Immigrant bought land where he crossed the border illegally, allows others to do the same

Immigrant bought land where he crossed the border illegally, allows others to do the same
We Build the Wall via Mental Recession

By Kaylee Greenlee

An immigrant who purchased the land where he crossed over into the U.S. illegally said he won’t stop other migrants from doing the same.

Ociel Mendoza illegally entered the U.S. when he was 18 years old and looking for seasonal work on Texas ranches, according to BuzzFeed News. Mendoza bought the land where he illegally crossed into the country over 40 years earlier and now allows other migrants looking for a better life to come through the area.

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“I was undocumented once myself. Who am I to stop them?” Mendoza told BuzzFeed News. (RELATED: Texas Rancher Says Illegal Immigrants Are Repeatedly Causing Property Damage And Trashing His Land)

Undocumented immigrants frequently crossed the border looking for seasonal work in the late 1970s when paying a smuggler didn’t cost thousands of dollars and border officials weren’t as militarized. Mendoza said he and some friends illegally crossed the border in 1979 and worked together while admiring the neighboring ranch.

“How much could it cost? One day I’ll buy it,” Mendoza told reporters he joked at the time.

Mendoza worked on construction in Houston for seven years before opening a convenience store and laundromat in Rio Grande City. He obtained his residency in 1982 and later bought other businesses and property around the town, including the 400-acre ranch.

Mendoza installed a fence and 300 ladders along the border of his land, and when Border Patrol officials asked him why he made it easier to cross over he said, “you’re the ones who can stop them, not me.”

Smugglers have used Mendoza’s land to bring migrants illegally into the country. and once two men asked him to inquire with his boss about how much they could pay to smuggle people into the U.S.

“My boss says to tell your boss not to worry. They can cross whoever they want. Just take care of the fence,” Mendoza told the men. He encountered the same men around a month later and they told him to thank his boss on behalf of the cartel.

“They never knew it was me,” Mendoza recalls. Local law enforcement started surveilling Mendoza’s land for human and drug trafficking.

The government has tried to build four miles of border wall on Mendoza’s land since September 2020, BuzzFeed News reported. The Department of Justice offered Mendoza $136,000 despite his ask for $200,000, and the case remains.

“Morally, I don’t agree with the wall, but there’s not much I can do about it,” Mendoza told BuzzFeed News. “But give me what it’s worth.”

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