Chris Simcox was a failed actor. Then he discovered the anti-immigration movement, and soon he was a movie star.
Chris Simcox was a failed actor. Then he discovered the anti-immigration movement, and soon he was a movie star.
A prominent anti-immigration leader has secretly urged the nation's largest neo-Nazi group to launch a campaign of violence and harassment against undocumented workers in the United States.
In Arizona, a county prosecutor opens the door for vigilante justice using a mistaken legal analysis of 'citizen's arrests.'
Chris Simcox, co-founder of the vigilante Minutemen, describes himself in heroic terms. But some of those once close to him tell a different, and frightening, story.
Lou Dobbs' daily 'Broken Borders' CNN segment has focused on immigration for years. But there's one issue Dobbs just won't take on.
Most Americans are angry about illegal immigration. For radio hosts, that means vilification is a no-lose path to popularity.
Around the country, an anti-immigration movement is spreading like wildfire. An array of activists is fanning the flames.
Some 15% of the Sierra Club's members voted to reject a ballot initiative aimed to move the Club from a position of neutrality to one that favors clamping down the borders.
On the tenth day of the Minuteman Project, a vigilante effort to shut down human traffic across the Arizona-Mexico border that began on April Fools Day, a man named Patrick Haab was arrested at an Arizona rest stop where officials found him holding seven undocumented immigrants at gunpoint.
Armas de fuego de gran potencia, maniobras de milicias y racismo en el proyecto Minuteman.