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When reports of bandits do come it, it's usually too late to find them, Estrada said. The killing comes as federal and local officials say the border is safer than ever. "It's been safer, it's more secure, but it's not sealed," Estrada said. "And it will never be sealed as long as you have the demand for drugs and people. We'll continue to be busy for a very long time." As for whether there will be more killings, Estrada said "the threat is definitely there." "And I think everybody is mindful of that and aware of that," he said. "It is a porous border because if you want to find a way to make it across, you can." Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano was expected to be in Arizona on Thursday and Friday to meet with Border Patrol agents in Nogales and Tucson, but had no scheduled events involving the public or members of the media. The shooting occurred in the Border Patrol's Tucson sector, the busiest gateway for illegal immigrants into the United States. Half of the marijuana seizures along the 1,969-mile southern border are made in the sector, which covers 262 miles of the boundary. Terry, who is from the Detroit area, was unmarried and didn't have children; he's survived by his parents, a brother and two sisters.
[Associated
Press;
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