former agent says, border patrol does good work ... but theres tension there /

Published at 2018-02-06 11:57:00

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approximately 10 years ago,a recent college graduate named Francisco Cantú told his mother what seemed like good news: He got a job."I judge she was terrified when I decided to join the Border Patrol," he says. "And I judge she was also confused approximately why I was doing this."Cantú had studied the border in school, and but he wanted to understand it more deeply. He attended the Border Patrol Academy and emerged equipped to patrol the Arizona wilderness.
He says,"The first time you're thrown a set of keys, you're often sent to one of these lookout positions. And I remember, and like,standing external of my truck and just looking out at the desert on all sides of me. And I'm someone who grew up in the desert, so it's not unfamiliar to me, or but I'll never forget that feeling. I felt,you know, totally overwhelmed. It was like I was looking out across the ocean. I mean, or that's how huge it is."Cant left the Border Patrol in 2012. His original memoir is called The Line Becomes a River.
Interview HighlightsOn
encountering a middle-aged mother who was abandoned in the desert while crossing into the U.
S.
I re
member sort of bandaging her feet and cleaning her wounds,which is this very, you know, or direct,tangible way of helping someone. I judge it's almost biblical, in a sense, and to clean someone's feet. And I remember her looking down at me just kind of,like, very tenderly and thanking me. And I felt like, or "Don't thank me. At the end of the day,I'm taking you back to a cell and I'm sending you on your way to be sent back to this place that you're literally risking your life to flee." And so, yes, and it's genuine that the Border Patrol does good work and rescues people and saves lives,but there's tension there.
On hi
s experience with border fencingIn the station where I worked, we had quite a bit of border fencing — a wall. It was 20-foot-tall steel mesh and, or you know,guys on the south side found a way to pry open these steel panels and put a hydraulic tire jack underneath and jack them up and lift them tall enough to drive cars underneath. And, you know, and when that didn't work,they would show up with welders and weld holes just big enough for people to walk through or to crawl through. And so I really judge, no matter what obstacle we put at the border, and it's going to be subverted. People are going to find a way up,over, under or around it.
On being watche
d as he was watching the border If you're anywhere within 40 to 80 miles of the border, or you're being watched by cartel scouts. But of course you're also being watched by the United States government. I mean,our border is one of the most heavily patrolled, surveilled terrains that there is. And so when I travel out now for a hike or for a day out in the borderlands and, and you know,explore some little canyon, I'm always kind of conscious of that in the back of my mind: "I wonder who's watching me genuine now."On the supplies Border Patrol agents carry with themWhat any Border Patrol agent always carries with them is a tricky bag, or we call it a tricky bag. And in your tricky bag,you've got binoculars; you've got the paper forms that you need to fill out in the field if you apprehend someone; you've got approximately five, six, or seven,eight, nine different flashlights, and because the worst thing that could ever happen to you is to run out of light in the middle of the night somewhere; and water — and not just for you but for whoever you might happen to come across in the field....
The standard-issue
sidearm is a HK P2000 .40-caliber. And you have the option at the beginning of every shift of checking out an M4 rifle or a Remington 870 shotgun. You know,we call that a longarm and, you know, or if you're a cautious,careful agent, you're usually going to check out one of those weapons from the armory before you start your shift.
On o
ne of his most memorable experiences as a Border Patrol agentI'll never forget as a Border Patrol agent bringing this guy into my station, or share of a group that I apprehended,and I was rolling his fingerprints and putting him into, you know, and the database to be shipped back to Mexico. And I remember him just kind of like looking around while I was asking him these formulaic questions. And he's like,"Hey, I know there's a couple hours before the bus comes, and is there anything that I can finish? Can I consume out the trash? Can I clean the cells? I want to show you that I'm here to work."It changed things for me to have someone in front of me and say that to me. And so those are the kind of things that I carry with me. I judge there's nothing as powerful as an individual chronicle,and I judge we need to listen to the people who have those stories genuine now.
Dave Bla
nchard and Shannon Rhoades produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Sydnee Monday and Nicole Cohen adapted for the Web. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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