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Governor Ducey, 25 Governors Commit To Coordinated Effort to Secure The United States’ Southern Border

By on April 20, 2022 0 230Views

On Tuesday, Governor Doug Ducey and 25 other governors launched the American Governors’ Border Strike Force, a partnership to do what the federal government won’t: secure the southern border.

The American Governors’ Border Strike Force announcement today by Governor Ducey and Governor Greg Abbott of Texas comes a day after a report by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection that disclosed migrant crossings along the U.S.-Mexico border are at the highest level in two decades.

The American Governors’ Border Strike Force is modeled on a successful effort developed by Governor Ducey in 2015 through the creation of the Arizona Border Strike Force. Since its inception, the Arizona Border Strike Force has seized 985 pounds of fentanyl, 13,100 pounds of methamphetamine, 1,704 pounds of cocaine and 801 pounds of heroin.

“What we’re doing in Arizona works,” said Governor Ducey. “But this is not just an Arizona issue, it’s a national issue. If our entire southern border isn’t secure, our nation isn’t secure. As dangerous transnational criminal organizations continue to profit from holes in the border and fill our communities with drugs, it’s no coincidence that we’re seeing historic levels of opioid-related deaths. The American Governors’ Border Strike Force will serve as a force multiplier in the fight against criminal activity directly tied to our border. My thanks to my fellow governors who saw the problem and chose to be part of the solution.”

The unprecedented collaboration among 26 states will fill the void created by federal inaction and work to secure the southern border by sharing intelligence, strengthening cybersecurity and improving efforts to protect children and families.

The announcement comes as the Biden administration is preparing to lift Title 42, a common-sense policy that has helped secure the border.

Joining Arizona and Texas in the effort are the governors of Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming.

In conversations with Governor Ducey, Border Patrol in Arizona expressed a need for more analytical and cyber assistance.

“Criminal organizations know how to exploit the crisis at the border, and are using it to flood massive quantities of fentanyl, heroin, methamphetamine and cocaine into our country,” said Tim Roemer, Arizona Department of Homeland Security Director and the state’s Chief Information Security Officer. “The Biden administration’s failed border policies have created a homeland security and humanitarian crisis — and every state in the country is paying the price. The American Governors’ Border Strike Force will increase collaboration and intelligence sharing across state lines so we can work together to keep illegal drugs out of our towns and cities.”

As a comprehensive force, states can act in cohesion across state lines to target transnational criminal organizations, and drug and human trafficking crimes financially and operationally.

In Arizona alone, transnational criminal organizations profited approximately $3 billion in 2021 from human smuggling.

The American Governors’ Border Strike Force will focus on these dangerous organizations, as the current largest threat to public safety at both state and local levels. By partnering across states, the Strike Force provides a force multiplier in the fight against criminal activity tied to the southern border.

The multi-state effort will:

  • Improve intelligence sharing and analysis of state level crimes that may be connected to border security;
  • Monitor cybersecurity issues that may increase vulnerability along the southern border;
  • Target cartel finances that fund criminal activity in the border regions; and
  • Coordinate and improve interdiction on Interstate-10 and Interstate-40 to combat drug trafficking and human smuggling that occurs in the border region.

While opioid-related deaths are at historic levels, fentanyl is streaming across the border and filling Arizona communities’ bloodstreams. Fentanyl overdoses have replaced car accidents as the leading cause of death for people 19 and younger in Pima County.

In 2021, overdose deaths hit a record high. That year, fentanyl was involved in more than 77% of adolescent overdose deaths.

With record breaking migration leading to an overwhelming amount of apprehensions at the southern border, law enforcement is stretched too thin to effectively combat the cartels. This leads to more drugs entering the country, more dangerous individuals avoiding arrest, and more victims of human trafficking.