The Brownsville Herald
Sep. 11--Texas Gov. Rick Perry has announced the deployment
of specially trained Texas Ranger Reconnaissance Teams and about
200 Texas National Guard troops to the Texas-Mexico border to deal
with the ongoing violence along the border.
Perry said Thursday he's sending law enforcement personnel
and troops because the federal government as yet to answer his plea
that 1,000 National Guard troops be sent to help secure the
nation's border.
With 73 percent of the Texas border privately owned,
landowners along the area often face extortion or threats from
violent criminal organizations that smuggle drugs, people and
weapons across the border, the governor's office said in a press
release.
Perry said the Texas Ranger Reconnaissance Teams will be
sent to "hot spots" and will be paid for with money
provided through state legislation, the Associated Press reported.
Because officials don't want to "compromise the mission"
the locations where the Ranger teams will be deployed were not
released, a spokeswoman for the governor's office said.
Cameron County Judge Carlos H. Cascos said he didn't know if
the Texas Rangers and Texas National Guard troops would be sent to
Cameron County. However, he has long said it was just a matter of
time before the violence, that has been occurring in places like
Laredo and El Paso, would spread to South Texas.
Cascos said it would be premature to judge Perry's action,
adding, "The governor's office may have intelligence about
violence that we might not be aware of."
"If we knew all the state's Department of Homeland
Security knew, we would probably be doing the same thing,"
Cascos said.
Earlier this year, Perry asked Janet Napolitano, secretary
of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, to send resources and
1,000 troops to the border area because of ongoing violence in
northern Mexico. As of Thursday, he was stilling waiting for the
federal government to respond to his request.
Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas III did not return calls
seeking comment.
Last week, a Matamoros shootout prompted The University of
Texas at Brownsville and Texas Southmost College to close its
campus for the weekend after officials said bullets from the
shootout struck a campus building and a car.
Students and faculty were asked to leave the campus, and
soccer games scheduled on the campus were moved to the Brownsville
Sports Park, because of the shootout.
Cascos said he's "positive" that Perry is aware of
last week's shooting and was probably informed by Steve McGraw, the
former state homeland security chief, who has a "real good
pulse on what is happening along the border."
"No one can dispute there is some drug activity going
on, not only here (in Matamoros), but in Reynosa as well,"
Cascos said.
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