This Coyote's Life

Spener, David

The majority of undocumented Mexican migrants enter the United States for the first time with the assistance of a paid guide known commonly as a coyote. Portrayed by the Border...

...El Carpintero started on the coyote's path as a migrant himself...
...Indeed, he expressed disdain for just such a pair of bandits he had met while serving time in Laredo...
...As the economy recovered by the early 1990s, he moved back north to Houston to work in construction...
...I never had to look for them," he explained...
...They would always come to me...
...Ily Lu Illl U One would pose as the coyote, colth of the lecting a fee for crossing the river, then lead unsuspecting migrants to der...
...He eventually severed his relationship with the ring but did not abandon smuggling altogether...
...Still, he travels frequently to the border and maintains some contact with people who are in the business there...
...Though smuggling was never his main occupation, El Carpintero worked on and off as a guide for this family-run ring for the next two years...
...With the U.S...
...He became familiar with the many river crossings and footpaths migrants used to enter the United States without being detected by the authorities...
...He stayed with the coyote in his safe house for several weeks while he worked at odd jobs to earn the money to pay off his $350 smuggling fee...
...In the early 1980s, El Carpintero swam across the border at Laredo with a friend and a coyote they had met along the riverbank...
...Portrayed by the Border Patrol, human rights organizations and the press as hardened criminals, coyotes seldom get to tell their side of the story...
...Without him, they might drown in the river, fall prey to bann preying igrants, "El ero" saw providing a service to U r r dits, get lost in the desert, or lock themselves inside an unventilated freight car...
...He continued to travel to and from Monterrey four to five times a year and often brought fellow migrants along with him...
...Clearly, the temptation for experienced migrants with an entrepreneurial bent to enter the profession is great, while the demand for coyotes' services, even at the new, higher prices, shows no signs of abating...
...What follows is the tale of one man from Monterrey, El Carpintero, who entered and subsequently left the smuggling profession...
...Far from preying upon immigrants, El Carpintero saw himself as providing a valuable service to those needing to find work north of the border...
...And as they look north across the muddy Rio Bravo del Norte, that is a big "if' indeed...
...Realizing that if he were apprehended in the United States illegally again he could face years in jail, El Carpintero headed home for Monterrey...
...He acknowledged that there were many rip-off artists in the border towns who posed as professional coyotes and that it was difficult for inexperienced migrants to know whom they could trust...
...The acquaintance recruited him on the spot to help guide a group of undocumented migrants across the border and past INS highway checkpoints in south Texas...
...Waiting to cross the Rio Grande at night on one of his trips back to Houston, El Carpintero bumped into an old acquaintance from San Antonio whom he knew to be a coyote...
...El Carpintero disliked working with this professional smuggling ring...
...He noted that it was generally not in the interests of the smuggler's clients to identify him as the group's coyote, since they were depending on him to lead them across the border again if they were apprehended and returned to Mexico...
...And it was, of course, in the interest of the coyote to lead them again since he and his collaborators would not collect their full fee until the party reached its destination...
...Upon release from prison at the end of 1997, he was deported to Mexico...
...He is editor, with Kathleen Staudt, of The U.S.Mexico Border: Transcending Divisions, Contesting Identities (Lynne Rienner, 1998...
...Young men began to approach him for help in crossing and he obliged when he was able, though he had not yet begun to charge a fee for his services...
...Alternatively, they might say that there had been a coyote with them but that he had abandoned them in the brush before the Border Patrol arrived-a point worth considering since the Border Patrol frequently denounces coyotes for leaving their charges to face the hazards of the desert alone...
...Through his teen years, El Carpintero traveled frequently from Monterrey to south Texas towns, swimming across the river to visit relatives and to work as a carpenter's assistant...
...Where before it was possible to smuggle a party to Houston with just two or three people working together, now it is best to work with four to six companions...
...As his reputation as a competent and "honest" coyote Carpint spread, strangers also came to him, himself as and he eventually developed a Mexico City clientele in addition to his valuable Monterrey circle...
...Although he had been apprehend- those nee ed by the Border Patrol on numer- work no ous occasions, El Carpintero had never been charged with alien bo smuggling even on trips when he was, in fact, guiding groups of migrants for a fee...
...The Border Patrol's Operation Rio Grande began in the summer 1997-after El Carpintero had left the smuggler's game...
...As he had done while living in San Antonio, El Carpintero commuted back and forth between Monterrey and his Texas home several times a year...
...The three hopped a freight train and got off in San Antonio where the coyote took them to one of the many safe houses located on the city's West Side...
...It interfered with his construction work, and he felt guilty that members of the ring profited from the predicament of impoverished compatriots who could ill afford to pay the $500 fee to Houston from the border...
...He now charged for Far fron his services, though he sometimes lowered the price for friends and upon imm friends-of-friends...
...The group's trip went smoothly and upon arrival in Houston, the head of the smuggling ring offered El 22NACIA REPORT ON THE AMERICAS David Spener is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology of Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas...
...Among his friends in Monterrey, El Carpintero became known as an experienced border crosser who knew the best routes and precautions to take on the journey...
...economy booming and wellpaying jobs (by Mexican standards) readily available north of the border, migrants calculate that even $1,000 is not too much to pay if their coyote can be counted on to get them through the Border Patrol's defenses in one piece...
...He agreed and spent the next eight months in jail...
...It was this type of aggressive interrogation that eventually brought El Carpintero to "justice" one night in February 1997 when he was pulled over on Interstate 35 with a carload of six undocumented migrants...
...During the deep recession that hit Texas in the late 1980s, El Carpintero returned to Monterrey to work in a factory for several years...
...He now knew the routes through south Texas "like the back of his hand" and had become well versed in the "cat-and-mouse game" played by migrants and the Border Patrol...
...the Texas bank of the river, where his accomplice lay in wait, ready to rob them at gunpoint...
...Detained in Laredo, he was appointed a public defender who advised him to plead guilty to the smuggling charge...
...22 NACIL REPORT ON THE AMERICASREPORT ON THE U.S.-MEXICO BORDER Carpintero $100 per head to guide other migrant parties in the future...
...In the face of migrants' unwillingness to identify their smugglers, Border Patrol agents often question those they apprehend quite aggressively, sometimes threatening them with jail if they refuse to identify the coyote among them...
...According to El Carpintero, members of the migrant party would typically tell Border Patrol agents that they did not know each other and that there was no guide among them...
...After finding employment as a carpenter, he worked and lived in San Antonio for the next six years, traveling back to Monterrey several times a year...
...In addition, he says, the prices charged to get to Houston or Dallas have risen, from $500-700 per person at the time he last crossed, to as much as $1,000...
...El Carpintero says that the Border Patrol has made crossing more difficult...

Vol. 33 • November 1999 • No. 3


 
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