Smugglers of Illegal Aliens Cause Rising Violence in Arizona
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2004
PHOENIX Jorge Zubia and his family were having a relaxing
holiday trip until they saw the muzzle flashes.
A man hanging out of a car window on an urban stretch of
interstate opened fire on their rented van. With his family
crouching in the back and his front tires flattened by bullets,
Zubia struggled to keep the van under control.
But three vehicles boxed Zubia in and forced him over to the
side of the road, where a gunman tried to open the van's locked
doors. Zubia's terrified relatives yelled at the gunman, asking him
what he wanted.
Then, the caravan drove off.
"I had with me what I most love in the world," Zubia said.
"If they had succeeded in opening the door, they would have hurt
us."
Police suspect immigrant smugglers were responsible for the
ambush in Phoenix and at least five other roadway attacks last year
in Arizona on families who have nothing to do with the smuggling
trade.
Smugglers who make money bringing people across the Mexican
border into Arizona have taken to kidnapping illegal aliens
from rivals and holding them for ransom. But sometimes the
smugglers mistake innocent families, almost always Hispanics, for
smuggled aliens.
"These people were truly innocent victims," said Ken
Witkowski, acting chief of the Gila River Police Department, an
agency 40 miles south of Phoenix that investigated four such
attacks last year.
In recent years, alien smuggling has grown more dangerous,
with kidnappings and killings in the Phoenix area
on the rise.
In a dispute between rival gangs of smugglers in
Arizona, four people were killed and several wounded in a shooting
involving three moving vehicles on Interstate 10 south of Phoenix,
which has become a hub for illegal aliens in recent years
because of tighter patrols along the border in California and
Texas.
The mistaken-identity attacks on innocent families pose an
enormous threat, police said. Illegal aliens, smugglers, families and
passing motorists could get shot, and the ambushes could lead to
high-speed wrecks involving other cars.
"The potential for something catastrophic to happen is high,"
said Phoenix Detective Tony Morales. "I'm surprised we haven't
already had that happen."
Immigration officials say they have not heard of such attacks
occurring elsewhere in the Southwest.
The attacks have usually come late at night on or near
Interstate 10, which runs through Arizona's two biggest cities,
Phoenix and Tucson. Police said smugglers probably look for vans
and other vehicles capable of carrying groups of people.
In the attack on Zubia's van, eight Zubia family members and a
friend were traveling from El Paso, Texas, to Mira Loma, Calif.,
when they were ambushed July 3 in Phoenix.
The attackers fire at the tires before using cars to try to
force over their victims. The families always resist and have never
been physically hurt. In all but one of the six cases, the
attackers got away.
Police are not certain why the would-be abductors gave up. They
might have been scared off by other motorists, encountered more
resistance than expected or realized their victims were not being
smuggled, police said.
In the Zubias' case, the gunman "probably realized that it was
the wrong van," said 20-year-old Susana Zubia, Zubia's niece.
___
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