By
Jim Kouri
Posted 1:00 AM Eastern
March 7, 2008
NewsWithViews.com
There
are many police and law enforcement officials who are
concerned with the growing trend of using military-trained
mercenaries to train and work with local police officers in
the United States.
For
example, Kentucky's Lexington Police Department contracted
private Mercenary
Army Blackwater Security International
to provide what's described as homeland security training.
Meanwhile that city's Mayor
Jim Newberry
and its chief of police Anthony Beatty refused free training
provided by the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement federal
program that prepares
police officers to enforce
immigration and border security as part of their duties.
Lexington
is on the nation's list of so-called Sanctuary Cities in which
police officers are prohibited from working with ICE or Border
Patrol agents in the United States. Critics are angry over the
use of local tax dollars to hire Blackwater personnel to train
the police.
But
Lexington isn't the only city using hired guns to help local
police officers. In New Orleans, heavily armed mercenaries
from the Blackwater private security firm, infamous
for their work in Iraq,
are openly patrolling the streets of that beleaguered city.
Some
of the mercenaries were reportedly "deputized" by
the Louisiana governor and were issued gold Louisiana State
law enforcement badges to wear on their chests and Blackwater
photo identification cards to be worn on their arms.
While
they are working in Louisiana, Blackwater officials say they
are on contract with the Department of Homeland Security and
have been given the authority to use lethal force if
necessary. Some of the mercenaries assigned to patrol the
streets of New Orleans recently returned from Iraq, where they
provided personal security details for the former head of the
US occupation, L. Paul Bremer, and the former US ambassador to
Iraq, John Negroponte.
While
Blackwater mercenaries are some of the most feared
professionals in the world, as military personnel they are
accustomed to operating without worry of legal consequences,
as are local police officers. This situation is what's
disturbing both cops and civilians.
"It
amazes me how politicians are so ready to use professional
soldiers in a law enforcement capacity. It just doesn't sit
right with a lot of cops," said New York Police Officer
Edna Aguayo, who received training in homeland security
operations.
"We
should be using experienced cops and experts in law
enforcement as training officers, not former soldiers and
mercenaries," she said.
Blackwater,
which is based in North Carolina, is one of the leading
private security companies providing security personnel in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Along with other companies such as
Wackenhut Security, Inc., it has several lucrative US
government contracts and provides security services --
including bodyguard work -- for many senior US diplomats,
foreign dignitaries and corporations.
The
company received international exposure when several of its
security officers were captured, tortured
and killed in Fallujah.
Two of their charred bodies were hung from a bridge in March
2004.
"While
many Liberals have decried the use of Blackwater in Iraq and
Afghanistan, these same Liberals don't seem to mind the use of
Blackwater mercenaries within the United States," said
conservative political strategist Mike Baker.
"Conservatives
are the ones who appear upset over using contracted
mercenaries to train cops and perform law enforcement
functions. It's a way for politicians to bypass the Posse
Comitatus Act that prohibits the military from performing
police operations within the US," said Baker.
Some
retired police officers believe that private security
companies are going to be used to go after Constitutionalists
who will not willingly submit to microchip implants and/or the
satanic globalization that is currently unfolding.
Although
many politicos are saying Blackwater is not performing police
functions, their own statement seems to imply that they will
provide whatever services a government -- federal, state and
local -- desires.
"Man-made
and natural disasters require an immediate robust response.
Blackwater Worldwide’s extensive training facility and
staff of former military and law enforcement professionals can
provide the needed training and operational expertise to
prepare security teams to effectively support state and
federal emergency response units," according to
Blackwater's mission statement.
"I'm
troubled by the use of military personnel -- whether they be
US soldiers or private mercenaries -- performing a police or
law enforcement function. While they may be experts in
fighting wars, they are not constrained by the US Constitution
as to how they operate as cops," said former NYPD
detective and owner of FLT Security Services, Sidney Francis.
"Soldiers
are soldiers and cops are cops. What's next? Using smart bombs
to crash into drug dens?" he asked.
Since
its inception in 2003, the US Department of Homeland Security
has faced significant challenges related to recruiting,
retaining, and managing its workforce of over 170,000
employees.
Recently,
the US Congress requested the Government Accountability Office
to analyze DHS's attrition, efforts to recruit and retain
staff, use of external employees such as officers from private
companies, and compliance with certain provisions of the
Vacancies Reform Act, which requires agencies to report to
Congress and the Comptroller General vacancies in certain
presidentially-appointed positions requiring Senate
confirmation.
While
DHS's overall attrition rate for permanent employees
(excluding those in the Senior Executive Service and
presidential appointments) declined from 8.4 percent in 2005
to 7.1 percent in 2006.
These
rates, which were still above the roughly 4 percent average
rate for all cabinet-level agencies, were affected by high
levels of attrition (about 14-17 percent) among transportation
security officers at DHS's Transportation Security
Administration. With the security officers excluded, DHS's
attrition rate was 3.3 percent.

DHS
implemented agreements under the Intergovernmental Personnel
Act, allowing nonfederal employees -- private contractors --
to be temporarily assigned to a federal agency to meet mission
needs.