Border Officers: We Lack the Tools to Do Our Jobs
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2004
WASHINGTON Only about one-third of Customs and Border
Protection agents and inspectors believe they have all the tools,
training and support to stop terrorists from entering the country,
according to a survey released Monday.
The poll of Border Patrol officers, conducted for the unions
representing them, found the vast majority believe stopping
terrorists from getting into the country is their top mission.
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But only 34 percent said they were fairly or very satisfied with
the tools and training provided by the Homeland Security
Department. Union officials said at a news conference that the
tools needed include better vehicles, training in Spanish for new
officers and improved access to databases of potential terrorists.
"It should be simple for any law enforcement officer, anywhere
in the world, if they encounter someone suspicious to run one
biometric check that would link them to all this information so
that they would know if this person is a suspected terrorist or a
criminal," said T.J. Bonner, president of National Border
Patrol Council.
Agents have been given new technology such as personal radiation
monitors and the US-VISIT system, which fingerprints and
photographs foreigners when they enter the United States and allows
inspectors to determine whether they are carrying valid documents,
said Christiana Halsey, agency spokeswoman.
"Those employees out there today are better prepared than ever
to meet the challenges of guarding our borders," Halsey said.
The survey, done by Peter D. Hart Research Associates, was based
on responses from 250 Border Patrol agents and 250 Customs and
Border Protection inspectors who were interviewed by telephone
between July 30 and Aug. 7. The survey's margin of error is 4.5
percent.
About 6,500 of 10,000 Border Patrol agents are members of the
National Border Patrol Council. About 60 percent to 65 percent of
the 6,700 Customs and Border Protection inspectors are in the
National Homeland Security Council.
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