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."

