Fact Sheet: Department of Justice Funding Request for Southwest Border
Enforcement Initiative

http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2008/January/08_opa_080.html

As part of the Southwest Border Enforcement Initiative, the following
information provides a breakdown of the $100 million in additional funding
that the Administration seeks for the Department of Justice to fight
criminal activity on the Southwest Border.

Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA): $20.4 million (39 positions)

-Foreign-deployed Advisory and Support Team (FAST) Expansion: $7.0 million
and 20 positions (18 agents and 2 intelligence analysts) to establish two
additional teams for the Western Hemisphere, and funding to deploy them for
up to six months annually. The teams will be regionally oriented to assist
DEA's host nation counterparts in the Central America, South America, and
the Caribbean, where drugs flowing to the United States are produced or
transited. These teams will provide the expertise, equipment, and personnel
to augment DEA Country Offices targeting the most significant violators,
Priority Organizational Targets, and Consolidated Priority Organizational
Targets.

-Strategic Drug Flow Enforcement Operations: $2.0 million to conduct one
additional Operational All Inclusive (OAI) deployment each year in the
Western Hemisphere. OAI is DEA's primary large-scale and successful Drug
Flow Attack enforcement operation in the source, transit, and arrival zones.
This operational funding provides for travel, aviation support, intelligence
collection, and host nation support.

-Tactical Aircraft Section: $8.9 million and 3 agent pilots to purchase,
operate, and maintain one new Bell 412 twin-engine helicopter to support
interdiction operations in the transit zone, including FAST deployments, and
address air, maritime, and land drug trafficking threats.

-Southwest Border Staffing: $2.6 million and 16 positions (9 agents and 2
intelligence analysts) to prevent the flow of drugs across our Southwest
Border, which remains a critical front in our nation's defense against both
illegal drug trafficking and terrorism.

Interagency Crime and Drug Enforcement (ICDE)$9.6 million (56 positions)

-Drug Prosecution: $5.1 million and 50 positions (30 attorneys) to support
prosecution activities against significant drug trafficking organizations
and money laundering organizations responsible for: (1) transporting or
importing drugs and precursor chemicals to Mexico for subsequent
distribution to the United States; (2) manufacturing or distributing drugs
within Mexico for subsequent distribution to the United States; (3)
transporting drugs across the Southwest Border of the United States and/or
subsequently distributing those drugs in the United States; and (4) the
laundering and the bulk cash smuggling of illicit proceeds across the
U.S./Mexico border.

-License Plate Exploitation: $2.8 million to support communications costs
associated with the License Plate Exploitation Initiative, an effort to link
vehicles traveling outbound from the United States into Mexico with
Mexico-based Consolidated Priority Organization Targets and affiliated
"Gatekeeper" organizations involved in bulk cash smuggling. Also included is
$500,000 to provide sufficient IT infrastructure for the Organized Crime
Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) Fusion Center to process and exploit
the license plate data collected. The OCDETF Fusion Center will be able to
target the most significant bulk cash smuggling organizations by leveraging
the license plate data against its existing database of multi-agency
criminal investigative reports.

-Fugitive Apprehension Initiative: $1.7 million and 6 Deputy U.S. Marshals
to increase USMS' capability to apprehend OCDETF fugitives both domestically
and in foreign countries, particularly those fugitives linked to South
America and Mexico-based drug trafficking organizations.

U.S. Marshals Service (USMS) $12.7 million (73 positions)

-Prisoner Security and Transportation: $12.7 million and 73 positions (52
Deputy U.S. Marshals) to manage the increasing workload along the Southwest
Border. As the number of illegal immigrants entering America has risen, the
USMS has experienced substantial prisoner and fugitive workload growth along
the Southwest Border. Total USMS prisoner productions in Southwest Border
districts increased by 9 percent from FY 2006 to FY 2007, compared to a 2
percent increase in all other districts. This funding will allow the USMS to
meet its responsibilities for protecting and securing federal detainees
before, during, and after their judicial proceedings. Included in this
initiative is $2.1 million in non-personnel funding for additional leased
prisoner transport vehicles.

Office of the Federal Detention Trustee (OFDT) $37.6 million

-Detainee Housing and Transportation: $37.6 million to accommodate an
anticipated increase in the number of detainees housed in non-federal
facilities. These resources will fund the costs associated with prisoner
detention, care and transportation of detainees along the Southwest Border.

Executive Office for Immigration and Review (EOIR) $10 million

-Digital Audio Recording System (DAR): $8.3 million for the implementation
and maintenance of a Digital Audio Recording system (DAR) to be provided to
immigration courts nationwide. This system will substantially improve the
audio quality in the immigration courts to record hearings, over the
cassette tapes currently used, and will allow the immigration judges to
operate the recording system through the use of a desk-top computer.

-Immigration Review Information Exchange System (IRIES): $1.7 million for
IRIES through which EOIR will share mission-critical information with its
external business partners, most notably the Department of Homeland Security
and the DOJ's Civil Division.

U.S. Attorneys (USA) $8.4 million (83 positions)

-Southwest Border Prosecution: $8.4 million and 83 positions (50 attorneys)
to support additional prosecutorial efforts along the Southwest Border. The
Southwest Border is particularly vulnerable to the operation of cross-border
criminal enterprises including: human smuggling, drug smuggling, homicide,
robbery, hostage taking, and money laundering. Additional Assistant U.S.
Attorneys and paralegals are needed to respond to these cross-border
criminal activities and the increases in immigration cases resulting from
the substantial increases in Border Patrol Agents and the U.S. Government's
overall effort to gain operational control of the border.

Criminal Division (CRM) $289,000 (2 positions)

-Reducing Gang Violence: $289,000 and 2 attorneys to combat ever-increasing
gang threats facing the nation along the Southwest Border. The 2 attorneys
will be part of the Criminal Division's Gang Squad, but will focus
exclusively on Southwest Border enforcement cases and will work in tandem
with the DOJ Gang Targeting, Enforcement, and Coordination Center
(GangTECC).

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) $948,000 (12
positions)

-Firearms Industry Regulation: $948,000 and 12 positions to enhance ATF's
ability to inspect and investigate the firearms industry. Firearms-related
violence has been perpetrated by warring drug trafficking organizations in
border cities such as Laredo, Texas, and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. Agents have
noted an "iron river of guns" with thousands of weapons per week crossing
the border into Mexico from the United States. Approximately 40 percent of
those weapons are linked to drug trafficking organizations. These additional
positions will strengthen industry oversight in the region and implement a
focused inspection program to identify purchasers, traffickers and
non-compliant licensees that may be sources of illegally trafficked firearms
used by violent criminals.

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