Stock-in-Trade
Last Act of Defiance
the River
By Stephen L. Wilmeth
El Paso is the final Wild, Wild, West City.
~
Shawn Crahan
There is a best place to start trying to
describe America’s most unique wild, wild west city.
It would be
a location, and that would be where the Rio Grande River flows between the
Franklin Mountains on the north and the Sierra de Juarez on the south. It’s
recorded in history. In a ceremony there on April 30, 1598, a representative of
Spain, Juan de Onate, showed his brass and had his priest bless a ceremony
where he took ceremonial possession of the entire territory drained by the river
and brought Spanish civilization to El Paso del Norte, the Pass of the North.
With
several thousand head of livestock and a fair representation of a community of
people, he crossed the river and continued north to what is now Santa Fe.
Before his life was done, he introduced the Spanish language to del Norte, he established
Catholicism to a great swath of the upper reaches of the drainage, he
introduced farming and mining equipment to an endemic population, he brought
rudimentary health care (as the world knew at that time), he established Santa
Fe with its a major trade route from Mexico City, and, most importantly, he
brought the horse to del Norte.
Now, he
isn’t popular among the progressives, the critical race theorists, and
reinventors of history, but he had to be one tough little son-of-a-gun. In
fact, he ought to be nominated as El Paso’s first written history, tough
son-of-a-gun. He, of course, wasn’t the last.
El Paso
became a crossroads.
A second clue
is populated with headstones. Concordia Cemetery on the north side of the river
became a permanent resting place of citizenry that included town fathers,
business and professional people, and a litany of tough folks including a boxcar
of gun slingers, a number of lawmen and a plethora of practiced red-light
blossoms. Graves started to be dug there in 1856 and it is purported a good
number of the 65,000 or so deceased who reside there continue to vote a straight
democratic ticket to this very day.
El Paso
remains eclectic.
The next feature in this profile must
be that grand Trost designed structure, the hotel El Camino Real, or as it is
now known, El Paso del Norte. It was the place where a lively crowd gathered on
the 10th floor deck to drink and watch the battle of Juarez rage
just across the river. It proved to be too revealing and troops from both sides
of the conflict took pot shots at the revelers. Several were hit! Remodeling
notwithstanding the grand old place is a sophisticated walk back in time. Stroll
into the Tiffany domed bar and you enter the once inner sanctum of some the
most intense cow buying in American history. The emphasis, of course, was
crossing Mexican cattle. Today, cattle are crossed elsewhere so only the ghosts
of the El Paso buyers haunt the place.
It is a reminder El Paso was once a
hat town.
It remains
a boot town at least if manufactured boots are fair game to claim such. It
could once claim to be the world capital of cowboy boots. In its heyday, the
immensity of the output of Tony Lama, Lucchese, and scores of privately owned
custom shops made the town ground zero for boot arbitrage.
The Sole of El Paso was leather
bound, but it remains a best place to seek the creation of world class handmade
boots.
The final feature of this
abbreviated search for old El Paso is the Star on the Mountain located
on the south side of the Franklins. First lit in 1940, the star is lighted
throughout the year for special occasions. Thousands of visitors flying into El
Paso after dark will remember being greeted out the left side of the plane by
that star on the toe of that ridgeline. What a proper greeting upon entering
Texas. What can be more Texas than that lone star, and, yet many will argue, El
Paso doesn’t fit Texas. The relationship is incongruous.
After all, the River runs through
it, and its geographic relationship with lands northward and southward
transcends everything.
Stock-in-Trade
Whereas the
Silk Road was a series of trade routes, the juncture of north, south, east, and
west trade routes at del Norte collided at El Paso.
It was one
of the most natural land-based trade intersections in the world, and its remote
location defied much oversite and regulatory interference. Trade goods,
Stock-in-Trade, became as numerous and wide ranging as the characters leading
the burros or driving the Jeeps. Illicit goods were a major portion of those
offerings.
If the
metrics are reviewed, illegal goods and services always had impact on the local
population. There is extensive data that suggests fully one third of the city’s
residents were involved in illegal trade in the ‘70s. Where that is today is
not so much defined. What we do know is that El Paso was a major point of
genesis in the modern drug trade.
Obviously, it remains a problem
with the whole world now being aware, but beyond everything else, the River
was centrally complicit.
Last Act of Defiance
Before the Nixon administration,
the drug business across the entirety of the international border was largely unofficiated,
and comprised of gaggles of crooks and thugs. Anchoring the western end of the (then)
trade routes was El Paso with its natural location and historic personality.
Lots of folks were involved
including rich high school kids who would drive their Jeeps across the Rio
Grande and night to hook up with their suppliers. It was a universe of
small-time operators, but Nixon changed that.
Needing a political boost, he made
a big deal out of bringing the arm of the federal government into the skirmish.
He was going to be the great fixer. Before long, however, the competing federal
agencies assigned to the push were mired in the Washington politics of
attention, funding battles, and ensconced bureaucracies. The competing agency
fights were epic. There was the Bureau of Narcotics, the United States Customs
and Border Protection, the Office of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, the Office
of Drug Abuse and Law Enforcement, and ultimately the Department of Drug
Enforcement (headquartered in El Paso).
A theorem is in order.
The arrival of the strong arm of
Washington was largely successful in shutting down the small-time gaggles, but
the absence of real commitment of shutting down the greater trade was witnessed
by the emergence of much larger and more sophisticated operations to move the
product across the River into the insatiable and cultured American
demand for drugs.
The immensity of the federal
government was matched with the emergence of the Mexican cartels.
The book, Dirty Dealing, is
an interesting synopsis of this story. The El Paso Chagra family is the
subject, but the impact and growth of general and perhaps expected agency tactics
and stretch explains a great deal about current day events. Throughout the
early drug wars, the development of political posturing with personal vendettas
was widespread.
The Chagra brothers, particularly
Lee and Joe, decried foul the prosecutorial (and investigatory)
misconduct of federal agents who became obsessed in destroying the family. Agent
provocateurs and the weaponization of the justice system were terms
applied by them 50 years ago in the same context being manifested today.
The fact emerges that the agencies
themselves became expert in multiplying conspiracies.
Not for a moment suggesting the
brothers were innocent victims, a poignant fact emerges that was touched upon
but not expanded in the book. There was an epiphany when Lee (at one time
considered perhaps among the four best defense attorneys in the nation) decided
he was not going to sit tight and allow agency gross misconduct to destroy him.
There becomes that point when principle must be held inviolate. An interesting graphic
emerged to explain his defiance toward the tyrannical actions of the federal
agencies.
Soon, there was an outcome, but which
character was the citizen and which character was the force of government was revealed
to be … reversed.
Stephen
L. Wilmeth is a rancher in southern New Mexico. “Add up all the money spent by
this government on drugs and border control since this time, and consider the
implications of Washington politics.”

2 comments:
Great read Stephen, reminds me of Woody Harrelson's father's involvement with the Chagra's. Hope the blessing of the rain has reached your ranch. Jim in AZ
The conquistador extolled by the author is also known for slaughtering 800 to 1,000 people of the Acoma Pueblo and for mutilating, then enslaving, about 500 survivors. Now we know what kind of person Wilmeth admires.
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