Weak Link


By Katherine McIntire Peters <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected] ExecutiveApril 1, 2011

Drug cartels are working hard to corrupt federal agents and drive a hole
through border security.

It's not clear when Louis Enrique Ramirez took his first bribe. In the
summer of 2005, the former customs inspector apparently began cutting deals
with smugglers to allow undocumented immigrants as well as the occasional
load of drugs across the Southwest border from Mexico into Texas. During the
next three and a half years, U.S. investigators believe Ramirez pocketed
$500,000 to provide safe passage for illegal immigrants and cocaine. In
early 2009, Ramirez fled to Mexico after someone tipped him off that
investigators had begun to unravel his scheme.

The law caught up with Ramirez late last fall when federal agents arrested
him crossing the international bridge from Matamoros, Mexico, into
Brownsville, Texas. A partially unsealed 13-count indictment against the
38-year-old former inspector at the Homeland Security Department's Customs
and Border Protection bureau charged him with multiple counts of drug
trafficking, alien smuggling, conspiracy and bribery. On March 3, just as
jury selection for his trial was about to begin, he pleaded guilty to
cocaine trafficking and alien smuggling and admitted he belonged to a drug
trafficking organization. In addition to coordinating drug shipments through
the inspection lanes he handled at the U.S. border, Ramirez conspired to
bring undocumented foreigners into the United States and transport them
farther "for commercial advantage and private financial gain," noted a
statement released by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District
of Texas.

U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen convicted Ramirez and ordered him to
forfeit $500,000 - the amount of money federal agents believe Ramirez made
through corruption. Hanen set sentencing for early June when Ramirez faces
additional fines totaling $4.7 million. He could spend the rest of his life
in prison.

The Ramirez case and others illustrate a worrisome trend at CBP. As the
bureau has ratcheted up efforts to cope with the tide of crime sweeping
across the Southwest border, Mexican cartels have stepped up efforts to
infiltrate CBP and other federal, state and local agencies responsible for
policing the border. A week after Ramirez entered his guilty plea, federal
agents arrested nearly a dozen members of a smuggling ring operating in the
border town of Columbus, N.M. Among those netted in the raid were the mayor
and police chief. According to the 84-count indictment against them, they
supplied weapons to criminals in Mexico.

Thomas Frost, Homeland Security's assistant inspector general for
investigations, told Senate lawmakers in 2010, "Drug trafficking
organizations have purchased information to vet their members, to track
investigative activity and to identify cooperative individuals" in U.S. law
enforcement.

For a number of reasons, Mexican drug cartels have targeted CBP agents in
traffickers' broad efforts to corrupt U.S. law enforcement personnel, says
James Tomsheck, assistant commissioner for internal affairs at the bureau.
"We are the largest law enforcement organization in the United States and
much of that growth has occurred in the last five years. It creates
vulnerabilities that are inevitable."

Tomsheck notes that the Border Patrol agents and customs inspectors on the
front lines of the long-running battle against multinational drug cartels
serve in the highest threat environment for corruption and integrity issues
that law enforcement personnel face - the Southwest border. "And we're doing
all this at a point in time when there are clear indications there are
greater efforts on the part of those who would compromise our workforce than
ever before," he says.

Rooting Out Corruption

Few problems have been as vexing to Washington politicians as border
security along the 1,900-mile stretch of territory that separates the United
States from Mexico. In a quest to stanch the flow of drugs and illegal
immigrants coming into the states from the south, recent Republican and
Democratic administrations have at least one approach in common - policies
that have created unprecedented growth at Customs and Border Protection. In
the last five years alone, from 2005 through 2010, CBP grew by 16,315
employees, from 42,409 to 58,724.

As CBP has been ramping up efforts along the border, Mexican cartels have
been mounting their own offensive - to infiltrate the bureau, Tomsheck says.
Since Oct. 1, 2004, 121 current or former CBP employees have been arrested,
indicted or prosecuted for corruption, including cases in which employee
actions were serious enough to compromise the bureau's mission. The number
dipped in 2006 and 2007, but rose again sharply in 2008 and 2009.

"We take great pride in the fact that despite that scenario, we maintain a
very high integrity workforce where all but a fraction of 1 percent of
[employees] continue to engage in the most honest behavior you can expect of
a law en- forcement organization," Tomsheck says. Nonetheless, the number of
corruption cases has outpaced the rate at which CBP has grown, he adds,
prompting senior leaders to reorganize and boost its internal affairs staff
and activities.

"The number of arrests trended upward pretty significantly," Tomsheck says.
The dip in the number of employees arrested for corruption between 2009
(when 29 were taken into custody) and 2010 (when the number dropped to 18)
is encouraging, but he isn't declaring victory. "I hope it's a legitimate
downward trend, but it's really too early to tell. We'd like to think that
some of the measures we've put into place with some of our partners have had
an impact," he says.

Among the steps CBP began taking in 2008, as corruption arrests were
starting to peak, was a program to polygraph applicants who were considered
a high risk for law enforcement positions - especially those who had lived
outside the United States for periods of time, making it difficult to assess
their suitability through standard background investigations. "From that
program there were strong indicators that there were infiltrators in our
applicant pool, and polygraph was successful in identifying them. The
numbers wouldn't be appropriate for me to discuss, but an alarming number
were identified," Tomsheck says.

Expanding Polygraphs

A September 2010 investigative report by the Senate Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee staff found that drug cartels "have been
attempting to infiltrate the agency by sending drug traffickers to take the
entrance examination."

Among CBP applicants who take polygraph tests, 60 percent are found to be
ineligible for employment, primarily because they have a history of drug
abuse or criminal activity that they failed to disclose during the
application process. Among applicants who take and pass the polygraph, fewer
than 1 percent later fail the mandatory background investigation. But among
those who don't receive a polygraph, the failure rate of the background
investigation is roughly 22 percent, the Senate report found.

Despite the value of the polygraph test in screening out ineligible law
enforcement applicants, the test is administered to only about 15 percent of
applicants. The fact that such a valuable tool goes unused 85 percent of the
time is a matter of resources, Tomsheck says. CBP does not have enough
trained polygraph examiners to increase the rate of testing, a problem that
has been compounded by significant growth in personnel. Between 2002 and
2009, the workforce doubled from 10,045 to 20,119. As pressure on internal
affairs to screen more applicants has grown, the office is handling more
investigations into employee misconduct. There were 576 allegations of
corruption among Border Patrol agents in 2009 alone, the Senate report
found.

In December, Congress passed the 2010 Anti-Border Corruption Act, which
required CBP within two years to submit all applicants to a polygraph
examination prior to hiring them. The law, which President Obama signed in
January, also requires CBP to clear its backlog of periodic reinvestigations
of current employees - a backlog that has grown to 19,000, or 45 percent of
its law enforcement positions, according to the Senate investigation.

Law enforcement personnel undergo mandatory background reinvestigations
every five years. So, each year the investigations are scheduled for the
cohort of officers hired five years earlier. CBP has been unable to keep up
with the schedule, however. Under the new law, the bureau must initiate (not
necessarily complete) all scheduled reinvestigations within 180 days.
Employees undergoing re-examinations will not be subject to mandatory
polygraphs, something employee unions have protested, but investigators can
request a polygraph if they have reason to believe such an exam would be
useful in a particular case and the employee consents to one, he says.

The polygraph mandate, which the Congressional Budget Office estimates will
cost $19 million to implement during the 2011-2015 period, creates new
challenges for internal affairs. Tomsheck in January met with officials at
the National Center for Credibility Assessment, based at Fort Jackson, S.C.,
to discuss how the polygraph training center can help CBP expand the number
of certified examiners to meet the law's requirements. The military school,
which has operated under various names in the past, offers the only
federally certified polygraph instruction in the nation. All law enforcement
examiners must complete the 14-week course to become certified under federal
law.

"A polygraph exam is a psychological test. It's a fragile one. It needs to
be properly administered by highly trained professionals, and there needs to
be a very standardized approach to get a valid result," Tomsheck says. While
polygraph exams can be flawed, as the tool's critics are quick to point out,
"the overwhelming body of research strongly supports the use of polygraph
both in applicant screening and in criminal testing," he adds.

Additional Steps Tomsheck arrived at CBP in 2006 from the Secret Service,
where he oversaw 22 field offices as a senior executive in the office of
investigations. With the support of CBP leadership, he set out to
restructure and bolster the bureau's anti-corruption program. When he
started, the internal affairs staff numbered around 160 employees; today he
has more than 620 and he expects to hire more personnel in the future beyond
those needed to expand the polygraph program.

Eventually, he says he'd like to see periodic reinvestigations evolve into a
continuous monitoring program. Among the anti-corruption efforts he has
expanded at CBP is a program to better analyze corruption patterns to detect
potential problems earlier and prevent criminal activity.

Janene Corrado, director of internal affairs' integrity programs division,
says CBP analysts continually examine vast quantities of public data to
search for anomalies that could indicate corruption. Among the most
ambitious projects the division has undertaken is one to build a case study
of the insider threat at CBP. Analysts are methodically examining every
corruption case to detect patterns or other indicators that will further
develop their understanding of the threat. In each case, they're attempting
to interview former co-workers and associates to build a comprehensive
picture of corrupt behavior. The information they develop will inform
training programs and operations to root out corruption.

Another increasingly ripe source of data for analysts are social networking
websites, Corrado says. Employees often reveal compromising information,
assuming wrongly their revelations are private, or shared only among
confidants. "Sites like Facebook and MySpace are a gold mine," she says.

Another red flag is a sudden change in an employee's financial behavior.

Conspicuous consumption should trigger a closer look by managers, Corrado
says, noting that for federal employees, earnings are a matter of public
record.

"If one of your employees pulls into the parking lot with a new Hummer,
maybe you want to engage them and find out [what prompted the expensive
purchase]," she says. "It may be completely explainable - maybe grandma left
someone $100,000, or someone won the lottery. The dollar always gives us a
lot of information."

Consider the case of former customs inspector Margarita Crispin. While
Crispin lived modestly in El Paso, Texas, not long after she was hired by
CBP she bought two expensive homes in Mexico, along with several luxury
vehicles. Tipped off by an informant that Crispin was allowing drug
shipments through the lanes she worked at the El Paso port of entry, FBI and
Homeland Security agents were tracking her movements when they discovered
the purchases, made through straw buyers, as well as her social connections
to known drug traffickers. In July 2007, after nearly three years of
investigation, federal agents arrested Crispin when she showed up for work.
In April 2008, she pleaded guilty to various charges and was sentenced to 22
years in prison. FBI investigators estimate she received more than $5
million in bribes during her employment with CBP.

Tomsheck and other bureau officials hope CBP has turned the tide on rising
corruption cases. "We are looking very carefully and very hopefully at the
downward trend. We hope it's an indicator we have rounded the corner," he
says.

http://www.govexec.com/features/0411-01/0411-01s2.htm

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

One of the lessons of history is that nothing is often a good thing to do
and 

always a clever thing to say.

Will Durant

 



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