Lessons From The Ranch Rescue Fiasco

By Juan Mann

09/06/2005

[See also: A Reader Offers Pro Bono Tax Advice To Ranch Rescue Victims]

In the unfolding history of citizen groups keeping watch against the illegal alien invasion on the Mexican border, the undisputed All-American Patriot hall of fame so far includes Jim Gilchrist’s Minuteman Project, Chris Simcox’s Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, and Glenn Spencer’s American Border Patrol … while the border hall of shame remains the sole province of the hapless Ranch Rescue.

Though arguably the first to organize help for private border landowners, Ranch Rescue’s leaders were recently chewed up and spat out by one of the Treason Lobby’s most vicious attack dogs — none other than Morris Dees' Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF).

The New York Times’s Andrew Pollack reported on August 19 all the gory details of how Ranch Rescue founder Jack Foote, along with his sidekick Casey Nethercott — previously convicted of felony assault in California, it turns out — both failed to answer tort claims filed against them by the SPLC, as the result of their botched 2003 "Operation Falcon" in South Texas. [2 Illegal Immigrants Win Arizona Ranch in Court]

When the smoke had cleared, Foote had an outstanding legal judgment over his head, Nethercott wound up in jail on a gun charge (as a convicted felon, he wasn’t supposed to possess one), and Nethercott’s sister lost an Arizona ranch property to the SPLC’s plaintiff illegal aliens.

But the SPLC’s trouncing of Ranch Rescue nevertheless provides a valuable, although extremely costly, case study for all future efforts of border-watchers, both on public and private land. The misadventures of Foote and Nethercott illustrate what NOT to do in running a private border watch. [NOTE: I previously covered Ranch Rescue before its implosion here and here; and noted its happier days with Soldier of Fortune magazine here.]

So for the benefit of all border-watching Minutemen, past, present and future, I offer these lessons learned from Ranch Rescue:







The extraordinary phenomenon of private citizens peacefully defending their country’s border when the federal government failed to do so has been the single greatest victory for immigration reform since California’s Proposition 187 in 1994.

This is a mortal threat to the Treason Lobby. It will respond with unscrupulous viciousness. It can be beaten — but it has to be handled with extreme care.

Godspeed, Minutemen!

Juan Mann is a lawyer and the proprietor of DeportAliens.com.

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