The Daily Signal - ‘I’ve Never Seen Anything Like This’: Texas Sheriff Blasts Biden for Border Crisis
Episode Date: July 11, 2022Sheriff Roy Boyd of Goliad County, Texas, joined other law enforcement officials from his state last week to raise alarm about the border crisis that’s wreaking havoc in America. These local officia...ls, who confront the consequences daily, are now calling it an “invasion.” >>> ‘We’re Being Invaded,’ Local Texas Leaders Say as Border Crisis Worsens Boyd, a seventh-generation Texan, recently spoke to The Daily Signal about what it’s like in Goliad County, the vicious cartels trafficking humans and drugs, and why you the problem of illegal immigration is much worse than anyone realizes. “This is just a tidal wave of people coming across. It is an invasion. There’s no two ways about it,” Boyd says. “When you, as a taxpayer in the state of Texas, can’t utilize your own property because of the massive wave of people, it is an invasion, and that’s exactly what it is.” Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Monday, July 11th.
I'm Virginia Allen.
And I'm Rob Lewy.
On today's show, I speak with Sheriff Roy Boyd of Goliad County, Texas.
We discuss the border crisis and why he is calling it an invasion.
We also read your letters to the editor and share a good news story about a military veteran who was once homeless,
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coming up next. We are joined on the Daily Signal podcast today by Sheriff Roy Boyd. He's a seventh
generation Texan who is serving in local law enforcement in Texas and seeing firsthand the
consequences of the border crisis. Sheriff, thanks so much for joining us. Thank you for having me.
You are here with us at the Heritage Foundation's Resource Bank conference and you spoke about what you
are seeing firsthand on the ground being a sheriff in Texas. We have seen month after month the number
of illegal immigrants crossing the border increase. What is it like for you and your residents
and your county? Well, anywhere throughout South Texas, what it is? It's anything from an inconvenience
to terrifying depending on where you're at. When you go down into deep South Texas, a lot of the
ranches are now abandoned. The people who own those lands can no longer utilize them because of the
cartel presence on their ranches. They can't, if they are there, they can't leave their houses without
leaving somebody behind, armed.
They're getting carjacked at their gates on their own properties.
Where we're at, we have a lot of absentee landowners, and that's property where nobody
actually lives on the land.
And so what's happening is the cartel is coming in, and they will set up stash sites on those
ranches where nobody is at, where they'll either strip vehicles, staged stolen vehicles,
they'll hide illegal aliens while they're going to gas up or whatnot, or, you know,
you know, you've got, you know, somebody will bring them up from Mexico to where we're at,
then somebody comes from Houston to pick them up and then take them the rest of the way.
And so that's what we're looking at.
So much of the time we talk about the border crisis as being a federal issue,
you obviously being in local law enforcement, are seeing it firsthand.
What frustration do you have with the politicians in Washington or the Biden administration
and their failure to address some of the problems you just outlined for us?
I think the problem is that we find that the federal government has absolutely
no will, or at least the politicians have no will to do anything about this problem.
Your average Border Patrol agent, Homeland Security agent, wants to do something, but the Biden
administration has worked extremely hard to tie their hands and prevent them from doing the
jobs that they've been sworn to do, and it makes it extremely frustrating. So what we're doing
is we find alternatives in order to accomplish those goals. You have talked about how,
working under Governor Abbott's Operation Lone Star, you have taken steps to combat,
and try to repel this invasion that's happening in our country.
You are about three hours from the Mexican border.
What are some of the steps that you've been able to do with the governor's support
in order to help address this border crisis?
Well, I met with the governor last year with a handful of other sheriffs.
I've met with the state, you know, House representatives and state senate.
We sat down, worked on some different strategies.
Thank God, Governor Abbott, through his leadership,
was able to acquire money that came to local law enforcement agencies to give us the capacity
to go after the cartel activities within our jurisdictions.
Because most of us only have one to two deputy working in our entire county at any given time.
You just don't have the manpower, the resources, to combat something like the cartel coming in.
So thanks to the governor, we're able to hire some individuals, some officers,
that all their job is to go out and combat transnational criminal activity within our jurisdictions.
So what we've done is we took that funding that the governor's office gave us
and reached out to other law enforcement agencies.
And right now there's 16 of us who have come together to try to put pressure on the cartel
to get them out of our region.
You talk about the cartel.
I feel like as somebody who's not in Texas and maybe not seeing it firsthand, I don't have a full appreciation.
can you go into detail in terms of just how vast their network is and how difficult it is to repel them from your community?
Well, the first thing you have to understand is down in Mexico, the cartels operate what's called the plaza system.
And what the plaza is historically, it's the center square in town.
But as far as the cartels are concerned, and the Mexican government is concerned it's a territory.
And the Mexican government leases territory two different warlords, which are now the cartels, to operate within those areas.
they've now replicated that system here.
Now they're not paying the government for the use of those territories.
But what the cartel has done is they've come into Texas,
they've come into other states, and they have claimed territory.
And what they did then was they turned all of our main prison gangs,
like Mexican Mafia, Texas Syndicate, Aryan Brotherhood.
Those people are now mere contractors to the cartel.
The cartel runs these territories with an iron fist.
And if you don't conduct business the way that they authorize,
well, then you disappear and we're.
we never see you again.
So the cartel has come in and done that.
They've also bought up and established what you would think are legitimate businesses within our communities.
And they use this not only to move slaves through, but also move drugs through, but also to launder their money.
So they put their money into the system and deposited in the bank.
And at that point, they can use that money for whatever they want.
I imagine one of the consequences is the increased distribution of fentanyl, human trafficking,
Are these things that you yourself are seeing in your county?
Yeah, we've had a rash of fentanyl exposures within our region over the last couple of months.
Senator Cornyn had provided everybody within our region with the antidote for fentanyl, the Narcan.
Now that those have begun to expire, our contacts at Texas Department of Public Safety stepped in
and asked us if we needed some and re-upped all of the agencies in the area
because we have had a lot of fentanyl exposures as of late.
we have a lot of human trafficking goes through.
Everybody wants to think that this is an immigration problem,
but in reality, these people aren't immigrants, they're slaves.
They're brought out of their countries.
The cartel moves them through Mexico, you know, pays off the Mexican government as they go.
They get here, they push them across.
Some of them, they turn over to Border Patrol or tell them to turn yourselves over.
The vast majority, they don't do that too.
They sneak them into the state and the United States,
and then they smuggle them through.
various means getting them deeper into the U.S.
Those individuals are indentured servants here in the United States.
Most of them, when we interview them, we find out that they believed when they got to
the Mexico, Texas border, that they were paid up and could come across.
However, once they get brought across, they're now told they owe more money.
And I actually have a letter from a house where they were keeping sex slaves in another
jurisdiction where they articulate it takes eight to 13 years to buy your freedom once you're
brought into the United States. That's if nobody turns around and sells you because you're
just property while you're here. It's just heartbreaking to hear that. You spoke earlier about the fear
that landowners in your county face. What do you hear from some of them and what have their actions
or response been to the increased presence of the cartel? Well,
You know, what our folks have done is they're spending more time roaming around, checking the brush,
looking for activity on their places.
But they can't be everywhere.
And we have a lot of absentee landowners.
We have land trust.
We have, you know, we have different things like that, the entities that aren't even in our county that own land within our county.
And so what we've done is we've tried to educate people to be more vigilant and look for activity,
look for places where activity might take place, and they've been doing that.
But what we see is we see a lot more people who are concerned, and they're now carrying farms for their own protection.
Are there steps that we can take as a country to hold Mexico accountable for what's happening?
Yes, most definitely. The only way to fix this is not on this side of the river.
Because once a foreigner gets on this side of the river and becomes an illegal alien, then our government is there to welcome them in,
give them their visa gift card, give them their free voucher for the bus or the plane ride, wherever it is, the cartel wants them to go.
because that's really what's happening.
The government is becoming the last logistical leg on the cartel's slave trade.
So the only way to solve this is to bring Mexico to their knees economically.
The number one expense of the cartels, and they have publicly complained about this for years in Mexico,
is paying off all of the government officials in Mexico.
Mexico is a system that is set up with graft and corruption.
The cartels have to pay them off at a hefty amount every single month.
month. So the officials in Mexico are making a lot of money off this. The only way to make them
stop this partnership with the cartel is to create enough economic pain from the loss of
legitimate revenue that it finally outweighs their gain from their illegitimate revenue that
they gain from their partnership with the cartels. Do you think this administration has the
stomach to do that? No, I think what this administration is doing is exactly what this
administration wants. This is a direct result of our government wanting this to take place,
because if they didn't want it to take place, you could fix it in a matter of a month,
but they don't want to fix it because this is what they want happening.
And why do you think that is, though? I mean, we suspect that there is maybe a political
advantage they see in the effect of bringing in so many illegal immigrants to this country.
Obviously, they deny things like that. But in your own estimation, having seen it,
yourself up close, why are they refusing to take the steps, which I think to many Americans seem
like common sense? Yeah, it's common sense if you want to remain a free country. It's, to be
quite honest with you, it would be a very long conversation about all the little nuances that go on
into it. But as my friends in the field side and in the supervisory side of the federal government
tell me that this is happening so that we can make a transition from a free republic to a Marxist
style of government. And so why would you want to stop it? If what you want is Marxism and what you
want is, you know, a ruling class in peons, why would you want to bring it to an end while you're
importing more and more people into the slave trade, which basically creates a peon class within our
society? Have you ever seen it as bad as it is today in your time working in law enforcement?
No, I've been dealing with, I think the first border off that I ever wrote was in 2009 down in
Brooks County. And I've never seen anything like this. We thought it was bad then when we were
finding the pamphlets that the Obama administration was having handed out in Mexico on how to get
here and all the advertising on the radio in Mexico convincing people to come here illegally.
We thought that was bad, but that's nothing compared to this. I mean, this is just a tidal wave
of people coming across. It is an invasion. There's no two ways about it. When you as a as a
taxpayer in the state of Texas can't utilize your own property because of the massive wave of people,
it is an invasion. And that's exactly what it is. Do you think that the numbers that the Department of
Homeland Security puts out for apprehensions are an accurate reflection of the number of people
who are actually crossing the border? No, no, not by any means. You know, from October 1st till today,
I think there were 300, I think 300, I'm sorry, that was just Rio Grande Valley from October 1st to today.
All across the border, excluding California was just under 1.3 million apprehensions.
Border Patrol tells me they estimate they apprehend 8 to 10% of the people that come across.
You hear people talk about gotaways.
There's supposed to be 800,000 gotaways.
Well, in order to be a gotaway, Border Patrol has to see them.
Border Patrol has to see physical evidence like footprint or something.
something that they escaped without being apprehended. Well, there's a lot more coming across because
there's entire sections where nobody is patrolling. There are days in the Rio Grande Valley sector,
which is a large sector, that there's not one Border Patrol agent actually outworking the border.
Nobody's looking for Godaways. So you can imagine how many more there are when on some days there's
nobody looking for it. I talked to a Border Patrol agent a couple of weeks ago, and he told me that they
got told to quit reporting their gotaways, that he's being told, don't count those. And the logic
was, well, they may be counted somewhere else, so just don't count them anymore. And so it just doesn't
make sense unless you understand that this is all by design. And what is the reason that the Border
Patrol doesn't necessarily have a presence at all times? Because the administration has moved Border
Patrol from being the Border Patrol to taking them in and making them process these individuals so that they
can get them into the United States.
Historically, what happens is if you're apprehended and you're not going to be deported,
you're given what's called a notice to appear.
That notice to appear has that you have to appear on this date, at this time, at this court,
at this address.
Well, now they're handing them notice to appear.
There's no date, there's no time, there's no court, and there's no address.
But as long as they have that piece of paper, whether it's filled out properly or not,
no federal agent can touch them for immigration violation.
So they're letting these people in and telling the media and the public, oh, they have a notice to appear.
But in reality, it's an incomplete notice to appear that just gives them carte blanche to break federal law.
And so the other thing you have to consider is what they've looked at this year is the people that they have deported,
depending on the sector you're in, between 40 and 80 percent of those people, then reenter and are encountered a second time or a third or a fourth.
We in Goliad have apprehended people in bailouts that have made this is like their third, fourth time to be caught.
So like I said, this really showed us the fact that it's just a revolving door that we just started filing state charges on everybody because the federal system is broke.
They're not going to do anything about it because this is what they want.
So we're just going to take care of it on the state side.
Sheriff, you spent over two decades in law enforcement.
what inspired you to first get involved?
And given the challenges you're facing today,
what keeps you going every day?
Well, you know, I got into this just, I guess, by chance.
I had a neighbor who got into law enforcement,
and I started riding with him,
and I thought, you know, this is a good, fulfilling job.
I would really like this.
This is something that I can make a career out of.
I could make a difference.
And, you know, I can go out and do something.
It's changed drastically over that time.
To be quite honestly, when I first became a cop,
1994, Border Patrol had an incentive where they would bring us a box of bullets for every illegal
alien we apprehended. And they would come pick them up, sometimes 20, 23, and shove them in a
suburban, but they'd bring us ammo, a box of ammo for every illegal alien you captured
and turned over to all. Talk about a drastic change.
But, you know, the whole thing is, in the end, we're all going to be judged, not by the people,
not by anything, we're going to be judged by our Lord and Maker.
you know, we're going to have to answer for what we did.
And while I may not be able to fix it and I may not be able to bring it to an end,
I'm going to do my part so that when I get to the pearly gates,
at least when I get asked, they'll know I did something.
Well, Sheriff Roy Boyd, thank you for your service.
Thank you for what you're doing.
Thank you for also explaining the issue articulately for our listeners.
I think it's very helpful to hear from somebody who's on the front line.
dealing with us on a daily basis. We appreciate what you're doing. We're just having fun.
That was Sheriff Roy Boyd of Goliad County in Texas. Thank you again for being with the Daily Signal.
Virginia Allen here, I want to tell you all about one of my favorite podcasts. Harage Explains is a weekly
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Thanks for sending us your letters to the editor.
Each Monday we feature our favorites on this show.
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In response to Kathy Harris's commentary piece, I had an abortion.
Here's why I want row reversed.
Karen writes, my eyes are filled with tears.
As I've just read the commentary by Kathy Harris stating how she regretted her abortion
and has done all she could to stop this in our country.
I too suffer such agonizing pain from an abortion.
I know God has forgiven me, but the pain of the irreparable act of murder is excruciating.
I wish I had that child.
And in response to the Daily Signal's coverage of the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade,
V. V. V. V. Neighbors of Wisconsin writes, Dear Daily Signal, in 1980, I was 22, single and pregnant.
I was devastated. My doctor told me to have an abortion. He recommended a pro-choice clinic for counseling.
They told me to have an abortion. I made the appointment and sat inside the abortion clinic.
All I could think of was that in a little while, they will take me upstairs and kill my baby.
I finally left in tears, still pregnant.
It was one of the best decisions I've made in my life.
As the High Court in the land overrules itself, my son is now 41.
I also have an 18-year-old granddaughter.
It wasn't easy.
But life isn't easy.
I'm very thankful for the decision I made.
I came so close to killing my baby.
My heart goes out to everyone who has had an abortion.
I pray they feel God's amazing love and forgiveness.
Your letter can be featured on next week's show, so send us an email at Letters atdaily.com.
The Heritage Foundation takes the field on offense with their young leaders program.
I'm Evelyn Homily from Hillsdale College.
I'm Harrison Stewart from the University of Virginia.
I'm a journalism intern with the Daily Signal.
I'm a digital productions intern in communications.
For spring, summer, and fall semesters, the Heritage Foundation hosts undergraduate and
postgraduate interns right here in the nation's capital to train our country's future
conservative leaders. As a daily signal intern, I've had the opportunity to cover exciting events
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and better understanding our nation's greatest threats. If you want to go on offense with other
passionate, dedicated conservatives, go to heritage.org slash intern to learn more about the young
leaders program.
Bernadette, thank you so much for being back with us once again this Monday to share some good
news over to you.
Thanks, Virginia.
A U.S. military veteran, Cleo Lewis, is helping the homeless stay safe in the summer heat.
Cleo was formerly homeless himself, so he is taking extra actions to help those in need
through his nonprofit, Cleo and Lewis, Inc., which is an outreach program to connect the homeless
with permanent housing.
A 62-year-old woman, Kyra King, was living out of her car and weighed only 77 pounds due to heat exhaustion.
Kira tells ABC 15 Arizona about her situation.
I'm trying to remain positive, but I don't have a home.
ABC told Cleo about Kira's situation, and he jumped in immediately to help.
My first priority is to get you from out here to inside somewhere.
In a matter of minutes, Cleo connected Cairo with a housing situation so she could have a fresh start and move from her car in the parking lot to a shelter with resources to help get her back on her feet.
Cairo was overcome by tears of gratitude, and Cleo said Cairo is the reason his nonprofit does what they do.
You're the reason why we do what I do.
Thank you, darling.
No, thank you.
It is really inspiring to see a veteran who sacrificed so much continue to serve those around him.
It is really inspiring, Bernadette.
Thank you so much for sharing that story.
It's so awesome.
to hear about our veterans and how even after they've given so much,
they're still giving back themselves.
So thank you.
We are going to leave it there for today.
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