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Wed, Jan 26, 2005

Border Woes: Illegal Aliens Arrested Upon Landing In C172

But DHS Says They're Not Terrorists

Four Chinese citizens and their Mexican pilot -- all thought to have been trying to enter the US illegally -- were arrested Monday night after their Cessna 172 was forced to land at Stinson Field, near San Antonio, TX, by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.

But after being thoroughly checked out, they're not terrorists, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Instead, they were just five of the thousands of people who try to sneak across the border every year, officials said.

"We do not believe and all indications from all the queries we have run through our joint task force agents, indicate that this is not connected to the Chinese involvement in the alerts in Boston," Alonzo R. Pena, Special Agent in Charge of the Office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told WOAI-AM Tuesday.

The Cessna 172P is registered to Hameed Afzal of Dover, DE. WOAI reports Afzal runs Alpha Tango Flying Service, which is based in San Antonio. He told the radio station that he had rented the aircraft to the same Mexican pilot more than once.

The case was especially alarming after news reports last week cited threats to plant a radiological, or "dirty" bomb in the Boston, MA, area -- a plot that was said to involve several Chinese citizens. That forced Boston's mayor and the governor of Massachusetts to forego last week's inaugural festivities in Washington and rush back home to coordinate a response to the information, which came in the form of a tip.

"I think they had specific names," Pena told WOAI radio. "They have been completely cross referenced and cross checked, and we do not think its the same people, Boston does not think it's the same people."

Instead, Pena told the radio station that the four Chinese citizens paid the pilot between $40,000 and $100,000 each for a chance to enter the US. But the aircraft was tracked from the time it crossed the border, he said. A flight was sent to intercept the Cessna, but the pilot landed on his own at Stinson before he could be confronted in the air.

The four Chinese citizens will be sent back to their homeland, Pena said. But the unidentified Mexican at the controls of the aircraft will remain in the US for the time being, where he'll face charges of immigration smuggling.

FMI: www.ice.gov

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