Why Do Livestock Inspector in New Mexico Need Armed Escorts?

For decades they didn’t need to be protected by armed escorts, now they are suddenly assigned them. What’s going on in New Mexico?

When inspectors in New Mexico begin surveying 32 livestock scales along the increasingly dangerous Mexican border later this month, they’ll have armed escorts at their sides.

It will mark the first time armed deputies will travel with New Mexico Department of Agriculture inspectors, who certify the scales used to weigh livestock, Luna County Sheriff Raymond Cobos said.

“These scales that the ranchers use to ship their cattle are in isolated areas,” Cobos told FoxNews.com. “And the administration decided since those inspectors and personnel are not armed, they wanted to be able to concentrate on their work without worrying about their security.”

Cobos said that beginning on July 26, deputies will accompany inspectors to the scales in a corridor that stretches southwest from Interstate 10 at Las Cruces to the New Mexico-Arizona border, along Luna, Hidalgo and Grant counties.

“It also helps the deputies become more familiar with the ranches and their particular layouts,” Cobos said. “It’s a benefit to all of us.”

It’s an interesting article and you should give it a quick read if you haven’t already, but the subtext here seems to be that there is no guarantee of law and order anywhere near the Mexican border. The destabilized Mexican state is leaking it’s chaos over the border and we are basically powerless to stop it.