U.S. teens recruited to drive migrants from Mexican border
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[April 11, 2022]
By Andrew Hay, Nathan Frandino and Adria Malcolm
SUNLAND PARK, N.M., (Reuters) -
Seventeen-year-old Santi sits in his car outside shops in Sunland Park,
New Mexico, watching a pulsing blue dot on his mobile telephone.
Human smugglers have hired him to pick up migrants here, less than a
mile from the Mexican border, and take them to nearby El Paso, Texas.
His shiny red mobile phone pings every 15 seconds. He and the migrants
share locations, as a contact on the U.S. side messages instructions.
The high schooler with a high-fade haircut is among a growing number of
U.S. teenagers in communities from Texas to California recruited to
transport migrants crossing the Southwest border, according to U.S.
Customs and Border Protection.
Around one in four drivers caught smuggling migrants last year in the
Sunland Park-Santa Teresa area were children, most U.S. citizens living
locally, according to U.S. Border Patrol, which began recording the
juvenile driver data in fiscal year 2021.
Mexican youth have long guided migrants into the United States.
Recruiters tell both Mexican and U.S. teens they are unlikely to face
legal consequences because they are minors, according to around two
dozen government and law enforcement officials, attorneys, migrant
advocates and local residents Reuters spoke to.
U.S. children as young as 14 learn of the work from social media and
friends and transport mainly Mexican adults.
The young drivers can earn hundreds of dollars per migrant, and locals
jokingly call them "Ubers." Some see it as a way to get ahead in Sunland
Park, a working-class town with three times the national poverty rate
where a third of residents are under 18 and many children live with
grandparents.
But the job can be dangerous and federal authorities in New Mexico
appear keen to crack down on the juvenile drivers.
Teen drivers tend to flee at high speed when officers try to stop them,
according to Border Patrol officials. That can lead to pursuits by
Border Patrol and crashes.
GOOD DAY FOR PICKUPS
Santi is parked about 900 feet west of a white and green U.S. Border
Patrol pickup. The migrants are hiding in the desert around 1,000 feet
south.
Smuggling groups in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, took advantage of a cloudy
night to push migrants across rocky Mount Cristo Rey where there is no
border barrier.
U.S. agents in helicopters struggle to see migrants through clouds, and
strong winds may be stopping their drones from flying, according to
Santi.
"It's a good day for pickups," said the teen, who asked to be identified
only as Santi and that his vehicle details not be disclosed because
ferrying migrants is illegal.
Field agents check migrants' phones for information and pass it to
anti-smuggling units looking for drivers, group leaders and local "stash
houses" where migrants wait before travel.
Gerardo Galvan, the patrol agent in charge of the Sunland Park area,
noticed the rise in juvenile drivers in 2021 after a 14-year-old fled
agents and crashed into a Border Patrol van.
"They're told that if they go fast enough we're going to stop pursuing
them," Galvan said.
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Maria, whose last name she didn’t want used, shows her property
where she says migrants hide as they await rides in Sunland Park,
New Mexico, U.S., March 23, 2022. Picture taken March 23, 2022.
REUTERS/Adria Malcolm
Galvan said he was working with the
U.S. Attorney's Office in Las Cruces, New Mexico, to charge juvenile
drivers.
The office of the federal defender in Las Cruces represented four
minors for migrant smuggling in the first few months of 2022 after
six cases in all of 2021, according to Assistant Federal Public
Defender Amanda Skinner.
Unless the child has been in trouble before, the majority of
juvenile cases result in probation until the age of 21, she said.
"We don't typically see higher-ups charged. The vast majority of our
cases are drivers," said Skinner.
CRIMINALIZED YOUTH
Sunland Park Mayor Javier Perea sees no easy fix to the juvenile
driver problem. Meanwhile, the administration of U.S. President Joe
Biden expects another record-breaking year for migrant arrests on
the southwest border. A COVID-era policy that blocked most asylum
claims is set to lift in May.
"The last thing we want to do is criminalize our youth," said Perea,
whose town provides work opportunities for teenagers and is planning
an outreach program to deter drivers.
For activists like Irma Cruz, teen drivers are caught between the
multi-billion-dollar human smuggling business and the U.S.
government's policy to "militarize" the border as a deterrence.
"They're easy prey, and they're being used," said Cruz, campaign
director for Border Network for Human Rights, an immigration
advocacy group that also educates border residents on civil rights.
Of greatest concern are incidents such as when an El Paso
18-year-old crashed his sedan crammed with 10 people after being
chased by Border Patrol in 2020. Four local teens and three migrants
were killed.
The American Civil Liberties Union and U.S. lawmakers are calling on
Border Patrol to only chase suspects at high speed if they believe a
violent felony has been committed.
"If Border Patrol itself knows that such a high percentage of the
drivers of these vehicles in particular areas are children being
recruited in this way, then that should hedge against them
conducting these types of dangerous vehicle pursuits," said ACLU
lawyer Shaw Drake.
Galvan said agents attempting to stop a vehicle did not know whether
the driver was a child or adult. He said agents are not to engage in
pursuits around schools and in residential areas at busy times of
day, and must receive permission from a supervisor to continue a
chase.
Santi has transported migrants for a year and has been stopped by
Border Patrol but never charged. He knows the stakes will be higher
once he is 18.
When the parked Border Patrol truck drives off down McNutt Road,
Santi heads toward a migrant rendezvous.
"I don't want to go to jail for this," he says.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay, Nathan Frandino and Adria Malcolm in
Sunland Park, New Mexico; Editing by Donna Bryson and Aurora Ellis)
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