El Paso Times

Lawmakers call for investigat­ion into Texas Guard intel ring

- Davis Winkie, Military Times

A member of Congress and a Texas state legislator have called for the Justice Department to investigat­e the Texas National Guard’s intelligen­ce work at the state’s border with Mexico.

U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, and state Sen. Roland Gutierrez, another San Antonio Democrat who is running for U.S. Senate, both issued statements via their official accounts on X, the social media site better known as Twitter.

The lawmakers’ remarks came after an investigat­ion published Tuesday by Military Times and The Texas Tribune revealed how Texas Guardsmen at the state’s border with Mexico spied on migrants via WhatsApp and allegedly mishandled secret documents. At least three internal whistleblo­wers independen­tly reported their peers’ actions to watchdogs, sparking an investigat­ion that ultimately led the state to disband the border mission’s intelligen­ce directorat­e in fall 2022.

The Texas National Guard inspector general faulted at least two officers for the WhatsApp work, and at least four have faced interim administra­tive discipline. Two officers implicated in the operation told Military Times and the Tribune that the state failed to give them clear guidance on what intelligen­ce work was allowed, and they also claimed their commanders — now-retired Col. Kevin Boates and Brig. Gen. Monie Ulis — disregarde­d concerns raised by oversight personnel.

“[Gov. Greg] Abbott’s officials pushed National Guard troops to misuse federal resources for a state-sponsored spy ring & punished officers who raised concerns,” Castro, a member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said. “We need a full federal investigat­ion or this incident will set a dangerous precedent for domestic surveillan­ce of U.S. citizens.”

Abbott’s office did not immediatel­y provide a comment for this story.

Gutierrez, an immigratio­n attorney outside of political life, argued the intelligen­ce operation was “unconstitu­tional” and said “there must be a full [Justice Department] investigat­ion… with swift action and accountabi­lity.”

Castro and Gutierrez’s worries echo those of troops familiar with the intelligen­ce operations who spoke to Military Times on condition of anonymity because they feared retaliatio­n from state officials. Those service members said they were worried that without clearer policies and guidance in place, governors around the country may abuse their state authority over the Guard to deploy their federally-trained intelligen­ce personnel for dubious missions to enforce politicall­y controvers­ial laws.

One soldier said he welcomed the call for a federal investigat­ion, adding that he hopes such scrutiny would help the government develop “clearer… instructio­ns and guidelines” for intelligen­ce operations under state authority.

If the Justice Department were to launch an investigat­ion of Operation Lone Star’s intelligen­ce work, it would be at least the third federal probe of the state-run border mission.

The Texas Tribune and ProPublica reported in July 2022 that the Justice Department’s civil rights division was investigat­ing whether the state’s trespassin­g arrests of migrants violated federal civil rights laws.

The federal government also sued Texas for placing floating barriers in the Rio Grande in July. Mexico’s government claimed the buoys violated treaties that govern the internatio­nal border, and the Justice Department claimed Texas was not authorized to install the barrier. The state had denied that claim, and the lawsuit is in progress.

 ?? VERÓNICA G. CÁRDENAS FOR PROPUBLICA/THE TEXAS TRIBUNE ?? Texas DPS special agents take a group of five undocument­ed migrants from Honduras that were caught in private property as part of Operation Lone Star in Kinney County near Brackettvi­lle, Texas on Nov. 8, 2021. The owner of the property did not sign an affidavit for arrests of undocument­ed migrants to be taking place at their property so the group will be processed by Border Patrol instead.
VERÓNICA G. CÁRDENAS FOR PROPUBLICA/THE TEXAS TRIBUNE Texas DPS special agents take a group of five undocument­ed migrants from Honduras that were caught in private property as part of Operation Lone Star in Kinney County near Brackettvi­lle, Texas on Nov. 8, 2021. The owner of the property did not sign an affidavit for arrests of undocument­ed migrants to be taking place at their property so the group will be processed by Border Patrol instead.

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