This story highlights the insanity of the "Show Me Your Papers" law and the emotional cruelty it imposes of innocent citizens. This is what happens when you cast a net only designed to catch Latinos. Maybe the Arizona police and Border Patrol should be required cast an indiscriminate net, and stop everybody they see, all day, and do nothing else but harass innocent people. If other innocent people were caught in this web of bigotry, then maybe they would get their legislators to change the law.
Read it and weep:
THURSDAY, JUL 5, 2012 06:14 PM EDT
"It's not like I'm a gangbanger who was going to run away," Castro tells Salon.(Credit: AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
Not first time Arizona governor stopped
EXCLUSIVE: Ex-Ariz. Gov. Castro tells Salon he wasn't shocked when stopped recently: It's happened twice before

What started as a “ridiculous” Border Patrol incident along Interstate 19 in southern Arizona may be spiraling into a full-scale public relations debacle for a border security gone awry. Nearly three weeks after former Arizona Gov. Raúl Castro triggered a checkpoint’s radiation security system on June 12, the story of the 96-year-old’s brief but disturbing detainment in the brutal Sonoran Desert heat for more than a half-hour has spread from a local newspaper commentary to national news.
But there’s more: This was the third time such an incident has happened to Castro, who was elected in 1974 as the first (and only) Mexican American governor of Arizona.
“I’ve worked on immigration matters all of my life, as an ambassador, a governor and on the border,” Castro told me in a phone interview from his home in Nogales, Ariz. “But this was really bad judgment.”
An outspoken opponent to Arizona’s controversial SB 1070 “papers please” law, Castro recalled the other two times he had to fend off stumbling Border Patrol efforts.
Nearly half century ago, working on the front fence of his Tucson horse farm in his work clothes, Castro was stopped by a passing Border Patrol car. The agents asked if he had his work card. Castro said no. When they asked whom he worked for, Castro referred to “the señorita inside.” The agents nearly arrested Castro until he showed them the sign by his farm entrance: “Judge Castro.” A former Pima County prosecutor, Castro had become the first Latino Superior Court justice in the state in the 1960s.
A decade later, the Border Patrol struck again.
“I once had a home in San Diego,” Castro said. “One day my daughter and I returned and were stopped by Border Patrol. ‘Hey, where were you born? I wasn’t about to lie. I was born in Mexico, I said. The guard starts questioning me. ‘What about that young lady?’ She was born in Japan, I said, during the Korean War. He thought we were being smart. He didn’t want to let us go. In the meantime, someone came by and recognized me. Governor, how are you?”
CONTINUE READING
Jeff Biggers's next book, "State Out of the Union: Arizona and the Final Showdown Over the American Dream" (Nation Books) is due out in September.MORE JEFF BIGGERS.
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