Muslim cleric arrested near San Diego

Police discovered Said Jaziri, a Muslim cleric deported from Canada three years ago, in the trunk of a bmw near San Diego on January 11 while sneaking into the United States. The incident demonstrates the ease at which dangerous people and even terrorists could enter the border from Mexico.

Jaziri does not appear to be a terrorist. However, he supports sharia law, and led protests against the Danish cartoons of Mohammed in 2006.

He was imprisoned for eight months in France after he and a group of other fundamentalists attacked a Muslim they blamed for shutting down a prayer room.

He was deported from Canada three years ago because he did not disclose this conviction when he applied for refugee status in Canada.

Court documents say Jaziri crossed the border fence on foot with a Mexican guide. If it is this easy for someone like Jaziri to get in, how many other more dangerous illegals are flowing into America?

Hezbollah already has well-known connections to the drug cartels. U.S. Republican National Committee Representative Sue Myrick said last year that Hezbollah was sharing its tunnel-building expertise in exchange for cash and forged documents from the cartels.

Hezbollah uses “the same criminal weapons smugglers, document traffickers and transportation experts as the drug cartels,” said Michael Braun, former assistant administrator and chief of operations at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in 2009.

“They’ll leverage those relationships to their benefit, to smuggle contraband and humans into the U.S.; in fact, they already are,” he said.