Norma Jean Gargasz

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  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_04.JPG
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_03.JPG
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_09.JPG
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_08.jpg
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_05.JPG
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_02.JPG
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_10.JPG
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_07.jpg
  • A young girl, who clings to her mother in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, hopes to migrate to the United States with her mother and sister, where the three can escape an abusive relationship.  They wait near a plaza where others gather to be transported to the Mexican border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.  Her mother seeks to appeal to American authorities to grant her refuge in the U.S. due to her situation.
    Migrants_110608_06.jpg
  • A discarded water bottle sits near a cattle tank where illegal immigrants obtain water near Little Tucson in the Sonoran Desert on the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona, USA.  The area has the highest death rate of migrants crossing illegally from Mexico along the border.
    Illegal_Immigration_007.tif
  • 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
  • A metal wall, as seen from Arizona, marks the international border between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    1406_Border_NJG8325.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
  • A cross along Calle Internacional in Nogales, Sonora, memorializes 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 Mexico, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down the streetl 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.
    1305_Mexico_NJG5987.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
  • Razor wire surrounds residential properties located near the Mexican border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    Mexico_120714_72.JPG
  • Seen through the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, heavily armed federal police in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, patrol Colonia Buenos Aries, a residential area also known for smuggling and criminal activities.
    Mexico_120714_67.jpg
  • The border wall divides Nogales, Arizona, USA, (left), and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.  At one time, the area was referred to as Ambos Nogales.
    Mexico_120714_62.JPG
  • Business is slow along Calle Obregon in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Streets are mostly void of patrons as businesses in Nogales, Sonora, experience an economic decline as reports of cartel violence deter tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
    Mexico_120714_47.JPG
  • Business is slow along Calle Obregon in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Streets are mostly void of patrons as businesses in Nogales, Sonora, experience an economic decline as reports of cartel violence deter tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
    Mexico_120714_42.JPG
  • Armed security guards stand watch at a bank entry along Calle Obregon in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Streets are mostly void of patrons as businesses in Nogales, Sonora, experience an economic decline as reports of cartel violence deter tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
    Mexico_120714_34.JPG
  • A merchant sweeps water from the street that was once busy with American tourists and shoppers after a monsoon storm in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Businesses in Nogales, Sonora, saw an economic decline after reports of cartel violence deterred tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
    Mexico_120714_27.JPG
  • A merchant sweeps water from the street that was once busy with American tourists and shoppers after a monsoon storm in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Businesses in Nogales, Sonora, saw an economic decline after reports of cartel violence deterred tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
    Mexico_120714_25.JPG
  • A merchant sweeps water from the street that was once busy with American tourists and shoppers after a monsoon storm in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Businesses in Nogales, Sonora, saw an economic decline after reports of cartel violence deterred tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
    Mexico_120714_23.JPG
  • Businesses line a street in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, along the border wall at Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    Mexico_120714_14.JPG
  • Businesses line a street in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, along the border wall at Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    Mexico_120714_12.JPG
  • People tend to business in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, located across the border at Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    Mexico_120714_07.JPG
  • Patrons purchase food from a food stand in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, located along the border wall at Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    Mexico_120714_01.JPG
  • Plastic bottles, tires and other debris is hung up in the Santa Cruz River, which flows with reclaimed water, in the Sonoran Desert at Tubac, Arizona, USA.  The Anza Trail, which parallels the river in this area, is a known route for undocumented migrants who have crossed the border from Mexico.
    Tubac_110329_6.JPG
  • Plastic bottles, tires and other debris is hung up in the Santa Cruz River, which flows with reclaimed water, in the Sonoran Desert at Tubac, Arizona, USA.  The Anza Trail, which parallels the river in this area, is a known route for undocumented migrants who have crossed the border from Mexico.
    Tubac_110329_5.JPG
  • Rev. Dr. Robin Hoover, founder of Project Find Me!/Proyecto Rescatame!, promotes the use of Personal Location Beacons that employ GPS technology to aid migrant groups who may become distressed while crossing from Mexico in to the deserts of Arizona, USA.
    Hoover_110627_13.jpg
  • Rev. Dr. Robin Hoover, founder of Project Find Me!/Proyecto Rescatame!, promotes the use of Personal Location Beacons that employ GPS technology to aid migrant groups who may become distressed while crossing from .Mexico in to the deserts of Arizona, USA.  To date seven McMurdo FastFind PLB Model 210 units have been distributed to persons in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, who redistribute the units to those that guide migrants through the Arizona deserts.  Info:  http://robinhoover.com/Home.html
    Hoover_110628_11.JPG
  • Rev. Dr. Robin Hoover, founder of Project Find Me!/Proyecto Rescatame!, promotes the use of Personal Location Beacons that employ GPS technology to aid migrant groups who may become distressed while crossing from Mexico in to the deserts of Arizona, USA.  To date seven McMurdo FastFind PLB Model 210 units have been distributed to persons in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, who redistribute the units to those that guide migrants through the Arizona deserts.  Info:  http://robinhoover.com/Home.html
    Hoover_110628_01.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622a_33.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622a_26.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622a_22.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622a_02.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.
    Border_110622a_14.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622a_12.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622a_08.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622_28.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622_26.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622_25.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622_11.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622_04.JPG
  • Workers replace a 2.8 mile section of landing matt border wall constructed in 1994 in Nogales, Arizona, USA, at Sonora, Mexico.  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.
    Border_110622_03.JPG
  • Migrants in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, receive instructions at a shelter serving food to border crossers, who cross illegally in to Arizona, USA.
    Migrants_110608_49.JPG
  • Border activist Rev. Mike Wilson of Tucson, Arizona, USA, walks in Altar, Sonora, Mexico, near a mural that depicts the journey of undocumented migrants crossing the border from Mexico in to the Arizona desert.  Wilson distributes water along the migrant trails in the Arizona desert.
    Migrants_110608_40.JPG
  • Altar, Sonora, Mexico, which is about 60 miles south of the U.S./Mexico border at Arizona, serves as a staging area for migrants who enter the United States illegally.
    Migrants_110608_33.JPG
  • Men in Altar, Sonora, Mexico wait at the plaza before being transported to the U.S. and Mexico border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.
    Migrants_110608_24.JPG
  • Men in Altar, Sonora, Mexico wait at the plaza before being transported to the U.S. and Mexico border at Arizona, where migrants enter the United States illegally.
    Migrants_110608_15.JPG
  • Green Valley, Arizona, USA, paramedics/firefighters move Josemara Aquino, 3, an illegal immigrant from Mexico, from her mother's arms to a backboard for transport to a Tucson hospital.  The girl was among 41 illegal immigrants packed into an extended cab pickup truck that rolled when the smuggler attempted to flee Border Patrol agents after being spotted by a helicopter near Arivaca.  As the truck increased in speed, ground units pulled back, but the chopper continued to follow the vehicle.  Five helicopters made a total of 6 trips to transport the most seriously injured to Tucson.  14 ambulances transported others from the scene on Old Nogales Highway, about 18 miles south of downtown Tucson.  The driver/smuggler was taken into custody after he tried to flee.  About 10 children were in the vehicle and were stuffed into the front seat and extended cab.  The others were stacked in the bed of the truck.  The rollover took place on March 14, 2002 near Sahuarita, Arizona.
    Border_110522_09.jpg
  • An undocumented migrant fills water jugs at a home about 25 miles north of the Mexican border on the Tohono O'odham Reservation, Arizona, USA.
    Border_110522_08.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
  • A 4-year-old girl who was smuggled into the United States from Mexico illegally waits at the Mexican Consulate in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to be reunited with family.  She and her two siblings were discovered by law enforcement in the trunk of a smuggler's vehicle in temperatures exceeding 100 degrees.
    Illegal_Immigration_490.jpg
  • A 5-year-old girl, who waits on a bus for deportation, slept in the Sonoran Desert for seven nights with her 10-year-old sister and mother before crossing illegally in to the U.S. from Mexico near Lukeville, Arizona.
    Illegal_Immigration_16.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
  • 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_2835.JPG
  • A metal wall, as seen from Arizona, marks the international border between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    1406_Border_NJG8333.JPG
  • A metal wall, as seen from Arizona, marks the international border between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    1406_Border_NJG8328.JPG
  • A metal wall, as seen from Arizona, marks the international border between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    1406_Border_NJG8326.JPG
  • A metal wall, as seen from Arizona, marks the international border between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    1406_Border_NJG8322.JPG
  • A metal wall, as seen from Arizona, marks the international border between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    1406_Border_NJG8321.JPG
  • A metal wall, as seen from Arizona, marks the international border between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    1406_Border_NJG8318.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_NJG8267.JPG
  • A metal wall indicates the international boundary between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, as seen from Arizona.
    1406_Border_DSC6753.JPG
  • A metal wall indicates the international boundary between Nogales, Arizona, USA, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, as seen from Arizona.
    1406_Border_DSC6752.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
  • 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
  • A cross along Calle Internacional in Nogales, Sonora, memorializes 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 Mexico, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down the streetl 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.
    1305_Mexico_NJG5987a.jpg
  • A cross along Calle Internacional in Nogales, Sonora, memorializes 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 Mexico, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down the streetl 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.
    1305_Mexico_NJG5983.JPG
  • A cross along Calle Internacional in Nogales, Sonora, memorializes 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 Mexico, where the youth was reported by a witness to be walking down the streetl 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.
    1305_Mexico_NJG5980.JPG
  • A cross along Calle Internacional in Nogales, Sonora, memorializes Mexican teenager, Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16, who was allegedly shot and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents in Arizona who fired through the fence in to Mexico on October 10, 2012.  A witness in Mexico claims the youth was walking down the street.  The agents claim the the youth was throwing rocks at them across the border fence in to Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    1305_Mexico_NJG5979.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
  • A bus transporting deportees from the USA, to Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, approaches the Dennis DeConcinni Port of Entry customs inspection station in Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Deportees transported by bus to the border are typically those who were found to have entered the USA illegally.
    121228_Border_NJG2707.JPG
  • Vehicles in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, approach the Dennis DeConcinni Port of Entry customs inspection station, which is located in Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    121228_Border_NJG2609.JPG
  • Surveillance cameras in Nogales, Arizona, USA, monitor the border with Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    121228_Border_NJG2588.JPG
  • Surveillance cameras in Nogales, Arizona, USA, monitor the border with Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    121228_Border_NJG2554.JPG
  • Surveillance cameras in Nogales, Arizona, USA, monitor the border with Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
    121228_Border_NJG2551.JPG
  • Surveillance cameras in Nogales, Arizona, USA, monitor the border with Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.  Concrete columns marked the border between the two countries prior to the construction of a chain link fence, which was replaced by the current metal wall.
    121228_Border_NJG2502.JPG
  • Seen through the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, heavily armed federal police in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, patrol Colonia Buenos Aries, a residential area also known for smuggling and criminal activities.
    Mexico_120714_70.JPG
  • Seen through the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, heavily armed federal police in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, patrol Colonia Buenos Aries, a residential area also known for smuggling and criminal activities.
    Mexico_120714_69.JPG
  • Seen through the border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA, heavily armed federal police in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, patrol Colonia Buenos Aries, a residential area also known for smuggling and criminal activities.
    Mexico_120714_68.jpg
  • The border wall divides Nogales, Arizona, USA, (left), and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.  At one time, the area was referred to as Ambos Nogales.
    Mexico_120714_61.JPG
  • Razor wire surrounds residential properties located near the Mexican border wall in Nogales, Arizona, USA.
    Mexico_120714_60.JPG
  • Border crossers wait in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, to pass through customs to enter the United States at Nogales, Arizona.
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  • Border crossers wait in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, to pass through customs to enter the United States at Nogales, Arizona.
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  • Border crossers wait in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, to pass through customs to enter the United States at Nogales, Arizona.
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  • Locals walk the streets near the border wall in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, located across the internation line from Nogales, Arizona, USA.
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  • Locals walk the streets near the border wall in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, located across the internation line from Nogales, Arizona, USA.
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  • Business is slow along Calle Obregon in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Streets are mostly void of patrons as businesses in Nogales, Sonora, experience an economic decline as reports of cartel violence deter tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
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  • Business is slow along Calle Obregon in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Streets are mostly void of patrons as businesses in Nogales, Sonora, experience an economic decline as reports of cartel violence deter tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
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  • Armed security guards stand watch at a bank entry along Calle Obregon in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, across the border from Nogales, Arizona, USA.  Streets are mostly void of patrons as businesses in Nogales, Sonora, experience an economic decline as reports of cartel violence deter tourists and shoppers from entering the country.
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