Border News
The
United States and Canada recently opened the first joint-operated border
crossing, between central Washington state and the Okanagan Valley of British
Columbia. The crossing is located at a large commercial port facility, and it
includes a two-lane highway exclusively for cargo truck traffic. The $31 million
facility is co-operated by the U.S. General Services Administration and the
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency.
*****
Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Agents working undercover in Baghdad have arrested
a man for allegedly violating the Arms Export Control Act and International
Traffic in Arms Regulations. Regard Yakou, 43, is suspected of brokering the
manufacture and export of six armored patrol boats to Saddam Hussein, from
November 2000 to July 2003. Yokou was transported to JFK International Airport
to appear in the Eastern District New York court. Yakou's father, Sabri Yakou,
was also arrested this month in New York for his alleged involvement in the
scheme. ICE officials said the case "sends a message to those who thought
they could violate the arms embargo, and cynically expected that the evidence
would be lost within the borders of Saddam Hussein's terrorist regime. The
message is: We can reach you there, too. And will."
*****
Last week during a subcommittee hearing, House Agriculture Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte claimed the Department of Homeland Security was refusing to brief the panel on a border security program that merges personnel from three federal agencies into a single unit. The DHS's "One Face At the Border" initiative was launched in order to cross-trains border agents and simplify the entry process. Goodlatte said the Department's plans may be "insufficient to protect American agriculture against the unintentional introduction of plant an animal pests and disease." The DHS said officers will receive additional training to perform agricultural inspections, but Goodlatte said the agency could not find time to brief the Agriculture Committee when officials appear on Capitol Hill, leaving the Committee in the dark.
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