Norma Jean Gargasz

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  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4517.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4510.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4463.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4455.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4410.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4478.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4482.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4459.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4427.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4416.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4395.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4379.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4368.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4367.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4361.JPG
  • The U. S. and Mexico border wall, monitored by a U. S. Border Patrol agent, stretches between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    U. S._Mexico_Border_51.tif
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4539.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4538.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  A soldier stands watch U.S. Army troops installing barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry as part of Operation Secure Line in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4508.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4387.JPG
  • Nogales, Arizona, USA.  24th November, 2018.  As part of Operation Secure Line, U.S. Army troops install barbed wire on the U.S./Mexico border wall west of the DeConcini Port of Entry in Nogales, Arizona, USA. 7,000 soldiers were deployed to the southwestern U.S. border last month at the request of President Donald Trump's administration.
    1811j_Bor_NJG_4371.JPG
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: A Guatemalan woman, (left), and her 10-year-old son wait in Tucson at bus station where they were dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.  The boy translated Mayan Q'anjob'al (also Kanjobal) into Spanish for his mother, who spoke only her native language.
    e_1406_Bus_DSC6800.jpg
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: A Guatemalan woman, (left), and her 10-year-old son wait in Tucson at bus station where they were dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.  The boy translated Mayan Q'anjob'al (also Kanjobal) into Spanish for his mother, who spoke only her native language.
    e_1406_Bus_DSC6799.jpg
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: An 11-year-old Guatemalan girl waits with her mother in Tucson at bus station where she was dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatamala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.
    e_1406a_Bus_DSC6793.jpg
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: A Guatemalan woman, (left), and her 10-year-old son wait in Tucson at bus station where they were dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.  The boy translated Mayan Q'anjob'al (also Kanjobal) into Spanish for his mother, who spoke only her native language.
    e_1406_Bus_DSC6801b.jpg
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: A Guatemalan woman, (left), and her 10-year-old son wait in Tucson at bus station where they were dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.  The boy translated Mayan Q'anjob'al (also Kanjobal) into Spanish for his mother, who spoke only her native language.
    1406_Bus_DSC6801b.jpg
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: An 11-year-old Guatemalan girl waits with her mother in Tucson at bus station where she was dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.
    e_1406_Bus_6794a.jpg
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: An 11-year-old Guatemalan girl waits with her mother in Tucson at bus station where she was dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.
    e_1406_Bus_6794.jpg
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8270.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8259.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_DSC6746.JPG
  • The U. S. and Mexico border wall stretches between Nogales, Arizona, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.   U. S. Border patrol agents, (at right), monitor the border, some from behind a metal shield to protect them from rocks thrown across the border.
    U. S._Mexico_Border_25.tif
  • Tucson, Arizona, USA, June 26, 2014: A Guatemalan woman, (left), and her 10-year-old son wait in Tucson at bus station where they were dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.  The boy translated Mayan Q'anjob'al (also Kanjobal) into Spanish for his mother, who spoke only her native language.
    1406_Bus_DSC6799.JPG
  • An 11-year-old Guatemalan girl waits with her mother in Tucson at bus station where she was dropped off by the U.S. Border Patrol after being apprehended near Douglas, Arizona, USA, where they crossed the border illegally from Mexico.  The two traveled for about five days from Guatemala to get to the Arizona border.  They, along with others, heard in Guatemala that mothers with children could find work in the U.S. and better their lives.  Recently flooded with undocumented migrants from Central America, federal authorities are transporting children with adults to bus stations where they will head to other states in the U.S.  Their status in the U.S. will be addressed by authorities after they reach their destination.
    1406_Bus_6794.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8315.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8274.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8269.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8267.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_DSC6728.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8303.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8300a.jpg
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8275.JPG
  • José Joaquín Chacón, consul general of El Salvador in Arizona, met with U.S. officials and other consul generals from Central American at the U.S. Border Patrol Nogales Station about the 751 unaccomanied minor children who crossed illegally in to Texas, were apprehended and are now being held in detention at this Arizona facility.  The youths were transferred from Texas to Arizona because of the lack of space to care for the youths due to the overwelming numbers of children entering the U.S. in Texas without documentation.
    1406_Border_NJG8313.JPG
  • Protestors in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, raise their fists to the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, during a protest of the shooting of a teen in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent standing in Arizona.
    1405j_Bor__DSC6119a.jpg
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2842.JPG
  • May 24, 2014, Nogales, Sonora, Mexico:  Protesters at the Victimas de la Patrulla Fronteriza Protest vigil in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, were joined by protesters from the Border Patrol Victims Network from Nogales, Arizona, USA, along the international border in Sonora to support families of those who have been killed or injured in incidents involving U.S. Border Patrol agents.  Shena Gutierrez, (left), says she wants the eleven U.S. Border Patrol agents held accountable for the severe beating of her husband in 2011 at the San Luis, Arizona, port of entry.  Gutierrez also claimed that just prior to the protest she was harassed then arrested at the Nogales port of entry.  Guadalupe Guerrero, (right), comforts Gutierrez at the site where 16-year-old Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez was fatally shot in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who fired from Arizona in to Mexico.
    1405_Border_DSC6264a.jpg
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_24.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_12.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_09.JPG
  • Protestors in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, raise their fists to the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, during a protest of the shooting of a teen in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent standing in Arizona.
    1405j_Bor__DSC6115.JPG
  • Protestors in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, raise their fists to the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, during a protest of the shooting of a teen in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent standing in Arizona.
    1405j_Bor__DSC6115a.jpg
  • Travelers cross between Arizona and Sonora, Mexico, at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Dennis DeConcini Crossing, Nogales, Mexico, USA.
    180613j_Nog_NJG_8406a.jpg
  • Travelers cross in to Arizona from Sonora, Mexico, at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Dennis DeConcini Crossing, Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    180613j_Nog_NJG_8403b.jpg
  • The metal wall indicating the U.S./Mexico border as seen near the property of Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    1101aj_Bor_NJG_2752.JPG
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2835.JPG
  • May 24, 2014, Nogales, Sonora, Mexico:  Protesters at the Victimas de la Patrulla Fronteriza Protest vigil in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, were joined by protesters from the Border Patrol Victims Network from Nogales, Arizona, USA, along the international border in Sonora to support and unite families of those who have been killed or injured in incidents involving U.S. Border Patrol agents. A 48-hour vigil and fast was held as a call for justice. Ezdras Iuan Osuna, 4, joins his family in the protest at the site in Mexico where a 16-year-old boy was shot and killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who fired from Arizona in to Mexico.
    1405_Border_DSC6248a.jpg
  • Posters placed on the U.S. side of the border wall call for justice for Mexican teenager, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was allegedly shot and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents firing through the fence in to Nogales, Sonora, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down Calle Internacional on October 10, 2012.  The agents claim the the youth was throwing rocks at them either through or over the border fence in to Nogales, Arizona, USA.  A cross memorializes the youth at the location in Mexico where he died.
    1305_Mexico_NJG6077.JPG
  • Posters placed on the U.S. side of the border wall call for justice for Mexican teenager, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was allegedly shot and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents firing through the fence in to Nogales, Sonora, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down Calle Internacional on October 10, 2012.  The agents claim the the youth was throwing rocks at them either through or over the border fence in to Nogales, Arizona, USA.  A cross memorializes the youth at the location in Mexico where he died.
    1305_Mexico_NJG6071.JPG
  • Posters placed on the U.S. side of the border wall call for justice for Mexican teenager, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was allegedly shot and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents firing through the fence in to Nogales, Sonora, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down Calle Internacional on October 10, 2012.  The agents claim the the youth was throwing rocks at them either through or over the border fence in to Nogales, Arizona, USA.  A cross memorializes the youth at the location in Mexico where he died.
    1305_Mexico_NJG6075.JPG
  • Posters placed on the U.S. side of the border wall call for justice for Mexican teenager, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was allegedly shot and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents firing through the fence in to Nogales, Sonora, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down Calle Internacional on October 10, 2012.  The agents claim the the youth was throwing rocks at them either through or over the border fence in to Nogales, Arizona, USA.  A cross memorializes the youth at the location in Mexico where he died.
    1305_Mexico_NJG5882.JPG
  • To increase security and visibility along the U.S./Mexico border workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA.  The project costs $11.6 million.  Under tight security on the Arizona side of the border, the construction draws much interest from residents of Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.  The concrete marker originally designated the border.  A young boy on the Mexican side of the border attempts to speak with a U.S. Border Patrol supervisor who is standing in Arizona.
    Border_110622a_15.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_21.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_15.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_10.JPG
  • Protestors in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, raise their fists to the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, during a protest of the shooting of a teen in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent standing in Arizona.
    1405j_Bor__DSC6115.JPG
  • The younger brother of a teen shot and killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent paces before the start of a protest of the shooting of another teen by an agent who shot from Arizona in to Mexico and killed the boy.  The proest was held in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, near the border wall where the teen dies.
    1405j_Bor_DSC5887aa.jpg
  • Protestors in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, raise their fists to the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, during a protest of the shooting of a teen in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent standing in Arizona.
    1405j_Bor__DSC6119.JPG
  • Travelers cross from Nogales, Arizona, USA, in to Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Dennis DeConcini Crossing.
    180613j_Nog_NJG_8412a.jpg
  • Pedestrians patronize businesses in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, near the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Dennis DeConcini Crossing, Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    180613j_Nog_NJG_8405a.jpg
  • Travelers cross in to Arizona from Sonora, Mexico, at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Dennis DeConcini Crossing, Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    180613j_Nog_NJG_8403a.jpg
  • A cement column marking the U.S./Mexico border remains along the metal wall as seen near the property of Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    1101aj_Bor_NJG_2748.JPG
  • A cement column marking the U.S./Mexico border remains along the metal wall as seen near the property of Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    1101aj_Bor_NJG_2746.JPG
  • Signs placed by the American Border Patrol commenting about the wall marking the U.S./Mexico border remain along the metal wall as seen near the property of Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    1101aj_Bor_NJG_2543.JPG
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2849.JPG
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2846.JPG
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2839.JPG
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2834.JPG
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2830.JPG
  • May 24, 2014, Nogales, Sonora, Mexico:  Protesters at the Victimas de la Patrulla Fronteriza Protest vigil in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, were joined by protesters from the Border Patrol Victims Network from Nogales, Arizona, USA, along the international border in Sonora to support and unite families of those who have been killed or injured in incidents involving U.S. Border Patrol agents.  Guadalupe Guerrero, (left), weeps as her son, Jesus Carlos Lamadrid, 9, is comforted by Ana Maria Vasquez at the site where Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, was shot in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who fired across the border from Arizona.
    1405_Border_DSC6042aa.jpg
  • May 24, 2014, Nogales, Sonora, Mexico:  Protesters at the Victimas de la Patrulla Fronteriza Protest vigil in Nogales, <br />
Sonora, Mexico, were joined by protesters from the Border Patrol Victims Network from Nogales, Arizona, USA, along the international border in Sonora to support and unite families of those who have been killed or injured in incidents involving U.S. Border Patrol agents. A 48-hour vigil and fast was held as a call for justice. Ezdras Iuan  Osuna, 4, joins his family in the protest at the site in Mexico where a 16-year-old boy was shot and killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who fired from Arizona in to Mexico.
    1405_Border_DSC6244c.jpg
  • Posters placed on the U.S. side of the border wall call for justice for Mexican teenager, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was allegedly shot and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents firing through the fence in to Nogales, Sonora, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down Calle Internacional on October 10, 2012.  The agents claim the the youth was throwing rocks at them either through or over the border fence in to Nogales, Arizona, USA.  A cross memorializes the youth at the location in Mexico where he died.
    1305_Mexico_NJG6068.JPG
  • Posters placed on the U.S. side of the border wall call for justice for Mexican teenager, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was allegedly shot and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents firing through the fence in to Nogales, Sonora, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down Calle Internacional on October 10, 2012.  The agents claim the the youth was throwing rocks at them either through or over the border fence in to Nogales, Arizona, USA.  A cross memorializes the youth at the location in Mexico where he died.
    1305_Mexico_NJG5885.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_19.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_17.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_14.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_13.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_10.JPG
  • Protestors in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, raise their fists to the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, during a protest of the shooting of a teen in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent standing in Arizona.
    1405j_Bor__DSC6115.JPG
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent drives on a dirt road along the U.S./Mexico border wall near the San Pedro River, Cochise County, Hereford, Arizona, USA.
    1101_BorderNJG_2829.JPG
  • May 24, 2014, Nogales, Sonora, Mexico:  Protesters at the Victimas de la Patrulla Fronteriza Protest vigil in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, were joined by protesters from the Border Patrol Victims Network from Nogales, Arizona, USA, along the international border in Sonora to support and unite families of those who have been killed or injured in incidents involving U.S. Border Patrol agents.  A 48-hour vigil and fast was held as a call for justice.  The protest took place at the site in Mexico where a 16-year-old boy, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, was shot and killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who fired from Arizona in to Mexico.
    1405_Border_DSC6170a.jpg
  • May 24, 2014, Nogales, Sonora, Mexico:  Protesters at the Victimas de la Patrulla Fronteriza Protest vigil in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, were joined by protesters from the Border Patrol Victims Network from Nogales, Arizona, USA, along the international border in Sonora to support and unite families of those who have been killed or injured in incidents involving U.S. Border Patrol agents.  Guadalupe Guerrero, (left), weeps as her son, Jesus Carlos Lamadrid, 9, is comforted by Ana Maria Vasquez at the site where Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, was shot in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who fired across the border from Arizona.
    1405_Border_DSC6042a.jpg
  • To increase security and visibility along the U.S./Mexico border workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA.  The project costs $11.6 million.  Under tight security on the Arizona side of the border, the construction draws much interest from residents of Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.  The concrete marker originally designated the border.  A young boy on the Mexican side of the border attempts to speak with a U.S. Border Patrol supervisor who is standing in Arizona.
    Border_110622a_16.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_18.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_16.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, says that the U.S. Border patrol agents removed signs with notes of support that he attached to the border wall and dumped them on his property.  Spencer monitors smuggling activity along the U.S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_11.JPG
  • Glenn Spencer of the American Border Patrol, Hereford, Arizona, USA, uses a light aircraft to monitor and record activity along the U. S./Mexico border.
    Border_110111a_02.JPG
  • May 24, 2014, Nogales, Sonora, Mexico:  Protesters at the Victimas de la Patrulla Fronteriza Protest vigil in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, were joined by protesters from the Border Patrol Victims Network from Nogales, Arizona, USA, along the international border in Sonora to support and unite families of those who have been killed or injured in incidents involving U.S. Border Patrol agents.  The site marks the location where a 16-year-old Mexican youth was shot and killed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent who fired from Arizona in to Mexico.
    1405_Border_DSC6129a.jpg
  • Triple Stacks or packages containing stimulants fed to illegal immigrants by smugglers to move undocumented migrants through the desert at a faster pace were confiscated by U.S. Border Patrol agents along the U.S. Mexico border.
    Triple_Stacks_0021.jpg
  • A 6-year-old boy reacts after he, his mother, and other relatives are apprehended by the U. S. Border Patrol agents near Little Tucson, east of Sells, Arizona, on the Tohono O'odham Nation, a 2.5 day walk through the Sonoran Desert in temperatures exceeding 100 degrees.  The group crossed illegally into the U. S. from Mexico and was headed to Los Angeles to work.
    Illegal_Immigration_264.jpg
  • U. S. Border Patrol agents wait for transportation for deportation for illegal immigrants who crossed illegally from Mexico on to the Tohono O'odham Nation near Sells in the Sonoran Desert in Arizona, USA.  The area has the highest death rate for undocumented migrants along the U. S. - Mexico border.
    Illegal_Immigration_0051.jpg
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