Ariz. border group vows to continue patrols
Topics: From the Wires, News
Hugo Mederos, father of shooting victim Amber Nieve Mederos, grandfather of 15-month old victim Lilly, Amber's baby, and ex-husband of victim Lisa Lynn Mederos, sits in a car after speaking outside of the home where five people were gunned down Thursday, May 3, 2012 in Gilbert, Ariz. Police have identified one of the five people killed in a shooting in a Phoenix suburb as a former Marine with ties to new-Nazi and Minutemen groups. (AP Photo/Matt York)(Credit: AP)PHOENIX (AP) — The U.S. Border Guard was among the last known groups of armed civilians actively patrolling the Arizona desert on the lookout for illegal immigrants and drug smugglers.
Now that its leader, former neo-Nazi Jason Todd “JT” Ready, is dead in what police believe is a murder-suicide involving his girlfriend in a quiet Phoenix suburb, the future of his group has suddenly come into question.
His friends vowed Friday that the patrols will continue in some form.
Sean Rose, a 35-year-old Tucson man who said Ready was like a brother to him, said he would quit his job to keep the group going.
“He did a lot for this country as far as protecting the border, something the government doesn’t do,” Rose said. “I think it’s good to have civilians stopping the drug market.”
Groups that monitor the activities of organizations like the U.S. Border Guard expressed doubts that it will be able to maintain its operations. Without Ready’s leadership, they say, the Border Guard will likely disappear.
“The U.S. Border Guard is probably finished,” said Mark Potok of the anti-hate group, the Southern Poverty Law Center. “It really did revolve around JT Ready.”
An SPLC recent report said that “nativist extremist” groups like Ready’s decreased by almost half in 2011 to 184 groups, down from a high of 319 such groups in 2010.
The Minuteman Project and other similar groups have been plagued by infighting and financial difficulties, largely splintering or disintegrating altogether.
The movement’s decline comes as states like Arizona passed harsh immigration laws that included provisions allowing local police to question a person’s immigration status while enforcing other laws, Potok said.
Those laws created an impression among some civilian border militia members that state governments were doing more about illegal immigration, and that they no longer had to, he said.
Jennifer Allen, interim director the Arizona chapter of the immigrant advocacy group, the Southern Border Communities Coalition, said that organizations like Ready’s thrive on a charismatic leader, and tend to implode once that leader is gone.
“What brings hate groups together is anger and fear. So it makes sense that they would start to direct that toward one another,” she said. “They also attract a lot of people that want to be mega personalities.




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