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Feds: Border fence not strong enough

The Chicago Tribune

COLUMBUS, N.M. — Illegal immigrants armed with torches, hacksaws, ladders and even bungee cords are making it around a section of the border fence hailed as the most efficient way to stop them.

In the 10 months since the section was put up, the only method federal agents haven’t seen is a tunnel -- “Yet,” said Victor Guzman, the supervisory Border Patrol agent responsible for the stretch of close-together 15-foot cement-filled steel poles planted three feet into the ground.

Agents responsible for guarding the stretch of border here “almost immediately” started seeing cuts in the fence. The towering gray- and rust-colored posts are marked with bright-orange spray paint in areas believed to have been breached, Guzman said.

Guzman said agents have found holes cut with acetylene torches, hacksaws and even plasma torches — a high-powered tool that uses inert gas or condensed air to quickly cut through steel and other dense metals.

Border Patrol spokesman Joe Romero said the breaches are no surprise.

“What we’re talking about is our fences are designed to deter people, discourage them from coming in,” Romero said. “Combined with the rest of the infrastructure, it’s supposed to buy us more time to make an arrest. Even an extra five seconds helps. The goal is, at the very least, it buys us extra time.”

Copyright 2008 The Chicago Tribune