Editor’s Note: Law
Enforcement, the public, and the United States in general, will rue the day that the Long Green Line of the
Border Patrol has been severed for political and short-sighted reasons. With
proven outstanding leadership within the organization, the appointment of an
outsider can only reflect the continued negative attitude of this
Administration to weaken enforcement at every quarter. The attack on this great
organization as outlined in the following newspaper article from political and
biased voices is shameful.
Ben
Ferro (Editor, InsideINS.com)
In An
Attempt To Stem Abuses, The Border Patrol Gets A New Chief — From The FBI
By Brian
Bennett, The Los Angeles Times
A senior
FBI official was named chief of the long-troubled U.S. Border Patrol on Monday
in an effort to curb abuses, investigate corruption and improve discipline
within the 21,000-member force.
Mark
Morgan, who heads the FBI training division, is the first outsider to lead the
Border Patrol in its 92-year history.
He
inherits a force under fire for ignoring or downplaying shootings of unarmed
people and other abuses by agents, and of doing too little to stem corruption
by drug cartels, smugglers and other criminals.
The Border
Patrol is responsible for securing the nation’s borders. Driven by concerns
about national security, the number of agents and other personnel has grown
dramatically in the last 15 years.
Critics
say that has led to a lack of accountability and an array of other problems,
from excessive use of force to racial profiling.
In a
statement, R. Gil Kerlikowske, commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, the Border Patrol’s parent agency, praised Morgan’s “strong law
enforcement and leadership credentials.”
Morgan’s
career has included stints as a Los Angeles Police Department officer, as a
deputy sheriff in Platt County , Mo. , and 20 years at the FBI.
He ran an
FBI-led Hispanic gang task force in the Los Angeles field office that focused on MS-13
and 18th Street gangs. He also held senior FBI roles in Baghdad , Iraq ; New Haven , Conn. ; and El Paso , Texas .
Most
recently, Morgan headed training at the FBI’s training center in Quantico , Va. , and at FBI headquarters in Washington .
FBI
Director James Comey said in a statement that Morgan brought “passion for
justice and public service” to his work.
Morgan
also led the internal affairs office at Customs and Border Protection in 2014,
a post that put him at odds with the Border Patrol’s insular culture.
Officials
say he helped internal affairs overhaul how abuse cases are investigated,
identified weaknesses in how agents were trained to use force, and pushed to
get greater authority for internal affairs officers.
Morgan’s
appointment immediately took flak from the Border Patrol’s powerful union,
however. It complained that Kerlikowske had ignored viable candidates within
the force.
“How can
someone who has never made an immigration arrest in his career expect to lead
an agency whose primary duty is to make immigration arrests?” asked Joshua
Wilson, a spokesman for the union’s local chapter in San Diego .
The union
had urged Kerlikowske to choose Ronald D. Vitiello, a veteran of the Border
Patrol who has served as acting chief. Vitiello improved new shift rotation
schedules, Wilson said.
Some
advocates of tougher immigration actions also criticized the selection of an
FBI veteran over an internal candidate.
“It
basically is saying that the existing border agents don't know what they are
doing and need an outsider to come in from a totally separate branch of law
enforcement and tell them how to do their jobs — it's offensive,” said Rosemary
Jenks, director of government relations for NumbersUSA, a Virginia-based
advocacy group that lobbies to reduce immigration levels.
By almost
any measure, the Border Patrol’s problems are significant.
In March,
for example, an independent task force said in a report that the system for
disciplining abusive or corrupt Border Patrol agents is “deeply flawed.”
A separate
independent review of 67 uses of deadly force made public in 2014 found that
some agents had deliberately stepped in front of cars to justify shooting at
drivers and had fired weapons at people throwing rocks from the Mexican side of
the border.
“It is not
a secret that the Border Patrol has major accountability problems resulting
from years of unchecked abuse,” James Lyall, an American Civil Liberties Union
lawyer in Tucson, said in a telephone interview.
Morgan
“needs to act promptly to implement modern law enforcement best practices that
the Border Patrol has resisted for far too long,” Lyall said.
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