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Feds: Gun, Cash Seizures Up At Mexican Border
John Torres, Special Agent in Charge of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives inspects a 50 caliber rifle during a news conference where the Department of Homeland Security and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are
The AP via YellowBrix
November 04, 2009
SAN DIEGO — U.S. authorities on Tuesday reported a spike in seizures of guns and cash along the Mexican border since they began assigning more agents to stem the flow of southbound contraband.
Nearly 600 illegal weapons were seized along the border by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials from March through September, an increase of more than 50 percent from the same period of 2008.
The agencies seized more than $40 million in cash along the border from mid-March through September, nearly double the amount in the year-ago period.
The seizures represent a tiny fraction of business done by Mexican and Colombian drug lords. According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, those drug lords generate $18 billion to $39 billion in wholesale drug proceeds in the United States each year. Cash proceeds are smuggled across the border to Mexico.
But U.S. officials said the figures demonstrate that heightened enforcement is paying off.
“The increases in seizures is no coincidence,” said John Morton, Homeland Security Department’s assistant secretary for ICE. “It’s a direct result of increased resources, increased emphasis that we are placing on the southwest border.”
Senior officials from immigration, border patrol and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are meeting in San Diego through Wednesday to discuss ways to combat the flow of guns and drug proceeds south of the border amid Mexican President Felipe Calderon’s nationwide crackdown on drug traffickers.
Mexico asked U.S. authorities to trace 12,073 firearms last year, up from only 2,906 in 2007 and 2,654 in 2006, according to the ATF. Of those successfully traced, the firearms bureau said about 90 percent came from the United States.
Kenneth Melson, acting director of the ATF, said lack of training in Mexico is the main obstacle to increasing weapons traces even more. Weapons tracing involves entering serial numbers and other information into a special computer system.
“I think (Mexico’s) intent is to try to give them all to us,” Melson said in an interview. “They’re just not in a position to be able to do that right now … It’s a huge effort.”
A Spanish-language version of eTrace, the Web-based method of submitting tracing information, is expected to be available by the end of this year.

avis_638
21 days ago
594 Comments
Great job!!! Keep it up!
avictor
22 days ago
368 Comments
Wow, nice work.
It SEEMS it would be bad for society to legalize drugs BUT why not a tiny while to crush these gangs?
Then make them illegal again- after the drug lords were bankrupt? And hey if the outcome turned out not so bad, PSA's and public intoxication laws would bring shame.
Sure some would OD due to increased availability but they were f-ing up society anyways.
Imagine how that would cut back on aids for injection users.
Smokers have been smoking half as much due to societal influence.
Drinking is no where near as acceptable as it was even in the 80's.
We could do this short term and make sure it is not viewed as acceptable.
Sure it would take a large campaign, including govt mandated drug testing for all employers to do and welfare recipient as well but totally doable and in the end the cost would be less then fighting cartels.
Let them kill themselves at least until we bankrupt the drug lords.
Maybe it will turn out beneficial like lifting alcohol prohibition.
If relying on history is not enough a trail run wouldn't hurt those who care about their lives anyways.
Treat it like sniffing paint.
grant319
22 days ago
510 Comments
Nice job guys. If you caught this much, just imagine how much has been getting into the states over the past years. This has been needing to be done for a long time.
Sheriff_1
22 days ago
6832 Comments
Do the deed. Good job
ehil
22 days ago
13140 Comments
Nice work to all involved! Keep it up!
s3sk
22 days ago
2500 Comments
Keep it up.
headbrer
22 days ago
2988 Comments
Way to go!
Irishcop1961
22 days ago
15506 Comments
Great job, keep up the good work.
fplasencia
22 days ago
5382 Comments
Good job by the Feds.
ICE_MAN
22 days ago
48 Comments
I recently returned from a 90 day TDY on the South West border, and it was the wild west out there!
cvarain
22 days ago
140 Comments
an all of that contraband is comming into the US. So much for the guns that are supposed to be going into Mexico. The more they ban here the more of a Black Market that is created for Mexico to bing in here.