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  • Arrest is praised by U.S. authorities

    San Diego Union Tribune, CA
    Aug 25 2004

    Arrest is praised by U.S. authorities

    By Anna Cearley
    UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER


    TIJUANA - A man suspected of running a people-smuggling operation
    along the California border was arrested yesterday by Mexican federal
    agents in Mexicali.


    Agustín Chan Montoya was "one of the most sought-after people
    smugglers" in the area for U.S and Mexican authorities, said Abraham
    Sarabia, spokesman for the Mexican attorney general's office in
    Tijuana.

    Mexican federal authorities said Chan also had been smuggling
    non-Mexicans. Authorities were exploring a connection between him and
    a group of eight Iranians and Armenians detained in Mexicali last
    week after a tip from U.S. authorities.

    U.S. authorities praised the arrest of Chan, who is in his mid-30s.
    Smuggling organizations of the type Chan is accused of operating are
    believed to move thousands of people illegally into the United States
    each year.

    "It's a very significant arrest in the eyes of U.S. law enforcement
    authorities," said Lauren Mack, spokeswoman for U.S. Immigration and
    Customs Enforcement. "This is certainly someone who has been on our
    radar screen."

    This was Chan's second arrest in 20 months. He was captured in
    January 2003 on an arrest warrant in Mexicali after a coordinated
    investigation between U.S. and Mexican authorities, but he was
    released from prison. It wasn't clear if a judge had dismissed the
    case or if Chan served a short sentence.

    Immigrants caught in the Imperial Valley by U.S. Border Patrol agents
    this year identified Chan through photos as the smuggler who had
    arranged their trip, according to the latest Mexican arrest warrant.

    The migrants, who were from various parts of Mexico, had used an
    inflatable raft to cross a canal from Mexicali into the United
    States. Their statements were taken by an official with the Mexican
    attorney general's office, which used them to build another case
    against Chan.

    The migrants said Chan "treated them in a violent and aggressive
    manner and said that if they were captured to not implicate him or
    his associates or else they would make their families suffer,"
    according to the arrest warrant.

    Mack wouldn't say whether Chan's arrest was a development from last
    week's detentions in Mexicali. Two of the detainees, U.S. citizens of
    Iranian and Armenian descent who were presumed to be involved in a
    smuggling operation, were deported to the United States.

    Chan's arrest "is part of the continuing cooperative effort between
    U.S. and Mexican law enforcement on both sides of the border to
    investigate smuggling activities in Mexicali," Mack said. "It
    definitely will be continuing."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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