Archive for the Uncategorized Category

Cash-strapped states revise laws to get inmates out

Posted in Uncategorized on September 7, 2009 by cosgoingwrong

 

Mandatory sentencing laws are relaxed, parole is accelerated, and time off for good behavior is increased as states scramble to save money.

Reporting from Denver – After decades of pursuing lock-’em-up policies, states are scrambling to reduce their prison populations in the face of tight budgets, making fundamental changes to their criminal justice systems as they try to save money.

Some states are revising mandatory-sentencing laws that locked up nonviolent offenders; others are recalculating the way prison time is counted.

California, with the nation’s second-largest prison system, is considering perhaps the most dramatic proposal — releasing 40,000 inmates to save money and comply with a court ruling that found the state’s prisons overcrowded. Read more »

Hilliard woman arrested for smuggling drugs into Nassau County Jail

Posted in Uncategorized on September 7, 2009 by cosgoingwrong

A 49-year-old Hilliard woman was arrested Sept. 2 on charges of introducing contraband into a correctional facility and trafficking in a controlled substance after dozens of prescription pills were found hidden inside her as she was being booked into the Nassau County Jail on other charges, police said.

Marsha Ellen Joslin was at the jail in Yulee when an informant told narcotics detectives that she had “a large quantity of prescription medication concealed on her person,” according to a sheriff’s office news release.  A nurse conducted a thorough search and found a condom filled with prescription tablets in her vaginal cavity, police said.

Joslin’s bond was set at $10,004.

source: http://www.jacksonville.com/community/my_nassau_sun/2009-09-04/story/hilliard_woman_arrested_for_smuggling_drugs_into_nassau_cou

Prison guards discover possible escape tunnel

Posted in Uncategorized on July 11, 2009 by cosgoingwrong

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) – South Carolina prison officials have discovered a hole dug by inmates at a maximum security prison that might have been part of an escape plan.

Spokesman Josh Gelinas said Wednesday authorities were tipped off by an inmate about the hole that had been dug through the concrete floor of a building at Lieber Correctional Institution at Ridgeville in an inmate work area.

Authorities are still investigating, but Gelinas says they don’t think the hole extends outside the wall of the building or beyond any security fences.

Gelinas says an inmate authorities think was digging the hole has been placed in solitary confinement.

Inmates on South Carolina’s death row are housed at Lieber but not in the same area where the hole was discovered.

source: http://www.wistv.com/global/story.asp?s=10663816

State ‘on guard’ for inmate-officer sex

Posted in Uncategorized on March 22, 2009 by cosgoingwrong

 SHARPES — In the past five years, officials have investigated at least 12 allegations of sex or improper relationships between male inmates and female officers or staff members at the Brevard Correctional Institution, according to state records Eight officers and one counselor resigned or were fired in those incidents. Five cases were proven to have involved sexual relationships. Read more »

Ontario’s correctional officers say they’re ready to strike in weeks

Posted in Uncategorized on January 13, 2009 by cosgoingwrong

TORONTO – Ontario’s correctional officers are bracing for a potential strike, and if it ends up being anything like the 51-day labour dispute of 2002, life inside the province’s jails could become exceedingly ugly in a few weeks.

 

The workers provide an essential service and can’t walk off the job entirely, but the last time the Ontario Public Service Employees Union went on strike, staffing levels in the corrections system were minimal and chaos was common. Read more »

Prison inmate charged with attempted murder

Posted in Uncategorized on January 13, 2009 by cosgoingwrong

A 47 year-old man has been charged with the attempted murder of a prisoner at Rimutaka.

Detective Grant Mumby said the alleged stabbing happened on Boxing Day at the prison after an argument. Read more »

Transfers may lead to layoffs at Rhode Island’s Wyatt detention center

Posted in Uncategorized on December 19, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

CENTRAL FALLS — The Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility is poised for “across-the-board” layoffs if the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) does not return or replace more than 150 immigrant detainees who were abruptly transferred from the jail last week.

Dante Bellini, spokesman for Wyatt, said the transfers — which came without explanation — will have a crippling effect on the detention center, which employs about 200 correctional officers, administrative staff, investigators and support staff. Read more »

Report Released In Corrections Officer’s Murder

Posted in Uncategorized on November 6, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

DAYTONA BEACH — A four-month investigation into the murder of a corrections officer at a Volusia County facility is now public.

Video

 The review by the Department of Corrections shows many security lapses leading up to the death of Donna Fitzgerald.

Prisoner Enoch Hall is accused of stabbing her inside the P.R.I.D.E. Enterprises facility inside the Tomoka Correctional Institution.
  
Investigators found a lack of regulations for officers supervising inmates in the work training area.

They also discovered Fitzgerald did not have a personal body alarm, radio or any other device she could have used for protection.

Department of Corrections Secretary Walter McNeil said Wednesday morning all security measures and policies regarding the P.R.I.D.E. program are being reviewed, and all employees are undergoing retraining

source: http://www.cfnews13.com/News/Local/2008/11/5/report_released_in_corrections_officers_murder.html

Check out the new Sound off page under blogroll.

Posted in Uncategorized on October 25, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

After some searching I found a nice blog for discussion. Use it for questions,rants, meeting other correctional professionals or whatever else comes to mind. You can post anonymously in this blog.

Heavy’ Inmate Hid Pot In Fat Folds Of Stomach

Posted in Uncategorized on October 22, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

Police have filed additional charges against an inmate who they say tried to hide illegal drugs inside a Northside prison in the folds of his stomach.

cedric.jpg

Officers said Cedric Webb, 25, was at the Montgomery Correctional Center on the Northside when officers searching for contraband told him to lift his shirt.

According to the police report, when Webb raised his shirt, the officer saw two bags of marijuana and tobacco tucked into his stomach fat.

Investigators said the drugs then fell to the ground, WJXT reported.

The report said Webb would not explain how he got the banned substances into the facility.

The arrest report describes Webb as 6 feet 2 inches tall and 290 pounds and his build as “heavy.”

Webb, who had been in jail since May on charges of possession of cocaine and forgery, is now charged with introduction of contraband into a detention facility and possession of marijuana.

source

http://www.officer.com/online/article.jsp?siteSection=1&id=43790

Plan to downgrade supermax facility

Posted in Uncategorized on October 13, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

The state prison chief is proposing major changes for three prisons, including a plan to reduce the security level at the maximum-security MCI-Cedar Junction and reserve Old Colony Correctional Center for mentally ill inmates.

Public Safety Secretary Kevin M. Burke must approve the plan, but the Department of Correction is preparing for changes at the Walpole prison by installing 400 bunk beds at the Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center, a maximum-security prison in Shirley that opened in 1998.

“We believe that Cedar Junction, based on its design primarily, is better suited to be a reception unit,” said DOC Commissioner Harold W. Clarke in an interview with the Herald.

Under Clarke’s plan, new inmates would be classified to determine where they will serve their prison sentence at MCI-Cedar Junction, which would become a medium-security facility. The Department Disciplinary Unit, which is a part of the Cedar Junction prison, would not be affected.

MCI-Concord, where the classification process takes place, would maintain its medium-security status and Old Colony, a medium-minimum security prison in Bridgewater, would take mentally ill inmates. Those inmates are scattered throughout the state system.

“We think that would be economical to do so, cost-effective to do so and release the stressors of staff and others at other facilities,” Clarke said of the plan for Old Colony. The DOC does not know how many mentally ill inmates could be relocated under the proposal.

Last month, the Herald reported that prison officials were installing bunk beds at Souza-Baranowski, a 500,000-square-foot prison with 1,024 general-population single cells, 128 special management cells and 24 health service beds.

Steve Kenneway, president of the Massachusetts Correction Officers Federated Union, said double-bunking can spark trouble.

“They are protesting the double-bunking of the maximum because they don’t want roommates,” said Kenneway. “It is the worst idea that they could ever think of. There may be more assaults but there also may be more deaths.”

Clarke said the Souza’s cells were built to be double-bunked and it is common practice nationwide to double-bunk inmates at maximum-security prisons.

“Crowding is causing us to have a need for that space at Souza,” he said. “Quite frankly, across the United States today they are double-bunking maximum-security offenders.”

source

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/general/view.bg?articleid=1125013

To answer a few questions

Posted in Uncategorized on September 7, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

I was asked by a couple of CO’s one from NY and one from Massachusetts if I knew of any good books written by CO’s about thier states.

Maybe all you out there can help. I’ll put a page up called books that you can post a comment with the name of books.

In New York you had a book called, New jack.

In Mass I know of a few. Last one over the wall, 65 A different shade of blue and prison officers and thier world.

If anybody can help it would be appreicated.

Sheriff moving mentally ill inmates into apartments

Posted in Uncategorized on September 2, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) — The sheriff of Benton County wants to move a couple of regular guests who have mental illness from the lockup to apartments.

“People with mental illness issues require a lot more supervision in jail,” said Sheriff Diana Simpson said. “The goal is to reduce reincarceration, improve care and alleviate overcrowding issues.”

As a test, she said, she plans to move two people into a county-owned apartment complex where the sheriff’s department has rented two studio units for $370 a month.

That compares favorably with the average cost of $150 a day to jail every inmate — or $1,050 a week, Simpson said.

Undersheriff Scott Jackson, the former jail manager, said that jailing people who suffer from mental illnesses interrupts their treatment, which only makes the problem worse.

“Social Security and disability (payments), Medicaid-Medicare and the Oregon Health Plan are either suspended or terminated when they are incarcerated,” Jackson said.

Parole and probation officer Abe Griswold will get additional training in how to deal with the mentally ill and supervise the program.

“I’m anticipating frequent contact, two to three times a week,” Griswold said. “We’ll make sure they’re taking their meds and have a structured environment.”

Those housed in the apartments will have to volunteer willingly to be housed and must follow the standard rules of their parole or probation, including a curfew of 10 p.m. to 8 a.m., dependent upon employment hours.

Simpson said the first two inmates haven’t been selected, and prosecutors, defense lawyers and mental health workers will help with that process.

Benton County District Attorney John Haroldson said the program is an important step.

“We work in a system where you only benefit by having more options,” Haroldson said.

source: http://www.kgw.com/news-local/stories/kgw_090108_news_mental_apartments.334a11fe.html

Five Inmates Escape in Canada, Public Notification Delayed

Posted in Uncategorized on August 27, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

Source:

Five Inmates Escape in Canada, Public Notification Delayed – DigitalJournal.com: The Power of Citizen Journalism

Five inmates, considered violent, escaped from a Saskatchewan prison, but the public notification was delayed by at least 15 hours.
Six prisoners broke out of the Regina Correctional Centre on Sunday night. One was caught shortly after the other five are still on the loose.

The Saskatchewan’s minister of public safety has ordered an investigation to determine why 15 hours passed before authorities alerted the public about a prison break by six inmates.

The escapees are described as dangerous and possibly armed and a Canada wide warrant has been issued.

The escapees couldbe anywhere as the prison is located near the Trans-Canada Highway.

“We’ve got a pretty big country. They could be just about anywhere,” said RCMP Sgt. Doug Coleman.

The five escapees are Ryan John Agecoutay, 25, Preston Clarence Buffalocalf, 22, Cody Dillon Keenatch, 19, James Joseph Pewean, 25, and Daniel Richard Wolfe, 32.

Apparently, the men escaped by pulling a vent off a wall, crawling into it and then kicking their way through an exterior brick wall. The brick wall did not have any reinforced concrete or rebar.

Of the five escapees, one is charged with two counts of murder and three face attempted murder charges in connection to shootings during a violent home invasion last year.

Corrections, Public Safety and Policing Minister Darryl Hickie found out about the escape earlier than the public, about 7 a.m. CT. The public was not alerted for another six hours.

“I believe that in this case, it sure would seem to me that the most critical thing to do would have been to inform the public at first time [in the morning] to ensure that people were aware of this,” Corrections, Public Safety and Policing Minister Darryl Hickie said.

Police say it took time to gather information, co-ordinate a police response and ensure they were making the right names public.

“We have to always ensure people’s rights are protected. So, that we do want to make sure we have the right people missing,” said Coleman.

The officials may have many urgent tasks following an escape, but public safety should be a priority.

Pregnant inmates won’t be shackled under new policy

Posted in Uncategorized on August 27, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

Inmates at any stage of pregnancy, labor or delivery, no longer will be restrained in Davidson County starting Sept. 1, with a few exceptions.

Sheriff Daron Hall announced the changes this week, calling them radical and dramatic. He said pregnant inmates would be restrained during trips to the hospital or court if there were credible information they might try to escape or if they presented a danger to themselves or others.

The change comes nearly two months after Juana Villegas, an illegal immigrant who was nine months pregnant, was arrested on careless driving charges and detained at the Davidson County jail. Villegas, from Mexico, said she was handcuffed and shackled during transport to the hospital and had one leg shackled to the bed for a portion of her labor.

The sheriff confirmed her treatment was in line with the old policy because her immigration status made her a medium-security inmate; those inmates are restrained regardless of gender or pregnancy.

Sheila Dauer, director of the women’s rights program at Amnesty International USA, said the international standard is that prisoners should be restrained only if there’s a danger of escape.

“That seems pretty unlikely, especially if this is an inmate in labor,” she said. “That’s generally a pretty painful and engrossing experience.”

A judge dismissed Villegas’ careless driving charge on a technicality. Her case had drawn international media attention.

“When you boil this situation down from a correction standpoint, it’s not about immigration and it’s not about us,” Hall said. “It’s about how do we ensure that a person is going to be able to go through that experience and be sensitive to that experience and attend to our duty. It is my opinion that … we were doing a little more than may have been necessary in every case.”

It’s a nationwide issue

One of Villegas’ attorneys, Elliott Ozment, said the change sounds like a good idea, but he wants to see the written policy.

For at least the last 14 years — the period in which the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office has had written policies and procedures in place — the Davidson County jail has restrained pregnant women when transporting them to court or to the hospital for medical care or delivery.

Hall declined to specify the department’s policy on guards standing inside or outside the room when pregnant inmates are in labor, citing concerns about security. He did say that at least one guard remains at the hospital with an inmate, and this portion of the jail’s policy will not change.

The change “puts the department out front” on an issue that jailing agencies across the country are discussing, Hall said. Hall is president-elect of the American Correctional Association, a Virginia-based trade group with about 19,000 members. The association recommends that jailing agencies consider the “age, gender, health and mental health
status” of inmates in restraining them, and use the least restrictive and harmful method.

At least 38 states have policies allowing for some restraint at various stages of pregnancy or delivery.

In a typical week, Davidson County has about 25 pregnant inmates in custody, Hall said. The Tennessee Department of Corrections had 13 pregnant women in custody Tuesday.

source:

Trailer fire kills Angola prison guard

Posted in Passings, Uncategorized on August 9, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

SOLITUDE — A 52-year-old Louisiana State Penitentiary officer died Friday afternoon when trapped inside her burning mobile home on Solitude Road.

Chief Tommy Boyett, of West Feliciana Parish Fire Protection District 1, said firefighters found the body of Brenda Mills near the back door of her residence, which was engulfed in flames when neighbors discovered the fire.

The fire is under investigation by the fire district, state Fire Marshal’s Office and West Feliciana Parish Sheriff’s Office.

Boyett said the investigation may determine whether Mills was confronted by a locked door as she tried to escape.

Neighbors, whose nearby homes were not damaged by the flames, reported the fire at 1:53 p.m., and the first firetruck arrived in less than 10 minutes.

Neighbors Wanda Turner and Denise Barfield said they tried to enter the residence through the front door, but the flames drove them back.

Turner said she kicked the door open, but the flames were too intense for the two to see inside.

“The fire met us at the door, so we couldn’t go in,” Barfield said.

Mills was a corrections sergeant assigned to Angola’s Main Prison and had been employed at the penitentiary since November 1999, Angola spokesman Gary Young said.

“She was a good employee; a wonderful employee,” Young said.

Angola Warden Burl Cain extended condolences on behalf her fellow employees to Mills’ relatives and friends.

“She’ll be greatly missed,” Cain said.

Boyett said firefighters used a four-wheel drive truck to push Mills’ car from under a carport attached to the mobile home.

“I’m glad they did. If it had caught on fire, it would have made it a lot worse,” the fire chief said.
source: http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/26464399.html

Jail drugs crackdown targets prison officers

Posted in Uncategorized on July 7, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

Prison officers are to undergo body scans as part of an £80m crackdown on illegal drug use in prisons, the government said today.

The justice secretary, Jack Straw, said the new body scanners would be introduced at every jail in England and Wales by next March, to stop “treacherous” staff betraying their colleagues.

Mobile phone blockers are also planned for every jail to stop smuggling by officers, inmates and visitors.

Straw attacked corrupt staff after a new report highlighted the role played by them in smuggling heroin and other illegal drugs.

“It is a betrayal of society and it is also treacherous to colleagues because with corruption and the smuggling of drugs by prison officers goes major problems of disorder,” Straw said.

“It is intolerable and we are going to do everything we can to catch you and ensure you get a very long jail sentence.”

Today’s report, by former policeman David Blakey, also revealed some prisoners get hold of drugs by abusing a system designed to allow confidential communication with their lawyers.

Blakey said talks with the Law Society, which represents solicitors, should consider a registration scheme in a bid to foil the smugglers.

He also proposed a ban on visitors handing property such as clothes to inmates because illegal drugs can be stitched into garments.

And he said prison bank accounts should be more closely monitored, as they may be being used to operate drug dealing behind bars.

“These accounts should be a major source of intelligence and they are not. I am not entirely satisfied that the service is keeping sufficient track of money that is being held for prisoners within prisons and outside,” he said.

His four-month review found “substantial amounts” of drugs are smuggled into prisons or thrown over prison walls.

“Inevitably some clever and manipulative prisoners attempt to cultivate and compromise prison officers,” he said.

“Some officers engage in inappropriate relationships with prisoners and some prisoners offer to pay to staff large amounts of money … for drugs.”

Most staff had great integrity but were let down by a minority of corrupt colleagues, he said.

The planned network of scanning chairs and greater use of normal searches should be applied to staff more frequently on a random basis, he added.

Mobile phone blockers will be introduced, at an estimated cost of £50m. More than 600 mobile handsets and SIM cards are seized in prisons in England and Wales every month, the report said.

Blakey also suggested prisoners should wear a one-piece boiler suit with no pockets during visits, or a close fitting shirt and jeans, rather than a tracksuit, in a bid to reduce smuggling.

A report by PricewaterhouseCoopers in June
warned trying to make every prison in England and Wales drug-free would be too expensive. Over half the record 83,000 jail population misuse drugs, the report said.

Blakey agreed eradicating illegal drugs from jails would require an impractical level of searches and closed visits for every inmate.

source”: http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2008/jul/07/prisonsandprobation.drugsandalcohol?gusrc=rss&feed=uknews

Jail growth explodes as Feds crack down on illegal migrants

Posted in Uncategorized on May 27, 2008 by cosgoingwrong

DEL RIO, Texas — Many in Congress are counting on border walls to discourage illegal immigration and dope smuggling from Mexico. Here in Del Rio, Texas, authorities are using prison walls instead.

The ever-expanding Val Verde County jail is filled with would-be yardmen and maids, immigrants awaiting deportation. They’ve been caught in a law enforcement dragnet known as “Operation Streamline,” a zero tolerance program that began here and has since spread both east and west along the Mexican border.

Critics of the lock-’em-up approach question the skyrocketing costs, complain of poor conditions inside the detention facilities, and predict that ultimately the efforts won’t stop immigrants and drugs from making their way north.

But supporters say the approach is reducing crime and discouraging immigrants from trying to cross into the United States. The number of illegal immigrants caught in the Border Patrol’s Del Rio Sector is at its lowest level since the early 1970s.

“Enforcement works,” said Val Verde County Sheriff D’Wayne Jernigan. “We’re definitely seeing a reduction in crime throughout the border area and a reduction in the number of aliens running loose in our community.”

Though federal authorities are planning a small section of border fencing near the international bridge linking Del Rio and Ciudad Acuna, Jernigan, who prefers boots on the ground over physical barriers, says the illegal traffic has slowed without a wall.

In all of 2007, 22,920 people were apprehended in the Del Rio sector, many of whom passed through the Val Verde jail. In 1974, the oldest year-end figures available, almost twice that many, or 44,806, were caught. They don’t count how many get through, but officials believe fewer captures mean fewer illegal crossings.

As recently as 2000, 157,178 were caught in the sector. Then, in late 2005, after an outcry from the sheriff and other local officials, the Border Patrol inaugurated Operation Streamline in the Del Rio Sector. It was later expanded to Yuma, Ariz., and, most recently, Laredo, Texas.

The new approach is aimed at ending the controversial “catch and release” practice. For years, thousands of undocumented foreigners apprehended along the border were released for lack of jail space and given a notice to appear in court. Most simply vanished into the underground economy.

Now the buzz phrase is “catch and detain,” meaning virtually everybody who gets caught is sent to federal court or returned home immediately.

The result has been a logistical and financial burden for the U.S. Department of Justice, which must add attorneys and staff to bring charges against those being held. U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey recently called the burden “staggering.”

Along with it has come an almost insatiable demand for jail space.

Eight years ago, for example, the Val Verde Correctional Facility had only 180 beds. This year, after completing its second 600-bed expansion, the maximum security jail has room for 1,425 prisoners, an increase of almost 800 percent.

While the state prisoner population has remained flat at about 70 to 80 a day on average, the numbers serving time for immigration and drug offenses have skyrocketed, officials say.

“If it wasn’t for federal prisoners we wouldn’t need any of this. It just wouldn’t be necessary,” Jernigan said during a recent tour of the massive facility he oversees in Del Rio. “This is a federal court city and there’s a need to house federal prisoners here.”

Two brand new prisons specializing in federal detainees are also rising up along the Texas-Mexico border south of here — a 654-bed unit being erected in Eagle Pass and a 1,500-bed jail nearing completion in Laredo.

Like the Val Verde lock-up, the privately-run facilities belong to the Geo Group, Inc., formerly known as Wackenhut, which last year experienced its strongest financial performance ever, the company said.

Even the largest jail for illegal immigrants, the Willacy County Detention Center, was too small to accommodate federal demands. Located in Raymondville, Texas — nicknamed “prisonville” — it’s expanding capacity from 2,000 to 3,000 beds this year, officials say.

The detention boom hasn’t been done on the cheap.

According to Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE), it costs $88 a day to house a prisoner in privately run jail facilities — and nearly $120 a day at ICE processing centers.

Nationwide, the average number of daily prisoners detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, has increased 44 percent since 2001, figures show. Meanwhile, ICE’s budget for Detention and Removal Operations has more than doubled in the last four years, rising from $959 million in fiscal year 2004 to $2.4 billion in 2008, according to agency data.

Fixing the porous southern border became an urgent national priority after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The number of Border Patrol agents on duty, for example, will have doubled by the time President Bush leaves office, to 18,000, according to federal officials.

But Bush’s proposed immigration overhaul — giving guest worker permits to certain Mexican laborers — collapsed in Congress last year. That paved the way for workplace raids, an increase in fines for people caught hiring illegals, an expansion of electronic worker verification programs, and a series of anti-immigrant measures enacted by state legislatures.

Critics say the get-tough policies have been extraordinarily costly, both in financial and human terms. The U.S. already locks up far more people than any other country, according to the London-based International Centre for Prison Studies.

“Throwing money at the problem and then claiming that temporary gains are total victories is futile,” said Judy Greene, an analyst at Justice Strategies, a non-profit group that studies incarceration alternatives,. “I think Americans will come to see this over time, just like they did with the drug war, which didn’t have the advertised effect.”

Jim Harrington, director of the Texas Civil Rights Project, which provides legal assistance to many undocumented workers, said the crackdown is doomed to fail because it doesn’t address the root causes of illegal immigration. He blamed a massive “economic dislocation” in Mexico, where he said free trade policies have devastated rural agriculture and sent its field hands fleeing.

“I think we could lean on Mexico and tell them there’s no financial aid, reciprocity, any of that stuff, unless Mexico makes progress toward democratizing its own economy,” Harrington said. “Without that, we’re going to continue what we’re doing now, and that’s investing an endless amount of money into a bandaid that’s just not going to hold.”

Ricardo Ahuja, the Mexican consul in Del Rio, said migrants already are breaking through the physical and legal barriers.

“They’re finding other routes,” Ahuja said. “It’s a question of supply and demand. If there weren’t jobs waiting for them in the U.S., they wouldn’t cross.”

But supporters of the crackdown say the data proves it’s working and that the alternative is a suspension of the rule of law on the border. While Del Rio Sector apprehensions dropped 67 percent approximately two years after Operation Streamline was introduced there, they’ve gone down just 14 percent in the heavily-crossed Tucson area, figures show. U.S. Rep. John Culberson, R-Houston, is now pushing Congress to expand the zero tolerance polices border wide.

“This has an unbelievable deterrent effect,” Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said at a recent press conference. “When people who cross the border illegally are brought to face the reality that they were committing a crime, even if it’s just a misdemeanor, that has a huge impact on their willingness to try again.”

source: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/226/story/38555.html