Corruption on the Texas-Mexico border

Houston Chronicle:

The bribe has long been a shortcut to wealth and power along the Texas-Mexico border. But these days, it's not just politicians lining their pockets or crooked lawmen taking bags of cash to overlook drug loads.

The culture of bribery is quietly seeping into new realms of government, from school districts to municipal court, experts say.

Proximity to Mexico is at least partly to blame, said Anthony Knopp, a professor who teaches border history at the University of Texas at Brownsville.

"What we're dealing with is a Third World country on the other side of the border where there is a culture of corruption ... corruption will show up here, naturally."

And show up, it has.

Since March 2004, 19 public officials including former Cameron County Sheriff Conrado Cantu, a city manager, several county commissioners, a school superintendent and several school trustees have been convicted of taking kickbacks and bribes.

Some pocketed wads of cash. Others accepted new tires for their cars or extensive remodeling jobs on their homes and businesses. Some even partied with prostitutes. In return, some allegedly awarded lucrative contracts to build or furnish new schools and public buildings. Or they looked the other way as traffickers hauled drugs across the border.

"Bribery is happening down here," said Israel Pacheco, a veteran Texas Ranger in McAllen. "To say it's not happening is to bury your head in the sand."

The bribery culture has existed in Mexico for centuries. There, the bribe is known as la mordida — "the bite." Paying mordidas is often the most efficient — or the only — way of getting things done in Mexico.

...
There is much more. Party affiliation is not given in the story, but the Lower Rio Grande Valley is a Democrat stronghold. This is another example of the Democrats culture of corruption. As the vote in the recent election shows Democrat corruption does not deter Democrat voters. The culture of corruption theme they used during the election was just another piece of the cynicism of Democrat's politics of fraud. Why did the Houston Chronicle wait until after the election to run this story. The examples given in the article appear to predate the election.

Comments

  1. A Republican, Carlos Cantu, defeated Democrat Gilbert Hinojosa last month for judge in Cameron County. Maybe some in the Valley are ready for a change.

    ReplyDelete

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