Shadow Wolves
An all-Indian Customs unit possibly the world's best trackers uses time-honored techniques to pursue smugglers along a remote stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border
- By Mark Wheeler
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2003, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
After several minutes, the helicopter disappears behind the ridge. We learn by radio that the two men have been caught and taken to headquarters in Sells.
“These guys were pretty beat,” says David Gasho, an officer on board. “They didn’t even try to hide.” The helicopter had landed on a flat patch of desert. The Customs officers inside the helicopter, Gasho relates, had simply waited for the two men to reach them. They had offered no resistance.
The men claim not to be smugglers, mere UDAs who got scared and ran when they saw the officers. But interrogated separately back in Sells an hour later, they quickly confess. The men, ages 24 and 22, say they’d been hired right off the street in Caborca, Mexico, some 60 miles south of the border, and had jumped at the chance to make $800 in cash for a few days’ work—a bonanza considering that top pay at the local asparagus plant is $20 a week.
Because the men confessed, says an O’odham police department sergeant, they’ll be prosecuted at the federal court in Tucson. As first-time offenders, they’ll probably get ten months to one and a half years in a federal prison. Then they’ll be sent back to Mexico. Chances are high that the seven smugglers who got away, including Bear Claw, will be back humping bales of marijuana in a matter of days.
Nez and Scout look beat, but they are smiling. It has been a good day, better than most. The officers can go for weeks at a time without making an arrest. Rene Andreu, the former resident agent in charge at the Sells office, speculates that Shadow Wolves capture no more than 10 percent of the drugs coming into the reservation. “In recent years, we’ve averaged about 60,000 pounds a year,” says Andreu. They all agree that they need greater resources.
It will take more than a few reinforcements, however, to have any real effect on drug traffic. The Shadow Wolves know this dismal fact all too well. Still, without their dedication and that of other Customs officials, smugglers would be bringing drugs over the border, as one officer put it, “in caravans.”
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (4)
My mother's husband is a full-blooded American Indian from the Tohono O’odham Nation. He is the coolest, strongest, most compassionate, caring, genuine, honest, upstanding, no-nonsense, courageous man that I've ever known. He brings honor to our family, his people and his country. He is a role model for me and all who know him. When I first saw the Shadow Wolves, my eyes lit up. They were just like him. They even look like him, because they are his people. I had never known anyone else like him - until I saw the Shadow Wolves. We live in Pennsylvania, so we are far away from his home. But I know his people must be proud of him. I think the Tohono O'odham people must have some wisdom that many do not have or have not learned yet. I hope to learn from him to be a better man for my family and for my people and my country and for God. I am grateful for this man who has brought blessings to our family and I am humbled before a people who's history and courage, dignity and wisdom gives us all strength. The Shadow Wolves can teach us more than just how to cut sign. Their lesson is their courage and their honor. Their humility does not seem to make them boastful, even further proof of their strength of character. Just as the broken twig or cotton fiber or rustled dirt can show the path, it us up to us to see the signs and learn the lessons in life, so that we follow the right path. I am glad that I have this man beside me on my journey. I am glad that we have the Shadow Wolves to protect our country, and their people to bring their courage and strength and wisdom to our world.
Posted by Scott on July 16,2012 | 08:51 PM
Thank you for your work and dedication making all our nations safer for children sparing them from the horrors of street gangs and illicit drugs.
Posted by JT Ready on October 16,2011 | 11:58 PM
Those that are trained by he Shadow Wolves ...may leave the group from time to time. What would the typical job for someone with this type training? Is there anyone I might contact concerning individuals with this back ground. I'm interested in using information of this nature in a book that I am now developing.
www.chucksisson.com
Posted by Chuck Sisson on August 18,2010 | 04:32 AM
I am from Oklahoma, I am of the Choctaw Nation, I had moved to South Dakota about 7yrs now I had seen the Border Warriors on T.V. National Geographics Channel, it caught my attention I am currently going to school to get my Assc. Degree in Criminal Justice Specializing in Homeland Security will be done in 2010 I think. I was wonder how would I get in contact with the elite team I would love to relocate and become a part of History! need help and could use the training I also love to hunt.
Posted by Garrick Watson on September 21,2009 | 04:00 AM