Montana or whatever,
didn't really care about the border, right?
The 80s and 90s, it was not a big vote getter
for most of that period of time.
Now, at the start of the Clinton administration,
there were only about 4,000 border patrol agents
watching both Canada and Mexico,
which is not a lot if you think about
how big both of those borders are.
They're many miles long.
Yeah, they're pretty big.
In 1993, NAFTA became a thing,
the North American free trade
thingamajigger, and illegal immigration grew by leaps and bounds alongside right-wing fear-mongering
about illegal immigration. The Border Patrol more than doubled in size by the turn of the millennium.
So this is like the first thing that really leads to a massive surge in the Border Patrol,
is NAFTA becomes a thing and suddenly a shitload more people are trying to cross the border.
Illegal immigration by the end of the 1990s is a major national political issue and the Border Patrol more than doubles under Clinton.
In the year 2000, our nation's peak year for illegal immigration, Border Patrol agents apprehended 1.6 million people.
This though was just a fraction of the total that got through.
Border patrol agents were unhappy about the fact
that most undocumented migrants
were still getting through the border
and that the many rules,
that there were many rules in place to stop them from,
you know, doing operation wetback type stuff
and basically carrying out an ethnic cleansing
to get rid of non-white people from border areas.
From an article in Politico, quote,
near the top of the border patrol's list of complaints
was the policy known internally as CARP,
or the Catch and Release Policy.
By the end of the Clinton administration,
80% of people who were caught and released with a notice
to appear at a deportation hearing never showed up in court.
But despite millions of border crossings,
the border patrol had the financing in 2001
for just 60 detainees a day across the entire country.
They could turn themselves in and have a high confidence that they wouldn't be returned
to their home countries, recalls Michael Chertoff, who would go on to become President George
W. Bush's second secretary of homeland security.
Mostly agents just asked border violators for their names, and then did a cursory background
check before returning them to Mexico or releasing them into the United States.
Sometimes they ran fingerprints, sometimes they didn't.
In June 1999, agents captured one of the FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives, a rapist and serial
killer named Angel Maturino Resendez, aka the Railway Killer, and unknowingly released
him back into Mexico, whereupon Resendez promptly sneaked back into the United States and murdered four more people before being apprehended by
Texas Rangers. So the story of the railway killer was of course used to justify the need for more funding to the Border Patrol.
What the whole story really illustrates is that even when the Border Patrol had occasional chances to actually protect Americans by
apprehending people, they were as likely to fuck up as anything because most of them were shit ass incompetent
in anything besides doing violence.
So, 9-11 happens.
You remember 9-11?
I remember.
It's good, you're not supposed to forget it.
Now, 9-11 happens, and if you were live
and cognizant at the time, you might remember
that basically everybody and their grandma
was obsessed with the imminent possibility
that Al-Qaeda might drive a regiment of terrorist nuclear tanks or whatever across
the Texas border.
As someone who lived in Texas at the time, there were a bunch of people freaking out
about how like terrorist hit squads were going to be making their way up through the border.
Kids at my like suburban Texas high school were certain that Al-Qaeda was going to be
sending people to shoot up our school because like Plano, Texas was real high on fucking
Osama Bin Laden's hit list.
Wait, did they think they were going to like
go to Mexico first and then cross the border?
Is that what they thought?
Yeah, it didn't really scan a lot.
I mean, I'll say this.
I think that it's maybe not talked about enough.
The degree to which guys like John Milneas
and movies like Red Dawn prepared everybody
to believe the bullshit the Bush administration said about how terrorists
were gonna be sneaking through the border.
But like, yeah, whatever.
It was very dumb.
It was a very dumb time.
But also like, you know, a bunch of guys had worked together
to ram planes into the Pentagon
and destroy two skyscrapers in New York City.
People were willing to believe
a lot of terrible things were possible.
And because the border, you know, right wing pundits had been convincing everybody that
the border was this dangerous and unmonitored place for so long, people were like, oh my
God, of course the terrorists will try there.
They never did.
But you know, they still might.
Any day now, Caitlin, any day Al-Qaeda's gonna finally get a squad up there.
Nobody will notice all of the, anyway, whatever.
So yeah, Tom Ridge, the former governor of Pennsylvania,
was made President Bush's Homeland Security Czar.
Now this was before the Department
of Homeland Security existed.
That came about in like November of 2002.
But as soon as like 9-11 is a thing,
Bush is like, oh, we gotta have somebody whose job is to think about safety
for the country, which like, there were already a bunch
of people doing that and it hadn't helped.
And, but anyway, whatever.
So Tom Ridge is like, is made the czar of Homeland security
and he made border control one of his priorities.
He realized pretty much immediately that the border Patrol was going to be an issue for
him.
Robert Bonner, who worked with Ridge and later became the first head of Customs and Border
Patrol, told Politico, quote, within the INS structure, they were the poor stepchild.
That was how most of INS viewed them at every level.
They weren't appreciated and weren't viewed with respect, and that created this defensiveness
and insularity within the Border Patrol. There was a lot of debate about what to do with the organization and whether or not to
just take all the different groups that handle various border related things and merge them
into one border agency.
But that would have meant several different cabinet secretaries would have each lost tiny
amounts of power and money because you know, you have this group that's like, you know,
your job is to look for war criminals who might have like accidentally gotten citizenship
or green cards.
You have this other group whose job is to like,
handle customs enforcement.
You have the border patrol,
you have like the group that's job is to go around
and look for people who might be violating immigration law.
You have all these different groups
that are like under different sort of people's purview
and putting them all in one like organized border patrol that does everything
would have meant that all of the different cabinet secretaries
lost a little bit of money in power.
So they all vetoed that idea in unison.
No, no, no, no, fuck that shit.
Instead, the decision was made to dissolve INS
and put the border patrol under the purview
of the new Customs and Border Patrol,
which would itself be part of the brand new
Department of Homeland Security.
The final nail in INS's coffin was the fact
that the agency had approved visas
for two of the 9-11 hijackers after 9-11.
So this is kind of what like,
yeah, that's the wrong time to do that.
Somebody probably should have gotten on the phone
immediately after that and been like,
hey, we should run these names.
Just make sure we're not going to embarrass everybody.
But they did.
And when the news came out that INS had approved visas for two of the people who had just carried
out the biggest terrorist attack in the US history, the Bush administration was really
not happy with INS.
And that kind of spelled their doom.
And in fact, when they dissolved the agency, no one from the White House even thought to
call the INS commissioner and tell him.
I'm going to quote again from Politico's article.
INS was such a broken bureaucracy that it would be the single agency in the entire US
government to receive the ultimate death penalty after 9-11 in the wide-ranging
bureaucratic reorganization that led to the Department of Homeland Security. INS
was completely disbanded. Its responsibilities removed from the
Justice Department and its duties reassigned among three new DHS agencies
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, ICE, Citizenship and Imm, ICE, citizenship and immigration services,
CIS, and customs and border protection, CBP, and the newly created DHS would be a reality
in less than a year.
So that's the situation.
Now, the man tasked with creating the CBP was Robert Bonner, a federal judge and a former
DEA head.
His first and most pressing decision was whether or not to change the agency's
famous green uniform, which is obviously more important
than like the rapes, the training of women
for sports tickets and stuff.
Why is that the first order of business?
Why are there any orders of business?
Look, Caitlin, these brave men of the border patrol
who only occasionally commit mass rape and sex trafficking
that includes sex trafficking of 12 year olds and only occasionally torture pregnant women
to death.
Those brave men have a lot of pride in their uniform and they want to know that that uniform
is not going to change.
You know, they have to be presentable.
That's the most important thing.
Most important thing is that they get to still feel like they're part of the old border patrol that they love.
You know, the old border patrol,
it lets them torture all those people
and throw kids into dank freezing cells for months on end,
many of whom are actually American citizens.
That's just how it's important, you know?
Yeah.
So from Politico, quote,
weeks before the new agency officially launched
on March 1st, 2003, he invited all of the border patrol's
20 sector chiefs to Washington to discuss the transition.
They all arrived in DC in full dress green uniforms,
shoes polished, brass buttons gleaming.
As Bonner walked into the room,
everyone stood and snapped to attention.
The new commissioner began his remarks simply,
the Border Patrol will remain green.
The room erupted in applause and cheers.
They're proud of the green.
They were very proud of that uniform, Bonner recalls today.
They were concerned about losing that identity.
Ew.
Who cares about your green uniform?
Oh, the Border Patrol cares.
Like, fuck off and... patrol cares. Fuck off and.
Fucking losers.
Fucking nerds.
See this is why, as I've always said,
and Sophie can back me up on this,
Caitlin, you would be a terrible head
of the border patrol.
Because I don't respect the green.
Exactly.
Well, I don't even, I don't wear green,
but it's because I hate the Celtics.
So I couldn't have a job either.
Okay.
Yeah, see, Sylvie, you'd be bad at this too,
because as a border patrol agent,
you should be trading kidnapped women to the Celtics
in exchange for season tickets.
Oh my God, can we just go to an ad break?
Jesus Christ.
Speaking of the Celtics,
you know who else supports this podcast? Hey, hey, hey, you know who else supports this podcast?
Hey, hey, hey, you know who else is whore?
No, no, no.
Yeah.
Products.
And services.
And we're back.
That Celtics dig,
I just would like to denote that I will keep doing that
and also HiProp.
Yeah, I don't understand who the Celtics are.
I don't understand any of this.
This is all Sophie's fault.
If you love that team, send your death threats to Sophie.
If you love that team, just unfollow me.
Cause we will never be friends.
Also, once again, high prop.
Soccer?
If you don't give a shit about any sports teams in existence,
Tennis maybe?
Follow me.
Yeah.
Except for soccer.
Soccer is allowed.
Soccer is cool.
Soccer is the only sport I respect.
No, soccer is definitely not allowed.
What?
Soccer is allowed.
There is one sport allowed in my ideal world, and it's that game they play in Afghanistan
where they all ride around on horseback with a goat head and people get killed sometimes
because they, it's, yeah.
You just fully roberted this entire thing.
Anyways, follow Caitlin on Twitter and Instagram, she's a great follow.
Continue with your podcast.
And go to Afghanistan to play sports.
Anyway, they were not particularly concerned, the Border Patrol, with making any changes
to reduce the number of migrants killed by Border Patrol agents.
Since 2003, Border Patrol agents have killed at least 97 people. Six of those people were children.
They've also taken repeated action to stop other people from saving lives.
As summers grew more brutal, more and more migrants started dying in the Sonoran Desert.
In 2004, the faith-based organization No More Deaths started leaving gallon jugs of water
out near common footpaths, in the desperate hope that it might stop a few people from
dying horribly in the desert.
They soon noticed that their water bottles were being slashed open.
No More Deaths set up hidden cameras.
They found, in every case, border patrol agents destroying water caches, almost with visible
glee.
You can see one of these videos for yourself in the PBS documentary Need to Know.
Salon.com's description is quite good.
Quote,
Three Border Patrol agents, two men and a woman, are walking along a migrant trail and
approaching a half a dozen one-gallon jugs of water.
The female agent stops in front of the containers and begins to kick them with force down a
ravine.
The bottles crash against rocks, bursting open.
She's smiling.
One of the agents watching her smiles as well,
seeming to take real pleasure in the spectacle.
He says something under his breath
and the word tonk is clearly audible.
Do you know what tonk means?
I don't.
So we talked about wetback in episode one
and how that was the border patrol's kind of old term
for particularly Mexican immigrants
because of the river they have to cross.
Tonk is a new, the new slur that the border patrol uses
for undocumented immigrants.
And it comes from the sound that a flashlight makes
when you hit someone in the head.
Oh my God.
You'll hear this if in any article you read
about the modern border patrol,
that the word tonk is like their standard term for migrants.
And it's a term because of what it sounds like
when they beat these people with flashlights.
Well,
okay, let me just process that.
New slurs were of course,
far from the only changes to hit border patrol
during the Bush years.
By the time President Obama took office,
the border patrol had gone from an underfunded force
of about 9,000 to a 21,000 person army,
the largest federal law enforcement agency in the country.
There are actual armies smaller than the border patrol
and less well equipped.
They're the largest law enforcement agency
in the country now.
So that's good.
All those new officers had to be trained up quick
and this did not leave time for rigorous vetting
and background checking that other federal agents go through.
Border Patrol agents today still have the least average
years of experience of any federal law enforcement agency.
They also have the lowest standards for new recruits.
This may have something to do with the fact
that border patrol agents are involved
in more fatal shootings than any other
federal law enforcement agency.
Yeah, you know, probably.
It's not like any federal law enforcement agency
is good about giving us numbers
about how many people they shoot,
but probably they kill more than any of the others.
Okay, I believe it.
Yeah, one senior DHS official even admitted to Politico,
quote, the agency has created a culture that says,
if you throw a rock at me, you're going to get shot.
Between 2005 and 2012,
roughly one CBP officer was arrested
for misconduct every single day.
During President Obama's first term,
things got so bad that DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano
ordered the CBP to change its institutional definition
of the word corruption,
so they wouldn't have to admit to as many problems
when they were questioned by Congress about all
of the murders it's
Wow again under Obama
Under Obama
It's pretty much impossible no, I just yeah, I
Yeah
Like we're not even really gonna get into into the Trump years in this two parter because
that's like a whole nother thing to start talking about.
Yeah.
Like most of this that we're talking about today, I mean, it's Reagan, uh, Bush senior
Clinton, Bush Jr. and Obama, right?
Those are the guys that this is happening under those are the guys funding this right?
Enthusiastically all all the politicians that everybody thinks
are fine now because Trump is such a such a dick.
Anyway, yeah, it's pretty much impossible to exaggerate
how bad border patrol is and was like I'm gonna guess
that most of our listeners come from a broad position
that like feds are not good, which is fine and accurate.
But even among that company, like even if you're like, oh, federal agents are pretty
much all bad.
It's shocking how bad the agents of the CBP are.
Like it's like it's, it's staggering how shitty they, they particularly become in the
aughts.
Uh, and I'm going to quote from salon again.
There was my, there was the Miami CBP officer who used his law enforcement status to bypass airport security
and personally smuggle cocaine and heroin into Miami.
There was the green uniformed agent in Yuma, Arizona, who was caught smuggling 700 pounds
of marijuana across the border in his green and white Border Patrol truck.
The brand new 26 year old Border Patrol agent who joined a drug smuggling operation to distribute
more than a thousand kilograms of marijuana in Del Rio, Texas.
The 32 year old Border Patrol agent whose wife would tip him off on which buses filled
with illegal immigrants to let through his checkpoint on I-35 in Laredo, Texas.
Some cases were more obvious than others, like the new Border Patrol agent who took
an unusual interest in maps of the agency's sensors along the border and was arrested
just seven months into the job after he sold smugglers those maps for $5,500.
In November 2007, CBP official Thomas Winkowski wrote an agency-wide memo
citing numerous incidents, or as he called them, disturbing events, saying
that the leadership was concerned about the increase in the number of
employee arrests. The memo, never made public but obtained by the Miami Herald,
reminded officers and agents, it is public but obtained by the Miami Herald,
reminded officers and agents, it is our responsibility to uphold the laws, not break the law.
Now, right around that time, internal CBP investigations uncovered that the agency had,
in dozens of cases, hired members of Mexican drug cartels and gangs like MS-13 to be agents.
They'd also hired at least one serial killer, Juan David Ortiz, who murdered
five women during his time as an intelligence analyst for the agency. He is also suspected
of kidnapping a woman. We'll never really know the exact extent of his crimes, and in
that regard, he fits in with another Border Patrol veteran, Esteban Manzanares. It is
possible that Esteban Manzanares was not a serial killer. He hasn't been convicted of
any murders, but he was caught abducting three migrant women,
a mother and her two teenage daughters.
He attempted to bury one alive and he raped another.
And yeah, earlier this year,
an appeals court ruled that his victims
could not sue the federal government
as Manzanares was not acting in his official capacity
as a border patrol agent when he assaulted those women.
Sure, he arrested them during his duties as a border patrol agent, and he took them to a border patrol agent when he assaulted those women. Sure, he arrested them during his duties
as a border patrol agent,
and he took them to a border patrol processing facility
before taking them to a gated compound to assault them,
but he wasn't acting as a border patrol agent.
Oh, wow.
The mental gymnastics,
which people do.
Just legal ones.
Yeah, okay. Yeah. Now, the good news is that a few bad
apples like Manzanaras and Ortiz and also all of the thousands of agents who
got arrested on a nearly daily basis for seven straight years didn't stop the
orchard from detaining more migrants than ever before. During the Obama years
DHS deported more undocumented migrants than ever 400,000 a year as President Obama said in 2011 the presence of so many illegal immigrants make a mockery of all those who are
Trying to immigrate legally
Now yeah
That's good
It's pretty cool. It's pretty cool. What a problem this was. Yeah, so and again
What a problem this was
Yeah, so and again
All of these legal immigrants make a mockery of everyone trying to immigrate illegally the the data shows that during this period It's like fucking seven-year period an average of one Border Patrol agent per day
Almost was arrested for serious crimes like ranging from like rape and sexual assault to attempted murder
To you know drug smuggling like day, a Border Patrol agent basically
was getting arrested during these years.
But that's not making a mockery of like law enforcement
or whatever, yeah.
Yeah, now there were a number of reasons
why things got so bad in Border Patrol.
We've talked about some of them just sort of like
the inherent racist nature of the existence of the Border Patrol. But there are also just sort of some
reasons that you would describe as kind of broadly bureaucratic. There were a bunch of
bureaucratic reasons why it happened too, right? Kind of outside of the inherent problems of policing a border.
For one point, like they were increasing the size of the border patrol faster than any law enforcement agency
had ever been increased.
And that meant bringing in a shitload of people
who weren't qualified.
They had all of this money and they did not have enough
people who could actually responsibly do the job.
So they were just throwing people in chairs
and giving them guns and badges.
Now the issues of hiring a bunch of people for an agency
based on assaulting non-white people
and giving them broad powers
were compounded by structural problems
within the way the Border Patrol was set up.
Most Border Patrol men are agents.
This differs from special agents,
which are the cool dudes like Fox Mulder
that everyone who becomes a fed wants to be.
Special agents can both arrest people and investigate crimes.
Agents only have arresting powers.
They cannot investigate crimes.
Now, because CBP is seen as the shittiest
federal law enforcement agency,
the dumping ground for all of the violent assholes,
our government doesn't like to make them special agents.
According to Politico, quote,
"'In many ways, the difference between the two
is CBP's original sin,
a seemingly minor technical distinction
made in the harried heat of DHS creation a decade ago
that would allow hundreds of cases of corruption
in CBP's Office of Field Operations
and use of force abuses
in the Border Patrol defester for years. The problem was that no one at CBP's Office of Field Operations and Use of Force Abuses in the Border Patrol DeFester for years.
The problem was that no one at CBP received what's known as 1811 authority.
When DHS was set up, ICE was given exclusive 1811 authority to conduct investigations in
the border region.
CBP was only given so-called 1801 authority, a lesser classification that allowed Border
Patrol agents and customs officers to make arrests and enforce federal law, but not investigate. They could be cops, but not
detectives. This didn't particularly matter in the daily performance of CBP's duties.
The borders were patrolled with ports of entry watched, except that CBP was legally prohibited
from policing its own workforce.
Hmm.
Yeah. And it's again, one of these things, every single person who's ever been involved
in running the CBP agrees like, yeah,
this is a real big problem.
Cause it means that they're even less accountable
than other law enforcement agencies.
Cause like nobody- And those ones
are barely accountable.
And those ones are barely accountable.
But like even when border patrol agents commit a crime
that other border patrol agents think is horrible,
like they can't investigate.
Wow.
No accountability.
Holy crap.
Um, yeah, yeah.
Other law enforcement agencies look at border patrol and go, Jesus Christ, those
people are unaccountable when they commit acts of unspeakable violence.
That is bleak.
That is very bleak.
By 2012, uh, the problems in Border Patrol were obvious enough that they spilled out into the public sphere. The Arizona Republic conducted an investigation which showed that agents had killed at least 42 people, 13 of whom were citizens, since 2005.
In none of these killings was any agent known to have faced consequences of any kind.
Congressional pressure forced the agency to submit to an investigation
by the Police Executive Research Forum,
a Washington, D.C.-based law enforcement think tank.
The PERF investigated 67 cases of lethal force
by Border Patrol agents.
They found, among other things,
cases of agents firing at fleeing vehicles.
The report concluded,
"'Too many cases do not appear to meet the test
of objective reasonableness
with regard to the use of deadly force.'" The PERF report advised, among other things, that
agents should not use lethal force on unarmed drivers or rock throwers. The agency rejected
this out of hand, with the head of Border Patrol saying in an interview, I have known
agents who have almost died from being rocked along the border, and I think it was completely
ridiculous that they wanted that prohibition. I should note here that no border patrol officer has ever been killed by Iraq, and I can't
really find evidence of one being seriously injured by Iraq either.
What I can find is that, in 2014, CBP leadership estimated a full 20% of their force was corrupt.
Attempts at reform were made in the last two years of the Obama administration, and in
2016, it looked like things might finally be headed in a less murdery direction but then Donald Trump became the president and here we
are a presidential administration filled with literal Nazis was handed a vast
heavily armed force of sociopaths and rapists who just spent the last two
years being told that they had to rape and murder less and then all of a sudden
they were told whatever you want to do is fine just get these brown people out
of the United States and that's kind of where things stand today
with the border patrol as sort of the turning
into the official armed wing of the racist right
with these CBP and BORTC units set up
using border patrol men being sent into American cities
to police dissent because they're the most dedicated
and least accountable and most violent law enforcement officers the country has.
And yeah, there's a lot more I could and should get into about where things are at the moment
with border patrol, but this is, it took me this long just to get us up to the fucking
Trump administration. Right. And yeah, we're not even at the, you know, the whole, the frenzy around.
Yeah.
Build the wall and just like, yuck.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I guess that's another podcast.
Yeah.
It's another kind of podcast.
And I guess if I'm gonna lead, leave somewhere,
or in this somewhere, I probably,
it would probably be good to end by talking again
about Harlan Carter for just a little bit.
You remember Harlan Carter?
He was the former border patrol head
who was in charge during Operation Wetback
and who was a convicted murderer.
He, in 1931, he shot a Mexican boy in the chest. So yeah, the
the young Mexican boy that he murdered was named Raymond Casiano and there's
actually a really good song about the border patrol and about Raymond Casiano
by a band I quite like called Drive-By Truckers and there's a there's a line in
it about Harlan Carter, you know, this former head of the Border Patrol who goes on by the way to become the head of the
NRA and it's like one of the guys in charge of the NRA when it turns into the
NRA we all know today from the organization that was like oh people
should learn how to shoot accurately so they can hunt deer right like the NRA
used to just be like a normal pretty normal thing and then it turns into this
crazy thing that it is today, this quasi-military,
or not quasi-military,
but like this explicitly fascist organization
urging political violence.
Anyway, Harlan Carter is the guy behind that too.
So not somebody we'd wanna get a drink with.
Not somebody you'd wanna get a drink with.
And there's a couple of lines about him in this song,
Raymond Casciano, which is named after the guy that Harlan Carter killed. And it's a song, you know, really about
not just Harlan Carter, but about the kind of men who become border patrol agents. He had the
makings of a leader of a certain kind of men who need to feel the worlds against him, out to get
him if it can. Men whose trigger pull their fingers of men who'd rather fight than win
United in a revolution like in mind and like in the skin. Yeah. Yeah, it's good song
Mm-hmm. I'll give it a listen. So Caitlin you wanna you wanna plug your pluggables?
Sure
Well, thank you for for enlightening me with this information.
A lot of it I did not know, so I appreciate now knowing.
Depressing and upsetting though it may be, it's good to be informed.
You can follow me on Twitter and Instagram at Caitlin Durante.
And you can check out my podcast on this network, uh, called the Bechtel cast.
So, you know, that little conversation that Sophie and I had at the beginning
was a reference to that.
We talk about the representation of women in film and, um, yeah, check And yeah, check it all out.
Check it all out.
And you can follow Robert on Twitter at iWriteOK.
You can follow this podcast on Twitter
and Instagram at BastardsPod.
You can now email us at behindthebastardsatihartmedia.com
and you can buy merch at our tea public store.
You can also buy merch from Caitlin and Jamie's tea public store, which has some of my absolute
favorite items in the entire planet.
Feminist icon.
How's that for a plug?
That was great.
Thank you, Sophie.
Feminist icons.
You know who else is a feminist icon?
I can't wait to see who you say.
Oh dear god.
Caitlin Durante.
Oh!
Thank you!
Yep.
Alright.
This ended very very very very warmly.
Thank you.
That's the episode. Bye guys!
That is the motherfucking episode.
Bye.
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