Legality Of Inner Border Checkpoints?

Courts have upheld the constitutionality of inland checkpoints as long as they can be proven effective in detaining people who have crossed the border illegally and don’t unduly burden citizens. These checkpoints are described as “the third layer in the Border Patrol’s three-layer strategy”, following “line watch” and “roving patrol” operations near the border. The legal basis for these checkpoints is the Border Patrol’s statutory authority to operate within “a reasonable distance” of the border. Legally, these interior checkpoints should be located within a “reasonable” distance that stretches 100 miles from all US borders and coastlines.

CBP operates immigration checkpoints along the interior of the United States at both major roads (permanent checkpoints) and secondary roads (tactical checkpoints) as part of its enforcement strategy. According to news reports, Border Patrol operates approximately 170 interior checkpoints throughout the country. Congress should also draft a new statute ending lawsuit immunity for federal agents who violate constitutional rights and ban the use of interior checkpoints, which the Border Patrol operates.

Border Patrol agents at checkpoints have legal authority that agents do not have when patrolling areas away from the border. As long as the checkpoint’s location and purpose satisfy the Fourth Amendment, Border Patrol may BRIEFLY stop vehicles at certain checkpoints to: ask a question; and conduct searches without probable cause. Videotaping or recording interactions with Border Patrol on private property, in vehicle stops, and at checkpoints is not against the law.

In conclusion, checkpoints are legal anywhere and everywhere within 100 miles of any U.S. border. Every single person and vehicle is stopped at the border, and the constitutionality of warrantless internal border checkpoints conducting searches without probable cause has been upheld.


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What is the checkpoint between Arizona and California?

The text offers an account of the California Border Station in Blythe and the Interstate 10.

What do Border Patrol dogs sniff for?
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What do Border Patrol dogs sniff for?

The CBP Canine Program offers training and certification in canine behavior, handling, and employing a passive response detection canine. Canines are trained to detect concealed humans and controlled substances like marijuana, cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, hashish, and Ecstasy. Both officers and canines are taught proper search sequences for private and commercial conveyances, allowing for seamless staff interchange.

The Search and Rescue canine teams are trained in obedience, tracking/trailing, and large area search, with students honing their land navigation skills and demonstrating proper procedures using topographic maps, compasses, and global positioning systems. They also receive training in rappelling, backtracking, and deployments in various environments.

How do customs know who to stop?
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How do customs know who to stop?

CBP is alerted when an inbound passenger has a warrant for their arrest through the Advance Passenger Information System (APIS) and the Interagency Border Inspection System (IBIS). IBIS is used by CBP, law enforcement, and regulatory personnel from 20 other Federal agencies, including the FBI, Interpol, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives, the Internal Revenue Service, the Coast Guard, the Federal Aviation Administration, Secret Service, and the Animal Plant Health Inspection Service.

Information from IBIS is shared with the Department of State for use by Consular Officers at U. S. Embassies and Consulates. IBIS assists the traveling public with expeditious clearance at ports of entry, allowing border enforcement agencies to focus on potential non-compliant travelers. It also provides access to computer-based enforcement files, the FBI’s National Crime Information Center, and allows users to interface with all 50 states via the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications Systems.

Are there border patrol checkpoints in Texas?
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Are there border patrol checkpoints in Texas?

The Rio Grande Valley Sector, a part of the Border Patrol, has six stations on the border, two strategically placed traffic checkpoints, and one coastal station for backup checkpoints and marine operations in the Gulf of Mexico. Established in 1921, the Border Patrol has evolved over the years, with additional officers assigned to various locations. The headquarters were initially located in Brownsville, Texas, but later moved to McAllen, Texas, where the original building was removed and a new one was built in 1972.

The McAllen Sector was officially changed to Rio Grande Valley Sector in 2005, and in 2006, it relocated to a new state-of-the-art building in Edinburg, Texas. The Rio Grande Valley Sector patrols over 320 river miles, 250 coastal miles, and 19 counties, covering over 17, 000 square miles.

What questions do Border Patrol agents ask?

It is not uncommon for agents to inquire about travelers’ immigration status, travel plans, and luggage. In the event that such documentation is requested, it is the responsibility of the agent to provide the relevant identification or immigration documents for inspection. Furthermore, the agent must request consent for a search of the traveler or their luggage.

Is the San Clemente checkpoint active?

San Clemente Border Patrol Station is a traffic checkpoint on Interstate 5, one of seven stations in the San Diego Border Patrol Sector, and operates one of four checkpoints. Its strategy is based on line-watch activities and is tied to border enforcement. The station’s strategic importance lies in its location at a major egress route from the border, allowing the Border Patrol to provide a depth of defense beyond the international boundary and effect broader border security throughout the area. Officers inspect vehicle traffic at the checkpoint, with minimal contact with motorists due to heavy traffic volume.

Why is there a checkpoint from Vegas to California?
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Why is there a checkpoint from Vegas to California?

The California Department of Food and Agriculture established the first highway agricultural pest inspection stations in 1921 on highways crossing the state borders with Nevada in the High Sierras near Reno. These stations were established to detect live alfalfa weevils in camping equipment. The following year, similar stations were placed on the three principal highways leading into Southern California to detect pests from cotton and citrus-growing southern states.

By 1986, twenty-three border quarantine stations were operating by the State Department of Agriculture, examining a half-million cars. As of 2017, approximately 13% of the United States agriculture production occurred in California, with agribusiness directly generating $47. 1 billion of economic activity in the state. The California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) is a state government agency with a primary mandate of protecting California against the invasion of exotic pests and diseases.

Are random checkpoints legal in Texas?

Texas law prohibits law enforcement from setting up random sobriety checkpoints to check drivers for signs of intoxication. Instead, officers must have reasonable suspicion that a driver is impaired before pulling them over and conducting field sobriety tests. This is a violation of the individual’s right against “unreasonable searches and seizures” as outlined in the Fourth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution. The Supreme Court has grappled with what is “reasonable” for over two hundred years.

What is the rule 4 in customs?

In accordance with the stipulations set forth in Rule 4, the customs officer is required to undertake a comparative analysis of the sale of identical goods at the same commercial level and in similar quantities.

How to avoid falfurrias checkpoint?
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How to avoid falfurrias checkpoint?

The Federal Department of Homeland Security (FDA) has implemented a “layered approach” to monitor and enforce law on the Mexican border, with 18 permanent interior checkpoints located 25-75 miles north of the Mexican border. These checkpoints are part of a bounded zone that isolates a large portion of Texas, allowing federal law enforcement officers to monitor traffic and commerce being transported from the area to other parts of the state and country.

The value of the federal checkpoint system is high for Texas residents who live to the north, as the isolated highways and vast rural space make it difficult to move from south to north without detection.

In fiscal year 2013, the two major Texas sectors, the Laredo and the Rio Grande Valley sectors, combined to confiscate nearly one million pounds of marijuana, over 2, 500 pounds of cocaine, and make over 200, 000 apprehensions. However, the benefits realized by the residents north of the checkpoints come at a cost to the Texas residents who live south of the checkpoints. The area between the security layers creates a band that covers the northern banks of the Rio Grande River for a stretch of over 600 miles. This band of isolation and the situation it creates has wide-ranging effects on the people living inside.

Leaving the zone requires going through the checkpoints, which can have negative consequences. Minute level time delays from the long lines at the checkpoints mount into hours and days for those who regularly travel through. The checkpoints can also be a perpetual nuisance, especially for residents who constantly have to provide proof of citizenship or documentation of legal presence in the post 9/11 era. Procedures at both permanent and tactical checkpoints involve slowing or stopping traffic as vehicles proceed through the checkpoint.

Border Patrol agents use visual cues and canines trained to locate drugs and hidden persons to determine whether to wave the vehicle through, stop the vehicle, question the occupant(s), and determine whether a more thorough secondary inspection is required.

Despite the rigid standards at the checkpoints, the federal government does not try to lure people into a trap. Checkpoints are well advertised and easily averted as long as one stays in the bounded area. An example of this is the checkpoint just south of Falfurrias, where highly visible signs tell drivers that an inspection station is forthcoming and a U-turn allows drivers to avoid the checkpoint if they wish.

What is the busiest border checkpoint in the world?
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What is the busiest border checkpoint in the world?

Johor Bahru Checkpoint in Malaysia and Woodlands Checkpoint in Singapore handle the world’s busiest international land border crossing, with 350, 000 daily travelers. Border checkpoints are locations on international borders where travelers or goods are inspected and allowed or denied passage. Authorization is often required to enter a country through its borders, and access-controlled borders have limited checkpoints without legal sanctions. Arrangements or treaties may allow or mandate less restrained crossings, such as the Schengen Agreement.

Land border checkpoints are staffed by uniformed services, such as customs service or border patrol agents, to prevent the entrance of undesirable individuals, illegal or restricted goods, or to collect tariffs.


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Legality Of Inner Border Checkpoints
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Rafaela Priori Gutler

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  • Omg a month ago I was detained near El Paso on the highway. He pulled me over and was questioned for an hr. I am a single senior female traveling in my minivan. He eventually let me go after I applauded his decision to finally call in a drug sniffing dog so he didn’t have to tear apart my van. He kept saying I looked nervous. Well I was nervous. 😅🤣🤣

  • I was driving through the desert and there’s a roadblock. U.S. government agents detain me and ask to search my vehicle. Although I knew that I was clean it also felt wrong to say ok go ahead and violate my rights. As I drove away somehow I knew I had given up something more special than whatever they were looking for.

  • Back in 2011, I was stopped at least 6 times and searched twice while on a road trip from California to Florida. Most of the time, they asked the dumbest question imaginable: “Are you an American Citizen?” Other than looking for people to arrest, I’m convinced that these checkpoints are a means of conditioning the people into thinking it’s okay, to be stopped & searched without warrant or probable cause… Well, this is NOT okay!!!

  • what happen to the Fourth Amendment The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

  • Get rid of the federal reserve and these useless parasitic employees. The government needs to be shrunk by at least 90% immediately. If you are wondering why this government is so far in debt; look no further than the benefits, insurance and salaries of all of these non essential employees that are sucking the life out of this country. Stop the wars for profit. We will end up homeless like Thomas Jefferson said if we do not demand they end this nonsense.

  • I am a supporter of the Border Patrol. But, it makes no sense to have checkpoints more than 2 miles from the border. I also think they should have a reason to search your vehicle. This is how the rest of the Law Enforcement community operates. The Border Patrol shouldn’t be any different. Personally, I would call 911 and request local Sheriff or Police be present.

  • What about the 4th Amendment right to travel unobstructed and protection of your person and papers against search and seizure? These check points are unconstitutional. You are going to have to think of some legal way to catch illegals. Federal Agents should know better than to abuse constitutional rights.

  • For those who are unsure of modern law: Detaining someone requires a reasonable suspicion. This can be a broken headlight, or not using your headlights at night time. Arresting someone requires probable cause. This is when a police officer sees cocaine in your car and can legally search you. All these searches present in this article are illegal searches. They don’t satisfy probable cause. They just search without permission. If this ever happens to you, I highly suggest you press charges against the agent/agency. I hope this helps.

  • It infuriates me the border patrol can operate 100 miles from the borders and don’t appear beholden to the laws other agencies are. Border security, while a legit issue, is another issue being used to chip away at Const. under the guise “It’s for your own good.” I have a lot of empathy for those working on the border, often with one hand tied behind their backs, but I have nothing for an org run amok with power, detaining, attacking, etc US citizens up to 100 miles from the borders!

  • I never get why they ask for identification. Isn’t that the whole point of having no ID-cards? The fact that no, you don’t need to carry identification with you all the time and they can’t ask that? I live in Europe and I’ve never had a police officer ask me for “identification”, seems like you guys could use ID-cards better than us. Instead of all the suspicion bullshit.

  • Way back in 93 I was stopped in Memphis Tenn! I had 2 kids sleeping on the back seat & husband sleeping up front. They kept me in back of a cop car where the plastic divide was so close I don’t know how a big man would even fit but after an hour I was ready to lose it. It was so enclosed..😱I wasn’t doing anything wrong. Even told them to look in the trunk. But they kept insisting my story of living in Arkansas a few months & was returning back to Pa was too strange. well it was the truth.. I don’t like bugs & I wanted to go home where it was too cold for all the Ark critters. PERIOD ..then they woke the husband up to do same to him ..finally left us go. Claimed I was a tad over in the other lane.. which I wasn’t cuz I saw them way before I got to that corner & was making sure I was driving perfect so I wouldn’t get stopped

  • What happens if you are on prescription medication that allows you to drive? What happens if you are disabled and are really hurt by handcuffs or your arms behind your back? I was once punched in the stomach by a cop because I wouldn’t go out on a date with him, When I told other officers what he had done to me, I was begged not to call it in but to let them take care of it. I knew these guys from the place I worked so I trusted them. I have to say I never saw that one cop again, but I was young and a single mother of 2 and was afraid to turn him in. I’m much older now and things would be much different.

  • Most of those check points are looking for drugs. Years back we were coming up out of Albuquerque New Mexico and came upon a check that lit up the sky ahead of us. This is back in the 80’s, when we asked what it was about they told us a lot of drugs flow up this highway to the rest of the country. Maybe the difference was the police back then, they believed we still had rights.

  • This is an example of abuse of authority and aggravated assault, a felony, and NO amount of unconstitutional ‘policies or laws’ can defend these actions except a Presidential Executive Oder and Marshal Law! There are many of these checkpoints that do comply with Constitutional Law, but they should not be set up nowhere ‘near the border, which is highly unreasonable and unethical. I maintain a file titled “Good Cop/Bad Cop” and have watched many of both examples. I’m also a staunch Constitutional Conservative but believe in Innocent before proven Guilty in a court of Law. I am not a Lawyer, so this is my fairly educated opinion on the abuse of power, and Constitutional violations on our 1st through 5th amendments, primarily! Better technology can help separate the bad guys from the innocent travelers within our borders. Less petty Laws but stronger enforcement of more serious and especially violence-related crimes, espionage, terrorism, hard drug, and human trafficking to mention a few! Laws need to be written or rewritten to remove vagueness, obfuscation, semantics, and ambiguity! UnConstitutionnal Laws aren’t Laws!!!

  • DHS said the fifth amendment does not apply to them and detained us for over five hours before setting us free, while intimidating us with guns and dogs. Why do we US citizens have to go through this traveling down the road? Further they need more lessons in communication in English language, as they kept screaming at us…

  • The older I get the more disappointed I am in this country. You know what? Mexico is more free than we are. You don’t have government agencies breathing down your neck everywhere you go. Laws that people don’t like, they just don’t follow. Here if a law is passed, a new agency crops up taking my tax dollars to oppress my countrymen

  • You appear to consistently produce great and excellent, succinct, thorough, and relevant material on this website, and I value such reports and would consider them a viable source of information, even in this day when the media is, to put it lightly, in question. -Don’t change a thing, you guys ask the right questions.

  • Every one of these checkpoints I have ever experienced living in Arizona were after driving many miles of arid desert adjacent to national monument lands which are shared between United States and Mexico. Those are also the lands where my car has been approached while in motion by groups of persons walking in the desert dragging empty water jugs asking for water and rides farther inside the country. In those circumstances, just dial 9-1-1 to get border patrol. Border patrol will get them both water and a ride.

  • I am a former police officer and I was never a fan of these kind of check points. People should never be stopped unless you have resonable suspicion that a crime has been committed. Car stops like this are asking for trouble for both the police officer and the civilian. We need to illegal immigration for sure but practices like this are obviously not stopping it anyway

  • I just want to add some input here: as a former agent I do not support checkpoints at 100miles air miles or really any distance greater than 20miles and that only in extreme cases. However, it is VERY rare that the BP asks more then just “of what country are you a citizen”. It is even more rare to break windows for non compliance, and taser people. The agents that tased the pastor are abhorrent, Its outrageous to escalate the situation to that point. However, again, its EXTREMELY rare to bug people beyond asking if they are citizens. Unfortunately the reality of law enforcement is when you train someone to be a hammer, everything becomes a nail. It’s the sad the truth but its taught to them as potential life saving methods. I dont support it, but as with most complex issues, there is nuance here.

  • In spite of what the media has been saying, crime has been going down in this country. We don’t need checkpoints. For example, in New York City, homicides peaked at 2300 per year in 1991. In 2023, there were around 400 per year. I call this “New York Spring”; i.e., New York City is equivalent to Late March/Early April in weather. Cold days, but the trees 🌳 are beginning to bloom!

  • This is also a racist policy. I’ve driven from Vancouver Canada to Seattle Washington a few times and I’ve never seen an in land enforcement check point on the I5. Simply put the US border patrol isn’t worried about illegal aliens coming in from Canada, thus you are highly unlikely to see an in land checkpoint near the northern border.

  • I am in Cochise County, just a few miles from a checkpoint. No problems, ever. I love BP! I am polite to them, always. And they can search my vehicle anytime, but they have never asked. I think they are awesome! I love living here. If you are an ahole, then you might have issues with them. I see them as an asset to the community.

  • In 1979, I made my first trip to the border at Brownsville. Leaving the valley, I pulled my trailer back up hyway 77 at night and was stopped around Armstrong tx. Never been thru this before, I didn’t know what was going on. I had a travel trailer with ramp on back. BP told me that he wanted to search my trailer. I unlocked door, showed him the inside, the bathroom, and he saw the ramp and demanded that I show him what was in there. I looked at his grim sincerity and led him to the back of the trailer and said here you are. He told me to get back in my car and head up the road.

  • I advocate a 3 part solution to our boarder problems. 1) Secure the boarder with a wall, fence, or any other measure that stops future illegal crossing. 2) Deal with illegals currently residing in our nation. For otherwise law-abiding people, they can be offered a path to citizenship. For those who’ve committed additional crimes to being here illegally, they face prosecution for their crimes and then deportation. 3) Reform the process at the boarder. Have a series of crossing points where people can can cross either way. If immigrating here, the process needs to be simple and efficient. Those not able to be processed on the spot must wait outside the U.S. Once within the U.S. boarders, people should be free to travel at will.

  • “Put it in park!” “You told me not to reach for anything”. Yeah.. remember that drunk guy who was arrested after firing a BB gun out a window and the cop shot him repeatedly as he lay on the floor trying to obey the officer’s contradictory commands? All he did was try to pull his pants up, and now he’s dead.

  • In the summer of 1992 I drove from home in western Canada to California to visit my Dad in my 81 Cutlass Supreme. I was 22 with slightly long hair, the border patrol detained me for about half an hour and phoned my Dad to make sure that I was telling the truth. Looking back now it is definitely funny and a bit strange. 😐

  • I am more free in Yemen than you are in America, no one will tell you anything even if you are carrying an ak47 which many people do, lots of people don’t have number plates on their cars, lots of people don’t have an id card, there are lots of checkpoints everywhere but they just greet you and may look at your back seat and that’s it, they only stop semi trucks and overloaded vans or vans with a number plate from another place

  • America, i salute you. Every other country treats it’s government like it is their ruler, and they have to obey the governments every single order. America treats their government like it is a service provider, and the citizens pay the service provider the tax, and expects certain services, and will not tolerate excessive control on their lives. I wish we had this kind of Liberty in our Country.

  • The map that CBP uses is not 100 miles from the US border by any definition of the border of any country. The lake shore of the great lakes is not the border for this country no more what you say. The Northern border of the United States runs a a line through the Great Lakes, not down the shore line.

  • I live 35 miles from Juarez Mexico. I go through border check points regularly for the past 40+ years. I have never been treated with anything but curtesy and professionalism. Even when I set off Geiger counters because I had just had a medical procedure with radioactive materials or when carrying prescription opioid medication that were detected by the dog.

  • Also what does not make sense is they have their tag number they know that they are American citizen unless they have people that look like illegal immigrants in their car they should just let them go through why do they have to create trouble WHY it makes no sense and we are paying for this this is wrong so wrong

  • What I don’t understand is why don’t they give the people that live there a sticker or something to the people that live there they don’t have to even be stopped it can just be waived through It doesn’t make any sense it’s like they’re trying to create something out of nothing and we are paying them to do this to us this isn’t right we do have the power to change this if our politicians aren’t listening to us then we need to vote them out of office

  • I’m torn on this issue. I definitely don’t think they should be able to do this 100 miles from a border, but I can understand why they stop me on I-35 north leaving Laredo, or driving along Texas highways 83 or 277. I begrudgingly comply, because I’m more concerned with illegal immigration and drug smuggling than I am with wasting 5 or 10 minutes of my time every once in a while. The one in Encinal is the most annoying, because sometimes it takes me 30 minutes to get through. That’s about $20 out of my pocket, plus every once in a while I get radiated when they make me drive through the x-ray scanner.

  • you know……this really needs to be said….Stossel is pretty fuckin amazing. ive actually been perusal all of his pieces this year..looking at everything i can find on his reports and i gotta say….hes pretty good…..i mean really…trys very hard to be honest and straight forward…..he should really have a bigger platforn right now.

  • If this were the norm, that 100-mile range will become 200 miles. Once a liberty is forfeited, others will follow. I mean sure it would be easy to just answer the question and move on, but I bet for everyone, immediately afterwards, you will experience this nauseous gnawing feeling that your human rights have been trampled because you have voluntarily given up on a fundamental right. America is the land of the free and the home of the brave. Whatever happens to that? If you answer the question, you are neither free or brave.

  • I live in a border town and we’ve never hd any issues with the border patrol, but knowing that they can become this tyrannical makes me so impotent. Yes you can complain and maybe sue them if applicable (and let taxpayers pay for it) but this shouldn’t be happening at all. Not in USA. Land of the Free?

  • Border Patrol ruined my life! I was arrested by Arizona Border Patrol by himself in the middle of hey with a k9. It’s an open carry state. He said his dog alerted. I said and I have a CCW and a firearm under my steering column. That wasn’t enough, they kept searching, my friend had a half a joint and his medical marijuana card. They charged us with “Being International Drugs and Weapons Smuggling! I never went across or near border, I went to Patagonia lake fishing. We both had CCW and Medical Marijuana cards. Put is a chain link cage in hot desert without water. I made complaints everywhere, charges were dropped, officer met me in Tucson to return my gun after keeping and using it for a year and half. He brought it disassembled, I told him I’m not signing the property return paperwork until you put it back how and where you found it. He got pissed! But he did it cause I called his boss right there on the spot and said, do I need to refill suit? He called officer and said do what he says. Lol felt good! Until the next time I applied for a job! DISMISSED CHARGES STAY IN YOUR RECORD AND EMPLOYERS CAN SEE IT. It has ruined my life, can’t get good jobs. I’m a certified counselor and have 2 business degrees. All a waste of time and money thanks to Arizona Border Patrol. 21 people ran though there checkpoint while they were processing us. BP boss was livid that they all brought us to the station for shit charges and they missed a group crossing that they were waiting for. A supervisor was let go for abandoning checkpoint after we made numerous complaints for a year and a half.

  • Interest balancing of rights. The collectivism vs individualism argument. It’s ok to deny a individual thier rights up to and including life and liberty if it serves some nebulous greater good. That’s the argument. I reject the concept. Everyone is free until they have commit trespass upon another. Theft of concent, theft of life, theft of property. Then due process is to apply. How about deploying these guys on the actual border. I don’t but the concept that I somehow “collectively” own half a continent or 3\\5 in case of Canada. Therefore I require the holy writ of passport to cross between one unowned plot of dirt and another. If you or I purchase, maintain a plot of land. Put a house on it. Or certainly any permanent structure that conveys the private enjoyment and access on, through, across, under or (limited) over. Rockets fly overhead, satellites fly over and don’t disturb. If nothing permanent is placed on privately held land then signs are in order to put people on notice the land is private and only by invitation may one pass. That is not the same as crossing a sand dune or between two trees. Anyways armed men demanding you surrender your natural rights is too much!

  • Still a dumb move in my opinion. This pastor knew wether or not a police dog alerted? He seriously couldn’t just step out of his vehicle? He couldn’t just accept that sometimes you get put through bullshit even though your innocent? I don’t care how rude a cop is, expecting them to listen to you and let you go if you bitch in moan in your car is idiotic. The side of the road is not a court room and you are not your own lawyer, so don’t expect any reasonable treatment.

  • The events of 9/11/2001 create many of the rules. Many of these rules became laws by Congress. We U.S.A. will protect ourselves many of these actions could be consider anti Constitutional, however we as citizens should remember 9/11 and be compliant, not to be abuse and certainly uphold Constitutional rights.

  • Just imaging if a person was deaf and got pulled over. There needs to be a way to automate these stops and minimize human interaction if they can. Scan a code on a driver’s license if they deem the need to pull the person over in the first place. Many Cops and agents (not all) like to escalate problems and create situations were there shouldn’t be one. If a driver is uncooperative, have a report they fill out that involves why they pulled them over, DL number, plate number, and external observation, and let them go free. Put it on the record as a comment so if the next cop pulls over the same person, they understand and use de-escalation techniques…… maybe…. or maybe that’s a bad idea too.

  • Regardless of your stance on border patrol and illegal immigration, why is it that our own country is acting like a tyrannical state on two thirds of its citizens? This is how authoritarian governments operate. Remember the Natzi SS? While I am all for immigrants to this country be vetted and verified and then being allowed to stay, this should be done at the border, NOT 100 miles away and impacting 99.999% of the US citizens that live there, sometimes on a daily basis. I live in one of these zones and if a checkpoint goes up, my ass is moving.

  • It’s all a sham. Between Christmas and New Year’s 2013/1014 I had just retired and my wife and I were moving from South Florida to rural Utah. We pulled a large U-Haul trailer. When we got to the “border” check on Interstate 10 in New Mexico between El Paso and Tucson, the Border Patrol agent simply waved us through without checking anything. We could have been transporting at least 10 people in that trailer, or a ton of drugs, instead of our household items. They never asked, “What’s in the trailer?” I don’t know what they are there for, but in our case it certainly wasn’t to check for aliens or drugs.

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