SANTA FE, NM (By
Michelle
Price, AP)
July 17, 2010 — Minutemen groups, a
surge in
Border
Patrol
agents, and
a tough new
immigration
law aren't
enough for a
reputed
neo-Nazi
who's now
leading a
militia in
the Arizona
desert.
Jason "J.T."
Ready is
taking
matters into
his own
hands,
declaring
war on "narco-terrorists"
and keeping
an eye out
for illegal
immigrants.
So far, he
says his
patrols have
only found a
few border
crossers who
were given
water and
handed over
to the
Border
Patrol.
Once, they
also found a
decaying
body in a
wash, and
alerted
authorities.
But local
law
enforcement
are nervous
given
Ready's
group is
heavily
armed and
identifies
with the
National
Socialist
Movement, an
organization
that
believes
only
non-Jewish,
White
heterosexuals
should be
American
citizens and
everyone who
isn't White
should leave
the country
"peacefully
or by
force."
"We're not
going to sit
around and
wait for the
government
anymore,"
Ready said.
"This is
what our
founding
fathers
did."
An
escalation
of civilian
border
watches have
taken root
in Arizona
in recent
years,
including
the
Minutemen
movement.
Various
groups
patrol the
desert on
foot,
horseback
and in
airplanes
and report
suspicious
activity to
the Border
Patrol, and
generally,
they have
not caused
problems for
law
enforcement.
But Ready, a
37-year-old
ex-Marine,
is
different.
He and his
friends are
outfitted
with
military
fatigues,
body armor
and gas
masks, and
carry
assault
rifles.
Ready takes
offense at
the term
"neo-Nazi,"
but admits
he
identifies
with the
National
Socialist
Movement.
"These are
explicit
Nazis," said
Mark Potok
of the
Southern
Poverty Law
Center's
Intelligence
Project.
"These are
people who
wear
swastikas on
their
sleeves."
Ready is a
reflection
of the anger
over illegal
immigration
in Arizona.
Gov. Jan
Brewer
signed a
controversial
new
immigration
law in
April, which
requires
police,
while
enforcing
other laws,
to question
a person's
immigration
status if
officers
have a
reasonable
suspicion
that the
person is in
the country
illegally.
But Brewer
hasn't done
enough,
Ready said,
and he's not
satisfied
with
President
Barack
Obama's
decision to
beef up
security at
the border.
Pinal County
Sheriff Paul
Babeu said
there
haven't been
any
incidents
with the
group as
they patrol
his
jurisdiction,
which
includes
several busy
immigrant
smuggling
corridors.
But Babeu is
concerned
because an
untrained
group acting
without the
authority of
the law
could cause
"extreme
problems,"
and put
themselves
and others
in danger.
"I'm not
inviting
them. And in
fact, I'd
rather they
not come,"
Babeu said.
"Especially
those who
espouse
hatred or
bigotry such
as his."
Law
enforcement
officials
said patrols
like Ready's
could
undercut the
work of the
thousands of
officers on
duty every
day across
the border,
especially
if they try
to enforce
the law
themselves
in carrying
out
vigilante
justice.
Ready said
his group
has been
patrolling
in the
desert about
50 miles
south of
Phoenix, in
an area
where a
Pinal County
Sheriff's
deputy
reported he
was shot by
drug
smugglers in
April.
Bureau of
Land
Management
rangers met
Ready's
group during
one patrol,
and they
weren't
violating
any laws or
looking for
a
confrontation,
said
spokesman
Dennis
Godfrey.
The patrols
have been
occurring on
public land,
and militia
members have
no real
restrictions
on their
weaponry
because of
Arizona's
loose gun
laws.
The militia
is an
outgrowth of
border watch
groups that
have been
part of the
immigration
debate in
Arizona.
Patrols in
the Arizona
desert by
Minutemen
organizations
brought
national
attention to
illegal
immigration
in 2004 and
2005.
Such groups
continue to
operate in
Arizona, and
law
enforcement
officials
generally
don't take
issue with
them as long
as they
don't take
matters into
their own
hands.
Border
Patrol
spokesman
Omar
Candelaria
said the
agency
appreciates
the extra
eyes and
ears but
they would
prefer
actual law
enforcement
be left to
professionals.
Former
Minutemen
leader Al
Garza
recently
created the
Patriot's
Coalition,
which uses
scouts and
search-and-rescue
teams to
alert the
Border
Patrol and
provide
first aid to
illegal
immigrants.
Depending on
the
availability
of
volunteers
and the
scouts'
evidence of
border
crossers,
patrols can
vary from
several
times a week
to once a
month, Garza
said. The
operation is
about 500
people, and
includes a
neighborhood
watch
program,
legislative
advisers and
a horseback
patrol, he
said.
Technology,
rather than
manpower, is
the focus of
Glenn
Spencer's
American
Border
Patrol. The
group is
based at his
ranch near
the border.
The five-man
operation
flies three
small
airplanes to
ensure the
Border
Patrol is
present and
visible
along the
international
line.
Spencer also
uses
Internet-controlled
cameras and
works with a
group called
Border
Invasion
Pics, which
posts photos
of people
they suspect
are crossing
illegally.
"Sitting out
there with a
bunch of
volunteers
looking for
people is
generally a
tremendous
waste of
people and
time,"
Spencer
said. "And
it's also
dangerous."
Ready said
he's
planning
patrols
throughout
the summer.
"If they
don't want
my people
out there,
then there's
an easy way
to send us
home: Secure
the border,"
he said.
"We'll put
our guns
back on the
shelf, and
that'll be
the end of
that."