A Mexican man who used a fake U.S. birth certificate to get into the Border Patrol was helping to smuggle illegal immigrants
Onell R. Soto:
Oscar Antonio Ortiz, 28, an El Cajon-based Border Patrol agent on administrative leave, was arrested yesterday and charged in San Diego federal court with falsely claiming to be a U.S. citizen.
He also is charged with conspiring with another Border Patrol agent to smuggle immigrants and is scheduled to be arraigned in U.S. District Court this morning.
There is no indication in court records that the other agent, who was not identified, has been arrested.
In wiretapped calls, the two agents talked repeatedly about smuggling illegal immigrants through the border area they patrolled east of Tecate this spring, according to a complaint filed in court.
In one instance, they are heard talking about how to negotiate with a Mexican smuggler. In another, the other agent talks to a family member about how much money he would get if he just let the smuggling happen as opposed to smuggling people himself.
The two were working with a man in Mexico identified only as "Sol" or "Soldado," which means soldier.
In a May 4 wiretapped conversation, the other agent told Ortiz, "Talk numbers and don't go too low with him."
"I don't know how the guy wants to work, but I'll talk with him," Ortiz said.
"If he's just going to use our area, we can't ask for anything more," the other agent said.
Two weeks later, the other patrol agent told a family member that he was helping to smuggle 30 to 50 immigrants at a time, according to the court filing.
"We don't do anything, just clear the way and we get $300 per head," the other agent said, according to the wiretap. "But if we put in, then it's $2,000 or $1,800."
Ortiz and the other agent were placed on administrative leave in early June, around the time authorities dismantled a drug ring headed by an Encinitas gang member.
The agents knew some of the 28 accused drug dealers, but the two groups weren't working together, a sheriff's lieutenant said at the time.
Border Patrol agents must be U.S. citizens.
According to papers filed in court yesterday, Ortiz claimed to have been a U.S. citizen born in Chicago when he applied for the Border Patrol job in October 2001.
He provided a copy of an Illinois birth certificate. But when investigators checked the number on that document with records there, they discovered it belonged to someone else.
Ortiz, according to the court filing, was born in Tijuana and remains a Mexican citizen.
U.S. Agent Charged in Immigrant Smuggling
Border Patrol agent charged with smuggling, faking citizenship
The Border Patrol Hired an Illegal Alien and Gave Him a Gun
No bail for ex-border agent in conspiracy
1 Comments:
It's definitely a business opportunity, and will probably be even more so if/when the US steps up border enforcement.
Post a Comment
<< Home