Texas 2023 - 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HCR78 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 03/09/2023

                            88R8190 TBO-F
 By: Bumgarner H.C.R. No. 78


 CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, The State of Texas and the United States federal
 government are charged with protecting 1,254 miles of land along
 Texas' border with Mexico, a job that has become increasingly
 violent as this state has succumbed to an invasion by foreign drug
 cartels; and
 WHEREAS, These foreign drug cartels bring terror to Texas
 communities by flooding the streets with deadly narcotics, forcing
 women and children into human and sex trafficking, enriching
 themselves on the misery and enslavement of Texans, and butchering
 and murdering anyone who tries to stop them; and
 WHEREAS, State and local law enforcement agencies are forced
 to contend with extensive and dangerous criminal activity resulting
 from, or associated with, foreign drug cartels, thereby putting
 Texas law enforcement officials in danger and draining resources
 away from protecting our communities; and
 WHEREAS, The State of Texas has attempted to address the
 problem by adding hundreds of commissioned law enforcement officers
 to the border, purchasing state-of-the-art helicopters, conducting
 border security surge operations, and paying millions of dollars
 for overtime, training, equipment, and technology for local law
 enforcement; and
 WHEREAS, Law enforcement agencies working together in Texas
 have seized billions of dollars in illegal drugs and hundreds of
 millions in cash, along with thousands of firearms, and weapons,
 all related to the invasion of drug cartels; and
 WHEREAS, Texas has repeatedly asked the federal government to
 send more border security resources to the state, requesting an
 increase in manpower of border patrol agents and the deployment of
 National Guard troops; and
 WHEREAS, Texas prisons house violent offenders that claim
 foreign citizenship, and the state bears the cost of housing and
 prosecuting those offenders; and
 WHEREAS, Texas taxpayers have spent billions compensating
 for the lack of federal resources provided to the state; and
 WHEREAS, The inability of the federal government to develop a
 comprehensive plan that would address this border security problem
 puts an unfair and unreasonable burden on the entire state, but in
 particular on Texas border communities; and
 WHEREAS, Under Article I, Section 10 of the United States
 Constitution, Texas is entitled as a sovereign state of the United
 States of America to protect itself against this current foreign
 drug cartel invasion; this constitutional authority grants the
 State of Texas the power to defend the state when the state has been
 invaded, or is "in such imminent Danger as will not admit of delay";
 and
 WHEREAS, The Governor, in a letter to the President of the
 United States on November 16, 2022, invoked the authority under
 Article I, Section 10, Clause 3 of the U.S. Constitution, to protect
 the State of Texas; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the 88th Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby demand the federal government to immediately declare violent
 foreign drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations under
 Section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. ยง 1189;
 and, be it further
 RESOLVED, That the Texas Legislature hereby find that the
 State of Texas has been invaded by foreign drug cartels and that the
 citizens of this state are in danger of irreparable harm; and, be it
 further
 RESOLVED, That the Texas Legislature hereby encourage all
 applicable state and local resources as needed, to use any and all
 authority under Article I, Section 10 of the United States
 Constitution to repel this violent foreign drug cartel invasion,
 and that such authority should be invoked with the intention of
 utilizing such authority in the most peaceful manner possible
 consistent with bringing this invasion to a conclusion at the
 earliest possible moment.