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Welcome to the Minutemen Project Information page

 Dedicated to the men and women who volunteered to help protect our board with Mexico!

MMP is a citizens' neighborhood watch along our border
The Minuteman Project has no affiliation with, nor will we accept any assistance by or interference from separatists, racists or supremacy groups or individuals, no matter what their race, color, or creed.

 

Subject: Magic City News: Reports from a Minuteman
 

 
 




 
 
Letters-Reports from a Minuteman
By Robert Ludwig
Apr 18, 2005, 15:49

I recently returned from the Arizona border. There is a lot to be told here and I believe that my photo essay would tell much of the first few days of the Minuteman Project.

Two of my stories can be found at:

These are other photos, culled down from the five hundred taken.

While at the Minutemen demonstration, there seemed to be two concurrent thoughts:

  1. Close the border (not the crossings); and
  2. We support the border patrol.

What I heard the people saying:

We have been betrayed by President Bush.

I visited with Tim and his wife, residents who live about 4 miles north of the border. He spoke of the trails used by the Mexicans as they come north across his property. He also has abandoned mine shafts in his property. The homemade backpacks used to carry drugs across the border are dumped in these shafts. He told me there were nights when a pickup comes onto his property, lights off of course. The drugs or people are loaded and off they go. He knows of a ?car graveyard? where stolen out of state cars have been left after being used for transportation. He knows that he and his wife's identity have been copied as more than once, they have their mail stolen.

A woman from Tucson told me that she was tired of hearing of traffic accidents involving UDA's Undocumented Aliens.  It bothers her to hear of a pickup truck or van, overloaded with people, overturning and causing either deaths or injuries.

I talked with a man from Tucson telling of his disgust with a center being set up in Tucson to aid the illegals in finding daily work. This center is within 2 miles of his house and he had no trouble presuming who broke the glass into his camper in his back yard, ate or took all the food, stole his clothes and filled the toilet. From the style of clothes left, he knew the person had just come across the border, was about 5? tall, and had some large cuts on his left arm where he cut himself on the broken window glass. So to him it would just be a matter of going down to the work center and find someone wearing very baggy clothes (the Tucson owner was about 6? tall) with a bloody left arm. But it was so commonplace that he was told if we investigated all the alleged thefts by UDA's, we would have no time for anything else.

One Californian expressed concern that if people from Mexico could so easily cross the border, wasn't it a matter of homeland security to protect the borders from others who may be terrorists coming in the same way.

The border guards at this protest were very tight lipped. I tried to ask on as to the best place to see as much of the wall through Naco as I could and he said that he couldn't answer and all questions had to go through the information officer.

The sheriff's department was much friendlier. On Friday night, I was speaking with a member of the sheriffs department in Tombstone. He said that he felt that this protest wouldn't stop the traffic in people or drugs. Where there is money to be made, if one crossing area became closed, they, the coyotes (guides out of Mexico) would simply find another. I heard that one coyote could make thousands of dollars with each trip.

Yet, with all the problems, fears, and frustrations the UDA's bring, no one was willing to begrudge them the want of coming to the US for a better life. It just needs to be done within current immigration means not illegal night time crossings.

The Press

For each Minuteman, there is an equal number of press, each wanting their story.

Tombstone is a relatively small town, so when I arrived on Saturday evening and saw 7 television satellite trucks sitting at one street corner, you knew where the goings on where.

I was told when the organizational meeting got out, the more radical you looked, the more reporters were around you. If you were radical and had a pistol, so much the better.

I look forward to hearing from you.

Robert Ludwig
Bothell, Washington


© Copyright 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 by Magic City Morning Star

 

Minuteman Project
 
 
 
 
 

The Minuteman Project News release, April 4, 2005

"Neighborhood watch" along southern border
Minuteman Project's patrols begin today
 

April 4, 2005 (Tombstone AZ)---Dubbed the Minuteman Project by its organizers, approximately 200 citizen and self-described legal immigrant "volunteers" from the 50 states today began fanning out along part of a 23-mile section of the Arizona-Mexican border just south of the storied southeastern town of Tombstone, Arizona, to look for illegal border crossers. They are instructed "to observe and then report" to the Border Patrol. They emphasize they will not be confronting the illegal entrants.
 
Chris Simcox, owner of the Tombstone Tumbleweed newspaper, and Jim Gilchrist, a California accountant, project an upwards to 1,500 volunteers will be turning out over the month-long project. "We are peaceably assembling to petition the government for a redress of our grievances'" Simcox said, He said, "Polls show that 75 to 80 percent of Americans of all stripes want a complete halt this out-of-control invasion."
 
Simcox and Gilchrist list three paramount concerns motivating their project: homeland security, criminality and the massive numbers of illegal aliens entering the country. They cite news reports of known terrorist operatives said to have met with human smugglers in Latin American countries, and that the significant number of captured border crossers from "countries of interest" is alarming given that only an estimated one-fourth of all illegal crossings are intercepted. They also say that some 13,000 criminal aliens in two Arizona border sectors alone were apprehended in a one-month period while attempting to cross into the U.S. And they refer to an October 2004 Time Magazine cover story that said three-million illegals from all over the world now successfully enter the country.
 
President Bush has labeled the Minuteman Project's organizers and volunteers "vigilantes," a term that causes Simcox to bristle. "We are simply a civilian neighborhood-watch patrol gone national," Simcox said. At an April 1 press conference in Tombstone, in front of a sea of national and international press members jockeying for photo opportunities, U.S. congressman Tom Tancredo (R, CO) chairman of the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus and a open critic of President Bush's immigration policies, said to the volunteers present in the room, "You are not vigilantes, you are heroes in my book."
 

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