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" For nothing is secret that will not be revealed, nor anything hidden that will not be known and come to light." Luke 8:17 If you are new to
the Posse, WELCOME! Please read the information at the bottom so you will know
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Border Sheriff's Posse 03-25-10
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Dear Posse,
Included in this bulletin you will find:
> Follow-up to the warning about Guerrero
> Barrio Azteca gang threat against El Paso
Law Enforcement Officers
> Information about a little Mexican
community
> An article from the Fort Worth Star
Telegram
> Posse letter concerning REFUGE
GUERRERO
So far there has been no big clash in Guerrero. The body of one former Zeta has been
found. Information is sparse because so
many of the people of the city have fled.
Everyone remains on high alert.
Last night law enforcement officials received a bomb threat against
the bridges crossing from Mexico into the cities of Roma, Falcon, Rio Grande
City and Laredo. This is not the first
time they have been threatened. One
intercessor pointed out this could possibly be a set-up for
law enforcement. Please continue to pray for their safety.
EL PASO
There is an unconfirmed report the Barrio Azteca gang may
have issued a green light against law enforcement officers in the El Paso area
because the Aztecas were the target of a recent round-up by more than 200
officers from 21 agencies seeking information about the killings of 3 people
connected with the U.S. Consulate in Juarez. Pray for hidden schemes to be
revealed and for protection.
El PORVENIR
Events continue to escalate on the southern border of the
United States, literally just across the Rio Grande in northern Mexico.
Opposite the U.S. community of Ft. Hancock, in the Juarez
Valley, you will find one of the most dangerous places in the state of
Chihuahua. Though there are many small
communities in the Juarez Valley, I want to tell you about El Porvenir.
El Porvenir has maybe 3,000 residents, but the greater area,
including Sarabia, Colonia Esperanza, and Praxedes has about 10,000. It is an agricultural area.
I have heard estimates that 80% of the people in the El
Porvenir area in some way work with or for a drug cartel. Word has been put out to the people of El
Porvenir that the opposing cartel is coming and there is going to be a
cleaning. Everybody there with cartel
connections will be killed if they don't get out.
Today a friend told me the story of one family who had been
ordered to leave the area a couple of months ago. They stayed away for a while but then returned. Because they returned, the husband was
murdered and the wife was raped. It is
my understanding it is common for women to be raped by cartel members in the
area.
As you read the following article, keep in mind that, though
most of the really bad people who want to come into the U.S. may do so
illegally, we are not always certain who is coming. We must be prepared. Please pray for those who are fleeing for their lives and for those who are seeking asylum in the United States.
Following is a Posse letter sent out last year that seems relevant today. Of course, much has happened in the last 6 months, so the statistics have changed. The needs are the same. Thank you for taking your place on this wall.
Pam
Border Sheriff's Posse Refugees 10.24.09Dear Posse,
Recently I met a lady whose husband and son were
murdered a few months ago at their place of business in Juarez. The wife and other family members fled into
the U.S. the same night, with only the clothes on their backs. Their home was ransacked and they will never
be able to return. She could not even
bury her dead husband and son. Since
that time another son has been murdered and a nephew is missing.
A friend asked me to minister to these broken, grieving
people. As I held this precious Mexican
lady in my arms, she kept repeating, "I don't understand why, I don't
understand why." All I could say was,
"I don't either." Honestly, my prayers
seemed flat as I struggled to express the Lord's compassion for
them.
Before we departed from our meeting place, I saw a
16-year-old boy in a wheelchair. While
visiting his girlfriend in Juarez two months ago, he was shot four times in the
back as he stepped outside. He doesn't
use drugs. He is not part of a
gang. He has no idea why he was shot or
who shot him.
It is imperative that we are alert to the encroaching
violence as we prepare for the days ahead.
Ten years ago when Sam and I founded New Day Ministries International, we
placed a framed scripture picture of Psalm 91 in the entryway of our home and
declared it was our New Day Psalm. It
is one thing to know those days are coming.
It's another to know they are here.
These are not days to be feared. The Lord frequently tells me that all around me night is falling,
yet He assures me these are the days when His light will shine all the brighter
in the darkness.
Isaiah 60:1-3 is so precious. "Arise, shine; for your light has come! And the glory of the Lord is risen upon you. For behold, the darkness shall cover the
earth, and deep darkness the people; but
the Lord will arise over you, AND
HIS GLORY WILL BE SEEN UPON YOU. The Gentiles shall come to your light, and
kings to the brightness of your rising."
In these days, we all have different ideas of what is coming
and how we are to prepare. A few months ago a dear friend who is involved in the
Patriot movement said, "Pammy, I can't wait until we come out with guns
blazing!" I am concerned about anyone
who thinks this is the answer. It's
pretty obvious that in a situation like that we will not come out alive. What will happen if a contrived or natural
situation causes many people to be rounded up and placed in
detention/relocation camps? If
Christians take this stance, who will minister to the people in the camps? What if we have neighbors or families that
need us in a crisis? We may think we
will be better off dead, but if we have prayed for a great harvest of souls,
why would we want to hasten our departure when so many are going to need us in
the days ahead? If we are taken out of
this earth, who will tell them Jesus loves them and He weeps for them?
Yes, my prayers felt flat.
I didn't have answers for such grieving hearts. But I have arms to hold dear ones who have
suffered so much. And I have learned
that just because my prayers felt flat does not mean they did not touch the
very heart of God. In fact, the
Intercessor Who lives in me grieved for them.
When we met again a couple of days later, the countenance of the three
family members seemed to be lifted, and I thank the Lord for His
faithfulness. They have a long road
ahead of them.
Rusty Fleming, author of Drug
Wars: Silver or Lead, stated in the docudrama, "This (corruption and violence) is what's driving the mass exodus of
people coming across our border and if they were from any other country on
earth they'd be called REFUGEES!"Lord, we ask You to "comfort all who mourn...give them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness..." Isaiah 61: 2, 3
Though Juarez averages seven murders per day, a record twenty people were killed during the
24-hours from Monday at midnight through Tuesday, Oct. 6. The number murdered in Juarez since
President Calderon's crackdown on the cartels began in January of 2006 is
more than 14,000.
During a law-enforcement briefing last July, it was made
clear that the situation in Tijuana is expected to get much worse (it's already
bad) in the coming days. It's just a matter of time.
This is a quote from the newsletter of Crossing Borders, a ministry whose focus is the poorest people in colonias
across the border. "Whole communities
are being held hostage in their own hometowns by all the violence that's made
any sort of 'normal' life impossible.
The horrors even the youngest children are being subjected to are beyond
our comprehension. What would you do if
your child saw a mutilated body dumped at the bus stop? Nobody feels safe even to
talk about what nightmares they've witnessed for fear they will be targeted
next for execution. Shop owners,
schoolteachers, and more are kidnapped every day now and held for ransom,
hopefully to be returned to their families alive. But that's not always the outcome. How they need our prayers!"
For years, many intercessors in Texas have known their
cities were going to be cities of refuge.
If we are to provide refuge, where do we think the refugees will come
from?
Refugee is defined as "One who flees, usually to another
country, for refuge especially from invasion, oppression or persecution."
A former Chihuahua state public security secretary has publicly
alleged (by posting a letter on www.grajeda.com.mx)
that high-level politicians, government officials, national and international
businesses, and members of Calderon's political party, PAN, are involved in a sea
of corruption that extends from the senate to city governments.
There is an ongoing debate about whether some of the
violence and abuse of the Mexican people is perpetrated by the military
(government). Escalating reports
indicate the military is being used to terrify and silence those who speak
out. Under cover of, or parallel to,
the Drug War in Mexico there seems to be a systematic crackdown by the military
on dissidents -- people who speak out against corruption or the
government. People are routinely picked
up and tortured. Once they give names,
those people are also tortured and killed.
I have been told that activists with the ability to influence people or
who know the law and can advise people of their rights are tortured at the
military installation in Juarez. The
Mexican government denies abuse by the military.
November 2010 is the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Mexican
Revolution, and there is concern that people who are tired of the corruption
and violence might rise up on the anniversary. Some people believe the government of the United States
knows about abuses by the Mexican military and chooses not to intervene because
of concerns that any kind of uprising would interfere with our trade/economic relationship with
Mexico.We declare that "nothing is secret that will not be revealed, nor anything hidden that will not be known and come to light." Luke 8:17
A Chihuahua state human rights investigator, Gustavo de la
Rosa Hickerson, who has publicly stated he has evidence of Mexican army abuses, was taken into custody Thursday night,
October 15, 2009 by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents at a local port
of entry. They apparently wanted him to
seek political asylum for his safety, which was a highly unusual move according
to his attorney, Carlos Spector (a speaker at the El Paso Border School). Hickerson spoke publicly two weeks ago about
being able to document 170 instances in which Mexican soldiers extorted,
kidnapped, tortured and beat, or killed innocent people while deployed in the
state of Chihuahua. None of those cases are being
prosecuted by the Mexican government.
Hickerson, who has broken no laws, was asked if he was afraid for his
safety. He answered that he was afraid
but did not want asylum. Spector is
concerned that U.S. federal officials want Hickerson to seek political asylum
(which is currently being denied even in many very deserving cases) that will
later be denied. As soon as a person
asks for asylum at the border, they are put in Immigration detention, often for
months. Sadly, those with children are
sometimes separated from them.
Hickerson has worked for the Chihuahua State Human Rights Commission for
more than four years and has been an advocate for human rights for thirty-seven
years. Hickerson has now been released. Pray for his safety as he continues his work
with the Human Rights Commission in Mexico.
Let's have a little history lesson:
South America's political history is filled with civil wars,
unrest and the repression of political dissent. One of the better-known examples is the nation of Argentina. Wikipedia tells us: "The expression
'national reorganization process' was used to imply orderliness and control of
the critical sociopolitical situation of Argentina at the time. Forced disappearances, often based on
unsubstantiated accusations, became common.
Armed soldiers arrived at randomly selected people's houses to rob
them. The police would pull over cars
for no reason, beat the occupants senseless, and leave without explanation, as
part of a program to intimidate the
populace and decrease its willingness to protest against the government. Government spies were dispatched to
infiltrate the universities; students who openly professed even slightly
leftist political opinions would simply disappear. Official investigations undertaken after the end of the Dirty War
documented the 'disappearance' of about nine thousand persons, noting
nevertheless that the correct number is bound to be higher, since many cases
were not reported and the records were destroyed by the military authority;
unofficial estimates by most human rights organizations place the number closer
to 30,000."
Also according to Wikipedia, "Operation Condor was
a campaign of political repressions involving assassination and intelligence
operations officially implemented in 1975 by the governments of the Southern Cone
of South America.
The program aimed to eradicate alleged socialist/communist influence
and ideas and to control active or potential opposition movements against the governments...
the precise number of deaths directly attributable to Operation Condor will
likely never be known, but it is reported to have caused over sixty thousand
victims, possibly even more...Condor's key members were the governments in Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia and Brazil, with Ecuador and Peru joining later
in more peripheral roles."
Since this information was researched, newspaper articles have indicated that top leaders from that era are being held accountable. The former dictator of Uruguay, for example, was just sentenced to 25 years in prison for his role in disappearances and murders during. I include this information about Condor to make clear that
what we are seeing in Mexico is part of a much bigger picture of violence and
corruption throughout Latin America.
Why are these issues so prevalent?
Cathe Halford of Pray Texas partially explains it:
"Some differences between North American and Latin
American cultures are foundational.
When you study the history of what is now the United States, you read
about explorers and settlers. The
settlers came for a variety of reasons, but most came as families to establish
homes and communities. They built a nation
of farmers and shopkeepers. Though
there were inexcusable atrocities committed against Native Americans, especially during the era of Manifest Destiny, the founders' goal
was to create safe towns where families could flourish--not to exterminate or
subjugate the native population or to acquire riches for European rulers. You will not see the word conqueror in
any account of our colonial history.
In contrast, when you study the history of Latin America, it
is all about conquerors, conquistadores, from the Rio Grande to Tierra
del Fuego at the tip of South America.
For the most part the Spanish conquistadors did not bring their families
to the new world. They came as soldiers
and adventurers looking for riches to take home to their rulers. Acquiring those riches required the
subjugation of the indigenous people.
The tactics used were rape, kidnapping and massacres-the same techniques
used by terrorists today, including
government-sanctioned death squads in many nations.
Another difference between the cultures is based on
religion. The priests who
accompanied military expeditions into Latin America and the Protestants who
settled North America shared the belief that the native population must be
converted to Christianity. Their
methods of achieving that goal were vastly different. The Spanish used the same approach with Native Americans as was
used with Jews under the Inquisition, forced or coerced conversions, while Puritans and other groups in North America focused on evangelism. To be clear, the Puritans also hanged Quakers and various settlements persecuted Christians with different belief systems, so we don't deserve a free pass on this issue and we won't get one from the Lord."
Journalist Diana Washington Valdez states:
"The Inquisition ended Spain's dominance and brought upon
the country a curse, along with spiritual darkness. Back in the New World, the pagan rituals with human sacrifices
(approved by the government, such as it existed) ended with the conquistadores,
but these also went about importing to the new world their corruption. The
mestizos, the blending of the Europeans with indigenous people, for the most
part were the product of wholesale rape.
The sense of shame created by rape, I believe, is what contributes to
Mexico's low self-esteem as a nation.
It may also contribute to the subjugation of women in that culture. Several Spanish families, including former
President Vicente Fox, maintain their strong ties with European families and
rule Mexico through corruption. The
Spanish Inquisition was marked by cruelty, and avarice is the peculiar
corruption that marks the Mexican government influenced by the Spanish
elite. The cruelty of the Spaniards
(not all of course) probably stems from the centuries of being under conquest
themselves, especially the Middle Eastern conquest that lasted about 1,000
years. What helped the U.S. in its
early days was the influence of Bible-believing people. Though not perfect, the light that entered
the country through the gospel brought blessings to America...I thought it
especially significant that Mexican President Calderon met with leaders of the
Jewish community in Mexico City and apologized for the Inquisition, especially
since he is Roman Catholic."
Dear Posse, it is imperative we get this right. Regardless of our views on illegal
immigration, this is a heart issue.
Have we hardened our heart against the alien? I am not talking about people who come here with evil intent. What do we have in our heart for those who
come here out of desperation because their situation is intolerable?Psalm 92:2 says, "I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge
and my fortress; My God, in Him I will trust."
What about those who don't have the same source of assurance? Are those of us who know our cities are to
be cities of refuge an extension of our Lord in the earth, providing "refuge"
for those fleeing violence and persecution?"Search me, O God, and know my heart; try me, and know my thoughts; see if there is any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting." Psalm 139: 23-24Dr. Jim Garlow, pastor of Skyline Wesleyan Church in San
Diego, e-mailed 8,230 California pastors to tell them about Border School. It meant so much to me to read his
statement, "This will not be a redneck reaction (let's keep 'em out) or a milk
toasty lefty (just let 'em in) approach.
This will make you weep - literally - like the Old Testament prophet
Jeremiah, for your nation and for the
nation of Mexico."Sally Frahm, a friend and intercessor from Austin, shares this prayer:Father, we cry out to You for mercy, for the
stopping of evil that would invade at every point. Mexico has a wonderful
purpose, a call from You, that the enemy would try to stop, to destroy. There is a
purpose for Texas and Mexico together, for Mexico and the United States. Confuse the
spirits of violence and intrigue, dear Lord. Bring a wake-up call to those who
love violence, an opportunity to repent. You say in Your Word...
"The LORD examines the
righteous, but the wicked and those who love violence His soul
hates." Psalm 11:5
Lord,
forgive us in the United States, where we have been self-righteous, full of
pride, so sure our way is the best way. Forgive us where we have failed to
have Your heart for our suffering Mexican brothers and sisters and give us Your heart for the people
You love. May those who love You rightly represent You. We ask for comfort for
those who have lost loved ones and for amazing ministries to them to be birthed
"for such a time as this." Help them not to hate, but to turn to You, to Your
comforting arms. "You exalted me above my foes; from violent men you
rescued me." Psalm 18:48We ask for You to move
in...may we partner with You in prayer, and still recognize "the battle is the
Lord's." Raise up intercessors, Lord. Help us see this is a new day and there is no time for
complacency, for pleasure as usual. Give
intercessors from Mexico and the United States the prayers on Your heart. May we be mighty during
this hour; may we know how to stand in this time.We
speak freedom over the Mexican government, military, police. May the spirit of
fear and control be broken; may righteousness reign down from heaven. Protect all those standing for justice and righteousness. Give them
favor and open their eyes to Your goodness, Lord, the beauty of Who You are. Protect
President Calderon. We plead the blood of Jesus over him,
asking for angels around him, that You will open his eyes to the angels. Draw Him to Yourself and teach him Your ways. Give Him wisdom, understanding and clear direction.In Jesus' name,Amen
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| ABOUT THE BORDER SHERIFF'S POSSE |
LinkAmerica sponsors the Border Sheriff's
Posse to "ride" the U.S. borders in intercession and to
"pardner" with intercessors around the United States to protect the 26 counties
along the US/Mexico border. It is critical that we take our place on this
fence.
We support ALL law enforcement agencies, pray that
illegal activity will be stopped (drugs, human trafficking, etc.) and declare
that those who are slipping across our borders to cause harm be exposed and
apprehended.
This is not about politics! This is about the protection of the United States
of America. I was visiting with a prophetic intercessor who did not know
about the Border Sheriff's Posse when she pointed her finger and said, "And
right now God is pinning badges on hidden intercessors.....like a Sheriff's
badge," and, with that, she poked her finger into my shoulder! Are you being "deputized by 'The Sheriff' to aid in law
enforcement?" Will you join me as we ride with the Lord, our Border Sheriff?
We'll "ride" the fence. We'll catch rustlers, mend spiritual fences and sing
some great trail songs along the way as we worship over our
borders. Please
use the Subscribe link at the top of this email to join the Posse.
Pam Faraone LinkAmerica
El Paso, TX
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