Meet the Borderkeepers of Alabama
A vigilante anti-immigrant group called the Borderkeepers of Alabama is sending teams of men clad in camouflage and equipped with thousands of dollars in military weaponry to patrol for undocumented immigrants in Arizona and New Mexico.
The group, which has been operating since at least 2014, claims as many as eight volunteer 鈥渢eams鈥 of "redblooded Americans"聽who, it says, "travel to border towns to work closely with local residents and governmental agencies to limit illegal transient activity."聽It is one of the latest groups in the nativist extremist movement, which peaked in 2010 and has diminished dramatically since then, to engage in armed citizen border patrols.
Although the Borderkeepers says its mission is to 鈥渟ecure our nation鈥檚 border鈥 against undocumented immigrants and drug smugglers, some of its members would like to go far beyond that. In a comment left on a fellow group member鈥檚 post some two years ago, an Irvington, Ala. man who goes by the name 鈥淛on Anderson,鈥 proposed massive violence. 鈥淣eed 240 bravo鈥檚 mounted every 100 yards and shoot everybody who tries to force their way in,鈥 he wrote. The is a machine gun that can fire nearly 16 bullets per second and rip through targets 1,200 yards away.
Another member, identifying himself as Wesley Vance of Montgomery, Ala., said earlier this year that he had travelled some 2,500 miles to join the antigovernment occupiers of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon. Twenty-seven of those occupiers were arrested after a 41-day standoff and now face federal felony conspiracy charges. Vance was apparently not one of them.
鈥淐rying f----- shame the feds are going to investigate the feds,鈥 Vance wrote on March 8, referring to a probe of the apparently justified police killing of Lavoy Finicum, an occupation spokesman who tried to draw a gun on arresting officers. 鈥淭hey murdered lavoy is the bottom line. Shot the man three times in the back. I wish the f----- f------ would come to my house!鈥 A few days earlier, he wrote that 鈥減atriots are so oppressed and scared of the government, they are scared they will die.鈥 In his own case, Vance boasted that he would 鈥淒IE BEFORE I GET ON MY KNEES AND BOW DOWN TO THEM AND LIVE IN FEAR.鈥
A poster who apparently is not a Borderkeepers member responded to Vance鈥檚 comments: 鈥淎ll this country needs are about 100,000 patriots to arm up and start killing off some of these f------- liberals!鈥
鈥淎greed,鈥 Vance replied.
The group has managed to stop at least some border crossers at gunpoint. In an August 2016 Facebook post, Jimmy 鈥淏ull鈥 Bonham, an administrator of the group鈥檚 Facebook page, said that members had managed to detain two out of a group of four drug smugglers. He wrote that the 鈥渂p鈥 鈥 the Border Patrol 鈥 had then taken 鈥140 pounds of dope鈥 that the Borderkeepers had apparently seized from the men. It is unclear how closely the Border Patrol may have worked with the Borderkeepers.
But the group, many of whose members appear to engage in serious military training, may have connections to others in law enforcement. In April, Anderson posted a photo of an application to a police department in southern Alabama. He has since posted photos of himself in uniform and in a squad car, suggesting that he was indeed hired. A few other members of the group鈥檚 Facebook page list connections to law enforcement agencies, but these alleged ties have not been verified.
Early on in the group鈥檚 operations, in 2014, it was working out of a patrol base in Brownsville, Texas, known as 鈥Camp Lone Star.鈥 But in August of that year, camp boss Kevin 鈥淜C鈥 Massey was arrested for being a convicted felon in possession of firearms. The camp closed, and Borderkeepers operations moved to the west.
Locals do not remember Camp Lone Star fondly. The owner of the property told reporters that he regretted loaning it, and said participants 鈥渏eopardized my safety.鈥 Another local resident earlier that the group 鈥渕akes us feel less safe, not more safe,鈥 and added, 鈥淚 just hope they leave soon.鈥
Despite all the military equipment and tough talk, Borderkeepers operations do not always go very professionally. According to posts on the group鈥檚 Facebook page, a member named Brian Keith Henderson 鈥 a Tuscaloosa, Ala., man who 鈥渓iked鈥 Anderson鈥檚 post about turning the border into a kill zone 鈥 mistook a cactus plant for some kind of threat. 鈥淲hat the hell is that?鈥 he reportedly yelled before training聽his assault rifle of the wholly innocent cactus and very nearly blasting it to smithereens.聽
Henderson was kicked out of the group as a result. Henderson, whose writings make clear that he subscribes to the radical antigovernment 鈥sovereign citizens鈥 movement, now leads the Three Percent United Patriots of Alabama. Many members of that group are also members of the Borderkeepers Facebook group.
The apparent leader of the Borderkeepers of Alabama is Ron 鈥淐ornbread鈥 Stone, one of its Facebook page administrators and the primary organizer of its border teams. Other principals are also Facebook moderators, including a woman who identifies herself as Lisa Marie and Bonham. The group鈥檚 Facebook page asks that donations be sent to 鈥淎.D. Vance鈥 of Clanton, Ala.
The nativist extremist movement of which the Borderkeepers is a part began around 2005 and swelled to some 319 groups, many of which used 鈥淢inutemen鈥 as part of their names, by 2010. Since then, it has declined to some 20 groups. That is largely because much of the movement鈥檚 fire was stolen by state legislatures that passed harsh anti-immigrant laws like those of Arizona and Alabama. Donald Trump鈥檚 more recent attacks on immigrants have had a similar effect.
Jerry 鈥淕host鈥 Karl, an Arizona militia leader who leads Borderkeepers operations in Arizona, put it like this to a reporter with WIAT-TV of Birmingham: 鈥淭rump talks about building a wall. Well, we鈥檙e that wall right now.鈥