Norma Jean Gargasz

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  • Tony Estrada, sheriff of Santa Cruz County on the Arizona/Mexico border, has mixed feelings about the Clear Act.  His department does not have the time or resources to search for undocumented migrants.  Deputy Sheriff Luis Martinez, under the command of Estrada, started his shift four hours early because of lack of staff.  While routine calls may take him to areas such as this along the border wall with Mexico, his department lacks the resources to patrol for undocumented migrants like the U.S. Border patrol in the vehicle on the right.
    ESTRADA, Tony-5.jpg
  • Water provided as humanitarian aid by Rev. Mike Wilson sit along trails used by undocumented migrants crossing into the United States from Mexico on the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona. The area, which is south of Little Tucson, has the highest death rate of undocumented migrants along the 2,000 mile stretch of border.
    Humanitarian_Aid.jpg
  • U.S. Border Patrol agents wait for transportation for deportation for undocumented migrants 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. border with Mexico.
    Illegal_Immigration_0051.jpg
  • U.S. Border Patrol agents wait for transportation for deportation for undocumented migrants 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. border with Mexico.
    Illegal_Immigration_0056.jpg
  • Bottles of water provided by Rev. Mike Wilson as humanitarian aid sit along a trail paved by undocumented migrants crossing into the United States from Mexico on the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona. The area, which is south of Little Tucson, has the highest death rate of undocumented migrants along the 2,000 mile stretch of border due to dehydration and heat exhaustion.
    Humanitarian_Aid.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
  • 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
  • U. S. Border Patrol agents process undocumented migrants, who crossed the border from Mexico, about 20 miles north of Sasabe, Arizona, on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge.
    U S_Border_Patrol_0133.tif
  • A man refills water jugs at a home along a trail paved by undocumented migrants who crossed illegally from Mexico into the United States onto the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona in the Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Migrant_Trail_0062.jpg
  • Graffiti naming Sur 13 is tagged in an abandoned structure along the Anza Trail and the Santa Cruz River, a known smuggling corridor for undocumented migrants and drugs, Tubac, Arizona, USA. Sureños, Sur 13, or Sureños X3 are groups of loosely affiliated gangs that pay tribute to the Mexican Mafia while in U.S. state and federal correctional facilities. The gangs have root predominantly in California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Texas and connections with Mexican cartels.
    1105j_Tub_NJG_8942.JPG
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310a_Deport_NJG8408.JPG
  • Tucson clergy pray over the remains of 14 undocumented migrants from Mexico who died from dehydration and heat exhaustion in the Arizona desert after crossing the border illegally in to the United States.
    Migrant_Deaths_1.jpg
  • A trail paved by undocumented migrants that crossed from Mexico in to the United States on to the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona stretches across the Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Migrant_Trail_009.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.
    e_1406_Bus_DSC6799.jpg
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310b_Deport_NJG6687b.jpg
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310b_Deport_NJG6679.JPG
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310a_Deport_NJG8448.JPG
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310a_Deport_NJG8392.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
  • 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_4.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_3.JPG
  • 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
  • Undocumented migrants, who crossed illegally in to Arizona from Mexico, drink water from bottles left as humanitarian aid along trail heads in the Sonoran Desert on the Tohono O'odham Nation along the deadliest stretch of the U.S. border with Mexico.
    Humanitarian_Aid_0086.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_0057.tif
  • 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_0039.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.
    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_DSC6799.JPG
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310b_Deport_NJG6687.JPG
  • A group of undocumented migrants from Mexico, who crossed the border illegally, surrenders to a BORSTAR agent at Little Tucson in the heat of summer in the Sonoran Desert on the Tohono O'odam Nation in Arizona, USA.  The group reported leaving behind the body of an uncle who died from dehydration and heat exposure about a mile up the road and another relative who was ill.  Agents were in the area searching for another man who was ill and left behind by a different group of border crossers.  BORSTAR agents are part of a search and rescue unit.
    e_Border_DSC_0006a.jpg
  • Tucson clergy pray over the remains of 14 undocumented migrants from Mexico who died from dehydration and heat exhaustion in the Arizona desert after crossing the border illegally in to the United States.
    e_Migrant_Deaths_1.jpg
  • A map indicating the location of undocumented migrant deaths in the Arizona desert hangs in a church frequented by migrants in Altar, Sonora, Mexico.  The map was created by Humane Borders, a humanitarian organization in Tucson, Arizona, USA.
    Migrants_110608_30.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
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration. Water jugs represent undocumented migrants who have died from dehydration crossing the desert.
    March_100501a_03.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration. Water jugs represent undocumented migrants who have died from dehydration crossing the desert.
    March_100501a_02.JPG
  • Tucson clergy pray over the remains of 14 undocumented migrants from Mexico who died from dehydration and heat exhaustion in the Arizona desert after crossing the border illegally in to the United States.
    Migrant_Deaths_1.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
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310b_Deport_NJG6648.JPG
  • A group of undocumented migrants from Mexico, who crossed the border illegally, surrenders to a BORSTAR agent at Little Tucson in the heat of summer in the Sonoran Desert on the Tohono O'odam Nation in Arizona, USA.  The group reported leaving behind the body of an uncle who died from dehydration and heat exposure about a mile up the road and another relative who was ill.  Agents were in the area searching for another man who was ill and left behind by a different group of border crossers.  BORSTAR agents are part of a search and rescue unit.
    Border_DSC_0006a.jpg
  • A group of undocumented migrants from Mexico, who crossed the border illegally, surrenders to a BORSTAR agent at Little Tucson in the heat of summer in the Sonoran Desert on the Tohono O'odam Nation in Arizona, USA.  The group reported leaving behind the body of an uncle who died from dehydration and heat exposure about a mile up the road and another relative who was ill.  Agents were in the area searching for another man who was ill and left behind by a different group of border crossers.  BORSTAR agents are part of a search and rescue unit.
    Border_DSC_0006.jpg
  • An undocumented migrant from Mexico cools off after walking up to U.S. Border Patrol agents to report the death of a 55-year-old man traveling with their group and the heat-related illness of three others left behind in the Sonoran Desert south of Little Tucson on the Tohono O'odham Nation, Arizona, USA.
    Migrants_1.jpg
  • Tucson clergy pray over the remains of 14 undocumented migrants from Mexico who died from dehydration and heat exhaustion in the Arizona desert after crossing the border illegally in to the United States.
    e2_Migrant_Deaths_1.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
  • Undocumented migrants, who crossed illegally in to Arizona from Mexico, drink water from bottles placed by Rev. Mike Wilson along trail heads in the Sonoran Desert on the Tohono O'odham Nation along the deadliest stretch of the U.S./Mexico border.  One woman, (center), vomited water, a sign of heat exhaustion and dehydration.  The three were about 18 miles north of the border.
    Humanitarian_Aid_0086.jpg
  • A trail paved by undocumented migrants that crossed from Mexico in to the United States onto the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona stretches across the Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Migrant_Trail_035.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.
    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.
    1406_Bus_DSC6801b.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_1.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
  • A trail paved by undocumented migrants that crossed from Mexico in to the United States onto the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona stretches across the Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Migrant_Trail_033.tif
  • 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_0060.tif
  • Protesters block the entrance to the federal courthouse in protest of Operation Streamline on October 11, 2013, in Tucson, Arizona, USA, to prevent a bus carrying undocumented migrants from entering the facility for an immigration and deportation hearing.  The program instituted by the federal government expedites group hearings and deportation for those apprehended entering the United States illegally.
    1310a_Deport_NJG8454.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_2.JPG
  • A group of undocumented migrants, who crossed from Mexico on to the Tohono O'odham Nation, seeks shade under the scrub trees of the Sonoran Desert in temperatures exceeding 100 degrees south of Sells, Arizona, USA.
    Illegal_Immigration_018.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
  • Undocumented migrants wait to be processed and deported in Sells, Arizona, on the Tohono O'odham Nation, Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Illegal_Immigration_351.tif
  • A group of 42 undocumented migrants, who crossed from Mexico on to the Tohono O'odham Nation moves through the desert about 18 miles north of the border southeast of Sells, Arizona, USA.  The group walks in temperatures exceeding 100 degrees on a trail along the Baboquivari corridor, the deadliest crossing point along the border.  Brown water in some water jugs indicates that some of the group ran out of water and have filled their jugs from depleted cattle ponds.
    Illegal_Immigration_0085.jpg
  • Undocumented migrants are processed in Sells, Arizona, on the Tohono O'odham Nation, Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Illegal_Immigration_375.tif
  • Undocumented migrants, who crossed from Mexico illegally in to the United States on to the Tohono O'odham Nation in Arizona, refill water bottles at a residence before continuing to cross the Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Illegal_Immigration_0053.jpg
  • On August 15, 2002, undocumented migrant from Mexico, Robert Perez, is given oxygen by BORSTAR agent, Abel Melendez, after his group that surrendered to Border Patrol agents near Little Tucson on the Tohono O'odham Nation.  A 55-year-old man, an uncle to some in the group of ten, died from dehydration and and heat exhaustion about a mile up the road.  The smuggler abandoned the group when uncle fell ill.  Temperatures exceeded 105 degrees that day.  Perez waited with the uncle's body.
    Desperate Journey-1aa.jpg
  • A group of 42 undocumented migrants, who crossed into the U.S. from Mexico on to the Tohono O'odham Nation, moves through the Sonoran Desert east of Sells and Little Tucson, Arizona, USA.  The group moved without the presence of the Border Patrol or other law enforcement agency.
    Illegal_Immigration_78.jpg
  • A group of 42 undocumented migrants, who crossed into the U.S. from Mexico on to the Tohono O'odham Nation, moves through the Sonoran Desert east of Sells and Little Tucson, Arizona, USA.  The group moved without the presence of the Border Patrol or other law enforcement agency.
    Illegal_Immigration_82.jpg
  • A cross marks the location where an undocumented migrant, who crossed illegally from Mexico into Arizona, succumbed to dehydration and heat exhaustion on the Tohono O'odham Nation in the Sonoran Desert, USA.
    Illegal_Immigration_0001.tif
  • A U.S. Border Patrol agent prepares to deport a group of illegal immigrants east of Sells, Arizona, on the Tohono O'odham Nation, USA.  The area has the highest death rate of undocumented migrants crossing in to the U. S. from Mexico in the nation.
    Deportation_011.tif
  • Containers of water have been placed at an abandoned structure along a known smuggling route on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge as an act of humanitarian aid north of the U.S./Mexico border near Arivaca, Arizona, USA. Welcoming messages, the date, and the words "Mills College" are written on the jugs.
    2001j_Hum_NJG_3147.JPG
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4118a.jpg
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA. Drew Warner, president of the Immigration Lwyers Association at the University of Arizona, volunteers at the clinic.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4095a.jpg
  • The body of Arturo Gomez Castro, 27, lies where he died west of Silverbell, Arizona, in the Sonoran Desert.  The father of five from Chiapas, Mexico, entered the United States illegally at the Arizona border on to the Tohono O'odham Nation at the deadliest stretch of desert for crossers along the U.S. border with Mexico.
    Border_b_DSC_0122.jpg
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration.  Members of the Brown Berets participate in the march.
    March_100501b_06.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration. Opponents of the bill gesture to about 25 supporters of the bill who demonstrated at the march.
    March_100501a_24.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration.
    March_100501a_13.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration.
    March_100501_03.jpg
  • Containers of water have been placed at an abandoned structure along a known smuggling route on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge as an act of humanitarian aid north of the U.S./Mexico border near Arivaca, Arizona, USA. Welcoming messages, the date, and the words "Mills College" are written on the jugs.
    2001j_Hum_NJG_3147.JPG
  • Containers of water have been placed at an abandoned structure along a known smuggling route on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge as an act of humanitarian aid north of the U.S./Mexico border near Arivaca, Arizona, USA. Welcoming messages, the date, and the words "Mills College" are written on the jugs.
    2001j_Hum_NJG_3141.JPG
  • Containers of water have been placed at an abandoned structure along a known smuggling route on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge as an act of humanitarian aid north of the U.S./Mexico border near Arivaca, Arizona, USA. Welcoming messages, the date, and the words "Mills College" are written on the jugs.
    2001j_Hum_NJG_3122.JPG
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA. Maria Arguello, center, fears that she will be targeted by law enforcement at her residence.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4094b.jpg
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA. Maria Arguello, center, fears that she will be targeted by law enforcement at her residence.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4094a.jpg
  • A portable surveillance tower placed in an outlying area southeast of Arivaca and west of Tubac, Arizona, USA, by the U.S. Border Patrol monitors smuggling and illegal related activity related to the Mexican border.
    1703j_Nog_NJG_9867.JPG
  • Enrique Hernandez Juarez, 6, entered the United States illegally from Mexico at the Arizona border with his mother and other family.
    KIDS IN DESERT-JJJa.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
  • 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
  • A woman minds a shop in Altar, Sonora, Mexico where migrants wait at the plaza to be transported to the U.S. and Mexico border at Arizona, where they enter the United States illegally.  The shop sells backpacks, caps, dark clothing, and other items used by the crossers.
    Migrants_110608_17.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration.  Members of the Brown Berets participate in the march.
    March_100501b_05.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration.
    March_100501b_03.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070, which addresses illegal immigration.  Arizona Congressman, Raul Grijalva, called for a boycott of Arizona.
    March_100501a_11.JPG
  • About 6,000 people marched in the La Gran Marcha on May 1, 2010, to Armory Park in Tucson, Arizona, USA. The focus of the march was the protest of the controversial bill SB1070 that takes aim at illegal immigration.
    March_100501ag_08.jpg
  • Crosses on the border wall in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, memorialize those who died while crossing illegally into the United States at Arizona.
    Border_Crosses_0010.tif
  • Demonstrators protest at a march in Tucson, Arizona, regarding proposed immigration legislation.
    Immigration_Protest_1 _11.tif
  • Containers of water have been placed at an abandoned structure along a known smuggling route on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge as an act of humanitarian aid north of the U.S./Mexico border near Arivaca, Arizona, USA. Welcoming messages, the date, and the words "Mills College" are written on the jugs.
    2001j_Hum_NJG_3141.JPG
  • Immigration hearings and Operation Streamline hearings are held at the federal courthouse, Evo A. DeConcini U.S. Courthouse, United States District Court, District of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.  Those slated for immigration hearings are transported by bus to the courthouse.  Operation Streamline is a joint initiative of the Department of Homeland Security and Department of Justice in the United States, started in 2005, that adopts a "zero-tolerance" approach to unauthorized border-crossing by engaging in criminal prosecution of those engaging in it. Entering without inspection is a misdemeanor, and re-entering after deportation is a felony.
    180620_Imm_NJG_8691a.jpg
  • Rock placed to indicate directions were placed along a known smuggling route for illegal activity from Sonora, Mexico, Elephant Head Trail, Coronado National Forest, Sonoran Desert, Santa Rita Mountains, Green Valley, Arizona, USA.
    1301j_Tra_NJG3838.JPG
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA. "Edna", 21, entered the USA on a legal visa at the age of 9, along with her family.  Her father intended to sat in the USA to work. Her family chose to overstay their visas to avoid prolonged separation from her father.  She applied for and was granted DACA status, which lapsed in August, 2017.  With changes to DACA, she faces possible deportation if stopped by law enforcement.  She is a nursing student under the protection of DACA, but may lose that right, as she lost her job when she lost her DACA status.  She is now unemployed.  She initially arrived in the USA with her parents and two siblings.  Her parents then had two US born children.  She attends the clinic to be prepared with legal advice should she be stopped by law enforcement and be slated for deportation to Mexico.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4127a.jpg
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4104a.jpg
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4083b.jpg
  • Volunteers from Keep Tucson Together and attorney Margo Cowan provide legal assistance to persons effected by changes to DACA, or Deferred Action Childhood Arrival, which provided legal protection to those brought into the United States illegally as children, at a clinic at Pueblo Magnet High School, Tucson, Arizona, USA. Attorney Margo Cowan addresses attendees.
    1709j_DAC_NJG_4073b.jpg
  • A portable surveillance tower placed in an outlying area southeast of Arivaca and west of Tubac, Arizona, USA, by the U.S. Border Patrol monitors smuggling and illegal related activity related to the Mexican border.
    1703j_Nog_NJG_9869.JPG
  • A metal wall defines the Mexican border at Sonora, Mexico, as seen from Lochiel, Arizona, USA.
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  • A culvert runs along the international border wall between Agua Prieta, Sonora, Mexico, and Douglas Arizona, USA, as seen from Arizona.
    1510aj_SEa_NJG9504.JPG
  • Enrique Hernandez Juarez, 6, entered the United States illegally from Mexico at the Arizona border with his mother and other family.
    Border_a_ 251.jpg
  • A Guatemalan woman and her 10-year-old son, who crossed illegally from Mexico into the United States, look through belongings at the bus station in Tucson, Arizona, USA.  U.S. Border Patrol agents released the two to travel to a secondary location in the states where their immigration status will be addressed.
    1406_Bus_DSC6795.JPG
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