Chief Christopher L. Elg of the West Monroe (La.) Police Department summed up a lot of your responses when he wrote: "Your January 2009 cover photo showed an officer in tactical gear with a rifle standing ready to respond to any threat. I believe as a nation we need to be deploying military troops to the border to do just the same."
Chief Elg's idea has been voiced by other government officials, including Texas Gov. Rick Perry. About the same time as Elg was writing his comment, Perry told reporters in El Paso that he was asking for 1,000 troops to help guard the border. "I don't care if they are military, National Guard, or customs agents," Perry said.
Reader David Moore, who is serving with the U.S. Army in South Korea, sent a comprehensive list of ideas, including tougher immigration enforcement, more witness protection, and more interagency cooperation.
"We need to create multi-agency task forces and target operatives with consistency and continual follow-up. This can't just be a one-time takedown," Moore writes. "Think of it like a light focused on cockroaches. When the light is on, they stay in hiding. As soon as the light is turned off again, they are back at it. So far, what has worked best is to target specific behaviors, locations, or individuals."
Jesse Carrillo of the Austin Police Department had these comments: "The market that these cartels are exploiting is approximately $25 billion per year, so the economics of supply and demand are definitely at work here. Ruling out legalization and a military incursion, I think tasking the CIA to keep these groups off balance would be a viable option."