Mounted Patrols Beefed Up At The Border

By December 30, 2011 Horses

By Delcia Lopez, USA Today



By Rick Jervis
First published on USAToday.com.

HIDALGO, Texas – Clyde knows a thing or two about men hiding.

U.S. Border Patrol Agents Chris Garza, Hipolito Coy and Daniel Milan monitor the banks of the Rio Grande River near Hidalgo, Texa

If there’s someone squatting in the bush near the Rio Grande, the 5-year-old gelding will prick up his ears, give a snort and stop in his tracks, despite gentle rib kicks from his rider.

If people make a run for the river, he’ll crash through brush and branches after them. Or he could be quiet as a breath and walk right up to a circle of unsuspecting smugglers.

Clyde, a lean, copper-colored mustang, is one of the latest weapons in the struggle to tighten the U.S. border with Mexico. The U.S. Border Patrol has used horses since its inception in 1924, but new funds from headquarters and a federal program that captures, breaks and donates wild mustangs is bringing more mounted patrols than ever to the border.

“He’s doing great,” says Border Patrol agent Chris Garza, Clyde’s rider. “They do things ATVs and trucks just can’t.”

The horses come at a crucial time for the southeastern area of the border, the Rio Grande Valley Sector, a 316-mile stretch from Brownsville to Falcon Heights. For the fiscal year ending in September, agents here seized more than 930,000 pounds of marijuana, a new sector record, and arrested more than 53,000 people attempting to enter the U.S. illegally — more than the other two border sectors in Texas.

The high numbers are credited to increased enforcement, as well as crackdowns on drug cartels by Mexican authorities on the other side of the Rio Grande, says Supervisory Agent Daniel Milian, a spokesman. As the government raids the stashes of nearby syndicates such as the Zetas and Gulf Cartel, more drugs come north to the USA.

“This is a real old-school patrol,” Milian says of the mounted patrols. “It’s a great resource to have.”

In 1924, agents signing up for the newly commissioned Border Patrol were required to bring their own horses, according to the agency. Washington furnished a badge, revolver, oats and hay for the horses, and a $1,680 annual salary. Uniforms came later. The mounted patrols cased the southern border looking mostly for whiskey bootleggers and illegal Chinese immigrants. As motorized vehicles were introduced in 1935, horses were phased out.

Horses have since been used sporadically by some sectors, but lack of funds and support have kept their use spotty, says Supervisory Border Patrol Agent Mary Olivares, horse patrol coordinator for the Rio Grande Valley Sector. New money from Washington last year helped revive mounted patrols, she says. Agents are tapping into a program by the Bureau of Land Management that captures feral mustangs on federal lands and sends them to prisons to be broken, she says.

Inmates at Hutchinson Correctional Facility in Kansas broke and trained the 11 mustangs acquired by the Rio Grande Valley Sector, Olivares says. The inmates also castrate the horses, making them safer to handle, she says. Once at Border Patrol stables, the horses are made accustomed to loud noises, such as gunshots, and people.

They patrol in pairs, casing the wooded bluffs along the Rio Grande and muscling through thick brush that ATVs and pickup trucks can’t penetrate. Since arriving in July, the horses here have assisted in arresting 355 suspects and seizing more than 1,900 pounds of marijuana, she says.

The horses are the latest salvo in a back-and-forth chess match between drug cartels and smugglers on one side of the border and U.S. law enforcement on the other, says Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, an assistant professor of government at the University of Texas-Brownsville. The horses arrived on the border just as internal fighting within the Gulf Cartel had led to increased violence, she says.

“It’s important that America shows its strength when there’s some kind of problem to the south,” Correa-Cabrera says. “The horses are symbolic. It says, ‘We are here.’ ”

On a recent patrol, Clyde and his partner, Cash, a 3-year-old gelding, trot down a sandy road along the Rio Grande. Their riders, Garza and Agent Hipolito Coy, peer down at the sand looking for fresh footprints or bent brush in a process known as “signal cutting.” They also keep a close eye on their horses, who would alert them to nearby danger.

Smugglers routinely push rafts full of cellophane-wrapped drugs across the river, often at night, and load them into nearby cars, Garza says. Twice, Clyde has chased smugglers through the bush and into the river. Once, they chased a car that overturned on the narrow roads. Overall, his horse has been involved in the seizure of more than 700 pounds of marijuana, he says.

In August, Clyde also walked up to a group of eight illegal immigrants near Brownsville. The group didn’t hear the horse coming and quietly gave up, Garza says. “They’re looking for (Border Patrol) trucks with green and white stripes,” he says. “They’re not looking for horses.”

Garza knows it won’t be long before the cartels catch on and adjust tactics. “They’re smart,” he says. “They’ll figure it out.”

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One Comment

  • Karen Cooper says:

    We have mustangs of our own and they are incredible. We have also been to a couple of Open House events at Hutchinson, KS Correctional Facility, and what the horses and guys do for each other is amazing. We also got to meet several of the border patrol horses last year. What an honor to be able to train mustangs for our country! Great job guys!