AP/ August 16, 2010, 9:10 AM

Border Patrol Suicide Rate Spikes

After a bad day on the job as a Border Patrol agent, Eddie DeLaCruz went home and began discussing with his wife how to celebrate her upcoming birthday. Then he casually pressed his government-issued handgun under his chin and pulled the trigger.

"It was the ugliest sound I ever heard in my life," his widow, Toni DeLaCruz, recalled of that day last November. "He just collapsed."

A month later, one of DeLaCruz's colleagues at the Fort Hancock border post put a bullet through his head, too.

Suicides including these have set off alarm bells throughout the agency responsible for policing the nation's borders. After nearly four years without a single suicide in their ranks, border agents are killing themselves in greater numbers. Records obtained by The Associated Press show that at least 15 agents have taken their own lives since February 2008 - the largest spike in suicides the agency has seen in at least 20 years.

It's unclear exactly why the men ended their lives. Few of them left notes. And the Border Patrol seems somewhat at odds with itself over the issue.

Federal officials insist the deaths have nothing to do with the agency, which has doubled in size since 2004, or the increasingly volatile U.S.-Mexico border. But administrators have quietly undertaken urgent suicide-prevention initiatives, including special training for supervisors, videos about warning signs and educational programs for 22,000 agents nationwide.

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"It's a microcosm of life," said Christine Gaugler, head of human resources for Customs and Border Protection, the agency that oversees the Border Patrol. "There's no uptick. It has nothing to do with our hiring. We are just responding to the suicides that have occurred."

The agency declined to provide details of the suicides and would only confirm the number of deaths since 2008. But the AP uncovered the names, locations and dates of the suicides by reviewing public records, including those obtained from medical examiners through the Freedom of Information Act, and speaking with people close to the Border Patrol.

Sources close to the Border Patrol also provided the training video and information about what federal officials have done to address the suicides.

The 17-minute video made earlier this year is part tribute to the dead and part cautionary tale. It implores agents battling depression or stress to ask for help - a candid suggestion for an agency that once forbid agents from appearing in uniform at the funerals of colleagues who killed themselves.

The video was made by the agency's El Paso sector following at least four suicides among its agents, and it has been embraced by other sectors. In the video, El Paso agent Edmundo Puga Jr. describes getting a call about a suicide.

"At first I get upset, thinking, 'Not another one,"' Puga said. "Or, 'Here we go again."'

All but two of the recent deaths involved agents stationed in Texas, California or Arizona.

In interviews with the AP, Border Patrol officials and families of the dead agents pointed to both professional and personal reasons.

The job, which starts at about $37,000 a year, has changed dramatically since the hiring surge began. Two years ago, an agent at a busy border station might have processed 150 illegal crossers a day.

But stepped-up border security - including 600 miles of fence and an even larger "virtual" fence that is monitored online - have reduced the number of illegal crossings, as has the economic hardship of the recession.

The result is a job that went from thrilling to downright boring. Agents often spent 12-hour shifts sitting alone in Jeeps and pickups keeping watch for illegal immigrants.

"Now an agent may start his shift and sit in one position for eight hours and monitor traffic and do their work," said psychologist Kenneth Middleton, clinical director of the Border Patrol's peer-support program. "Now they've got a whole lot of time to think about other things going on in their life."

Despite the boredom, the potential for danger is constant, especially in places where the border has been wracked by a bloody drug war in Mexico.

Agents face hostility from many of the people they encounter in the desert. In June, a Border Patrol agent in El Paso shot and killed a 15-year-old Mexican boy in the dry bed of the Rio Grande. Authorities said the teen and others were throwing rocks at the agent from the Mexican side while he was trying to arrest illegal immigrants. The incident resulted in a tense standoff between armed federal agents from both Mexico and the U.S.

The story rang familiar to Mark Monsivais, whose daughter, Julia, committed suicide in July 2009. He said people hurled chunks of concrete at the 24-year-old agent during her three years in Yuma, Ariz.

Other times, he said, his daughter complained of lagging backup patrolling a dangerous and barren stretch known as "Devil's Corridor." She worried about running into drug traffickers but more often stumbled on dehydrated migrants collapsed in the sand, their legs twitching.

"It's transparent to us, the people that are here, that the job is a definite factor. They're under an enormous amount of stress," Monsivais said.

"If they do something wrong," he added, "it's an international incident."

The job was so dangerous the family has doubts about whether it was suicide. Relatives wonder whether Julia could have been killed by shady characters she met on patrol.

Suicide rates are generally higher among law enforcement than the general population, but the Border Patrol's recent troubles put the agency even above those numbers.

The rate of suicides nationally is about 12 per 100,000 people, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Law enforcement rates are about 20 per 100,000, while the Border Patrol's pace has the agency hovering in the upper 20s to low 30s per 100,000.

Some families said working for the Border Patrol had no bearing on their loved one's suicide. The parents of 29-year-old Charles Glenn Becker, who killed himself in May 2009 in Comstock, Texas, said he was up for promotion.

But Juan Tellez, the guard who committed suicide a month after DeLaCruz last fall, didn't think a promotion was in his future. His girlfriend, Christina Vasquez, said Tellez constantly butted heads with his supervisor over schedules and assignments. Tellez desperately wanted a transfer and turned to Fort Hancock's union steward for help - agent Eddie DeLaCruz.

DeLaCruz's suicide put her boyfriend over the edge. A month later, he stumbled home drunk, grabbed the gun from his holster and blew a hole as large as a coffee mug through his head.

Vasquez, four months' pregnant with their first child, was in the room.

"He loved being in Border Patrol," she said. "But toward the end when he was in that shift, he would call me for two hours and just go on and ramble."

Vasquez and DeLaCruz's widow agreed that the rush to double the agency's ranks caused it to overlook morale.

"The agency does run these agents to the fullest," Vasquez said. "'Protect, protect' as if they're robots and they're not. They're human beings."
© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
38 Comments Add a Comment
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ouchitatom says:
I said it yesterday and i will continue to say it until it becomes law and the only solution.UNTIL DEADLY FORCE AUTHORIZED IS PUT INTO EFFECT THE BORDER BREACH WILL REMAIN A UNSOLVED PROBLEM. I LONG FOR THE DAY WHEN I CAN SAY "I TOLD YOU SO"
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Ozymandias2009 says:
It is a thankless job being a border patrol agent in the U.S. We support the rights of illegals to enter our nation, commit crimes, lower the living wage for thousands as they utilize services AND do nothing. At the same time we denigrate our men in uniform, FAIL to support them with adequate manpower and resources, and prosecute them regularly when they fail to meet a standard that Washington politicians could never accept themselves.
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bradkt1 says:
When you perform a dangerous and thankless task that no one seems to care about, that others are actively subverting and that the government...which has the power to fix the problem...is so busy playing politics that it has apparently lost sight of the fundamental difference between right and wrong and has become paralyzed...it is very easy to become depressed and retreat psychologically into an isolated shell.

I suspect that this can similarly affect soldiers in an unpopular war in a distant land when politicians keep you there simply because they don't want to be accused of being "soft"...in other words, for purely partisan domestic political reasons.

Under those circumstances, suicide...once unthinkable...becomes an option for ending what has otherwise become a miserable existence once it becomes unbearable.
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callipygian8 says:
I think people are getting away from the real issue. The problem is not necessarily the job conditions for border patrol. The problem is that they have guns in their possession. And, the fact is that if a person has access to a gun, any thoughts of murder or suicide are easier to carry out on impulse. It only takes a second to fire a gun, which given the gunholder almost no time to reconsider the impulse.

My father shot and killed himself. I know he would probably still be alive today if he did not have easy access to a gun.
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raydernation says:
I agree with goldngrl - this is a sad story, regardless of whatever. Those two that killed themselves in front of their girlfriends, are especially sad. Especially the one where the girlfriend was pregnant.

It makes you think - everytime l see an interview with a athlete or actor or some other high profile person, all these people say the same thing. They can't beleive they get paid the money they do for doing something they love, and that comes second nature to them.

My point - you have to encourage these kids to follow their dream, if they fall down, or hit a wall, show them how to get up brush they self off and keep going. Don't give up. Don't chase the money, but that what you love doing, cause if its something you love doing, the money will come naturally.

There's no other way. Like that 16 year old girl from out here near L. A. who attempted to sail around the World solo. Her parents got all kinds of flack for letting the girl do that. But like her father said he was confident in his daughter, and he knew this is what she wanted to do. I would have done it to, that had to have been and adventure of a lifetime. You have to go for it. There's milllions of people out there in jobs like those agents that can be very boring and monotonous, but, they do it because of the money.

I got co-workers that work with me that drive up to 60 miles each way every day from the small cities surrounding L.A. to come to work, who deal with sitting in traffic for long stretches at a time, you can see it in them they look like zombies by the time they get to work. They have nice homes but,at what price, its not worth it. Thats why l never knock successful people or celebrities. Follow your dream, its never to late.
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jnostromo says:
End the suicides by closing the border and using the military to eliminate the drug cartel invaion force and let it be know that anyone attempting to cross will be sent back and use deadly force if necessary...If a company has paid for a truck to carry illegals in, arrest the officials of the company and charge them with violation of federal law and send them to gitmo for some r and r
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goldngrl says:
Sad story
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tsigili says:
Perhaps the reason is, the drug cartels and "coyotes" have been doing business with them, and they are afraid they are going to be discovered, leading a double life, on the border, serving more than one master.
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BetsyRoss76 says:
I love the inaccuracies in this report as a former 45 year Arizonan with still friends and family there. There has been little increased fencing and monitoring - in fact, Bush granted visa waivers to over 40 countries his last 90 days in office which has reduced screenings prior to arrivals in this country. The fence has not been even a quarter completed, and those vehicle spikes are a joke. The virtual fence? Can be turned off at the flip of a switch and just wonder how this actually works. Most likely, these agents continue to be disempowered in truly doing their jobs, which would result in increasing dissatisfaction and frustration if they reason they signed up was to truly secure our borders.

What spins once again on truly what is going on at those southern borders. These guys as with the National Guard ala Ramos and Compean, are being hired for political reasons, not to do a job at all.
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jxknowles says:
It's unfortunate that the U.S. cannot have an intelligent conversation as it relates to border security, immigration and undocumented workers with Mexico. Unfortunately the crooks and panderers in the Arizona Government, including McCain and Kyl, are using this issue for their own profit and political gain.

The border states were part of Mexico longer than they have been part of the U.S. The people of Mexico settled Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and Southern California long before U.S. settlers. People traveled freely across the border for hundreds of years, so it's not unusual that it still occurs today.

Violent crime is down and deportations have increased by 10% since 2008. The only serious breach of recent note are the three caucasians who broke out of the privately-run Arizona jail and murdered, then terrorized vacationers in states to the north. The women was caught smuggling heroine into the jails four times and was working as a mule for a white supremacist group behind bars. What does that big-mouth Sheriff have to say about the drug situation in his Arizona jails among the white inmates? Sounds like Arizona needs a new Sheriff.
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