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Special Report: Government Border Fence Trickery
By Grassfire.org Updates
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Special Report
UPDATE 12/20--Last night Congress passed the omnibus Consolidated Appropriations bill -- which includes the Hutchison Amendment that guts the Secure Fence Act. Last month, Grassfire.org's research staff broke this story. Thanks to the continued efforts of our team members who made tens of thousands of phone calls and sent thousands of faxes, the story finally broke through in the national media. World Net Daily's Jerome Corsi was the first in the media to tackle the issue. In the days leading up to the final vote, members of Congress and media outlets were repeating talking points first developed by Grassfire. As a result, although the bill passed, the Border Fence Funding Hoax has been exposed. Here is a list of articles and resources which chronicle how the Funding Hoax was exposed: Grassfire's Original Post -- The most detailed account of the Funding Hoax: As Grassfire.org has previously reported, despite grandiose claims, our government has built just 5 miles of the the 854 miles of double-layer border fence mandated by the Secure Fence Act of 2006. (Go here for that report.) While this fact is outrageous in and of itself, it begs a question:Why? If the law mandated a double layer fence covering 854 miles of fencing, then how come such little progress has been made? But the very same day that the Senate passed the Secure Fence Act, Senate leaders had already hatched a plan to, in essence, un-do the Act. More precisely stated, Congress passed another law giving the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)discretion over how and where the fence would actually be built. That night, after the Secure Fence Act was passed, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison rose to the floor of the Senate and expressed her concern that the Act was too restrictive and would impose too much of a burden on Texas' border communities. Hutchison then submitted into the record two letters written earlier that day. The first was a letter she had received from Majority Leader Bill Frist earlier in the day addressing Sen. Hutchison's concerns; the second, Frist's letter to House and Senate leaders issuing specific legislative directives related to Hutchison's concerns. The letter made three stipulations: Read Hutchison's comments and Frist's letter from the Congressional Record (.pdf). Thus, we see that a deal had already been struck to basically un-do the Secure Fence Act before the vote was even taken. The whole event was carefully staged to create the impression that Congress was clamping down on illegal immigration. You see, Republicans were just a few weeks away from the '06 elections and were desperately looking for an issue that would save them from defeat. So they passed the Secure Fence Act in hopes that people would overlook G.O.P. corruption when they went to the polls. Interestingly, as the Senate was voting on the Secure Fence Act vote, Democrats correctly criticized the G.O.P. for playing election-year political games. Sen. Patrick Leahy said the G.O.P passed the bill to "pander to the anti-immigration crowd" and give lawmakers "something they can take with them and hold up as a Republican victory for national security." Added Sen. John Kerry: "Knowing they cannot go home without taking some action to address immigration, Republicans in Congress have decided that saving their seats is more important than securing the borders."Timeline of Events Surrounding Fence Act Hoax
DHS questions necessity of border fence Instead, DHS arbitrarily decided there should be 570 miles of total border barriers, of which 370 miles would be actual pedestrian fencing (not double layer). Thus, instead of 854 miles of double-layer fencing, DHS set a goal of 370 miles of "pedestrian" fencing (i.e. not double-layer fencing). It is clear that DHS felt no obligation to fulfill the specific requirements of the Secure Fence Act. "(A) REINFORCED FENCING.--In carrying out subsection (a), the Secretary of Homeland Security shall construct reinforced fencing along not less than 700 miles of the southwest border where fencing would be most practical and effective and provide for the installation of additional physical barriers, roads, lighting, cameras, and sensors to gain operational control of the southwest border." Note the phrase "where fencing would be most practical and effective." Basically, DHS has an opt-out clause built in. But it gets worse. Page Two of the Hutchison amendment then states: "(D) LIMITATION ON REQUIREMENTS.--Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), nothing in this paragraph shall require the Secretary of Homeland Security to install fencing, physical barriers, roads, lighting, cameras, and sensors in a particular location along an international border of the United States, if the Secretary determines that the use or placement of such resources is not the most appropriate means to achieve and maintain operational control over the international border at such location" Just in case Subparagraph A was not clear enough, Hutchison added Subparagraph D to leave no room for doubt that this amendment is intended to make sure DHS is under no legal obligation to ever build any fence, never mind the 854 miles of double-layer fencing mandated by the Secure Fence Act of 2006. "Notwithstanding" means "in spite of." Thus, Subparagraph D says that in spite of anything stated in Subparagraph A, DHS is under no mandate to build the fence. Read the text of the bill from the Congressional Record Hutchison Amendment Survives On Omnibus Bill |
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