Inside Border Patrol’s first fentanyl-sniffing K-9 unit

(NewsNation) — Man’s best friend is joining America’s fight against the deadliest drug the nation has ever seen.

For the first time ever, Border Patrol K-9s are being trained to detect fentanyl. An academy in El Paso, Texas, is currently teaching 62 K-9s to find fentanyl and other hard narcotics, like meth and heroin.

These illicit drugs are coming in between the nation’s ports of entry, making Border Patrol and their K-9 partners essentially the last line of defense in detecting illicit drugs at checkpoints.

Jaime Lopez, a supervisory Border Patrol agent, says there is zero room for error when lives are on the line.

“It could be somebody’s kids. It could be somebody’s husband, wife, brother, sister, uncle. In order for us to do our job here and train these dogs to the standard that we need, we’re affecting the nation as far as a whole,” Lopez said. “All this that we do is not for nothing.”

Director of the BPK9 Academy Stephen Crump told NewsNation that expanding the dogs’ abilities is the best way to contribute to the nation’s safety.

“The K-9 community for the United States Border Patrol has been the best of the best for 30-something years, and now we’re even adding on to that,”  Crump said.

The agency plans to up its workforce in the next fiscal year to more than 300 K-9s — more than double the 144 dogs in 2016 to 2020.

The K-9s are trained to not only detect drugs that are being concealed but people who are being smuggled into the U.S.

“You’re going to go up against the best-of-the-best smugglers,” Lopez said.

It’s all about the partnership with the dog and its handler — the reward is such a huge part, so when the pup does its job, the K-9 is rewarded as the good boy or good girl it is.

Currently they have 900 teams deployed to the field, and Lopez told NewsNation they are looking to improve the numbers to over 1,000 by next fiscal year. 

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Mike Johnson slams brakes on key vote amid GOP rebellion over warrantless spying



With just a month until a key Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act spying power expires, US House Speaker Mike Johnson was planning to try to push through reauthorization legislation next week, but the Louisiana Republican leader is now reportedly delaying the vote while “still dealing with a dozen or so Republican members who want reforms.”

Privacy advocates and lawmakers across the political spectrum have long called for reforms to FISA’s Section 702, which empowers the US government to surveil electronic communications of noncitizens located outside the United States to acquire foreign intelligence information, without a warrant.

Citing three unnamed sources familiar with discussions in the House of Representatives, Politico reported Friday that “with a GOP hard-liner revolt over warrantless surveillance threatening to tank the legislation,” Johnson “will instead work through the remaining issues over the upcoming two-week recess and try to put the extension on the floor the week of April 14.”

Welcoming the development, Demand Progress executive director Sean Vitka said in a statement that “Speaker Johnson is backing away from his plan to ram through a FISA reauthorization vote next week because he knows his members don’t want it and the American people don’t want it.”

Republicans, Democrats, and independents all overwhelmingly want Congress to take serious action to protect privacy—in particular against AI and data brokers—and oppose any efforts to rubber-stamp the government’s warrantless mass surveillance powers as is,” Vitka continued.

“Before any vote on reauthorizing FISA,” he added, “Congress must first enact real protections for Americans’ privacy, in particular by closing the data broker loophole to prevent the government from circumventing the courts and independent oversight through the purchase of Americans’ private location, web browsing, and other sensitive information.”

Various bills, including the bipartisan Security and Freedom Enhancement (SAFE) Act introduced last month by Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), would close the loophole that agencies use to buy their way around the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution, which is supposed to protect Americans against unreasonable searches and seizures.

Demand Progress has endorsed that bill, and on Thursday partnered with the Project On Government Oversight and over 130 other artificial intelligence and civil rights groups for a letter urging Republican and Democratic congressional leaders to impose “much-needed privacy protections against government agencies’ warrantless mass surveillance of people in the United States.”

President Donald Trump and his pro-spying deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, have fought for a “clean” reauthorization, but the GOP has slim majorities in both chambers of Congress. In the House, Johnson can only afford to lose two votes, and in the Senate, most bills require at least some Democratic support to get to the president’s desk.

The conduct of Trump’s second administration has fueled calls for reform. Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), a member of the House Judiciary Committee, said in a Thursday statement that “as the Trump administration continues to run roughshod over our Constitution, we cannot continue to give them a further opening to sacrifice our civil liberties in the name of national security. We cannot give Stephen Miller a blank check to conduct domestic surveillance in violation of the Fourth Amendment.”

“I have been working on essential reforms to FISA across administrations, and I have not wavered—whether it is a Democratic or Republican president,” she noted. “This has always been a bipartisan issue for good reason. Americans across political parties care deeply about privacy and not being surveilled. Congress has a duty to protect those fundamental constitutional liberties. Any attempt to push forward a ‘clean’ reauthorization of Section 702 will put our private, sensitive data at risk.”

Jayapal stressed that “this Trump administration has been particularly brazen in its use of domestic surveillance to suppress our constitutional rights and dissent. In just the last six weeks, the administration has blacklisted Anthropic for refusing to stand down on its requirement that its technology not be used for the mass surveillance of Americans, and we learned that the Department of Justice surveilled me—and likely many other members—while reviewing the Epstein files, seeking justice for survivors.”

“In Minnesota, federal immigration agents have surveilled and intimidated US citizens exercising their First Amendment rights to document agents’ unlawful actions,” the congresswoman noted. “It is time to reform FISA, ensure our Fourth Amendment protections are guaranteed, and stop the government surveillance of Americans.”