The head of a militia group that reportedly has been detaining scores of migrant families at gunpoint as they crossed New Mexico’s southern border was arrested Saturday by the FBI on charges of being a felon in possession of firearms and ammunition.
Larry Mitchell Hopkins, 69, who lives in the tiny village of Flora Vista in San Juan County, was arrested in Sunland Park, a border town near El Paso, the FBI said in a statement.
It wasn’t Hopkins’ first arrest on a weapons charge. He faced a similar count in Oregon in 2006. Though, Hopkins’ original felony conviction was not immediately clear. The FBI said in the statement that it would not release further information until after his first court appearance, scheduled Monday in U.S. District Court in Las Cruces.
Online New Mexico court records did not show any charges for Hopkins, who also has used the names Johnny Horton Jr. and Scott Alan Curtiss.
Hopkins, who has said in court documents that he runs an entertainment business and is a musician and recording artist, is the leader of the United Constitutional Patriots, a group of “Americans that believe in the constitution and the rights of every American that will stand up for there[sic] rights in unity and help keep America safe,” according to a Facebook group page.
Last week, the militia detained about 200 migrants, most of them Central Americans who had just crossed the U.S. border with Mexico near Sunland Park, seeking asylum, according to the New York Times.
Militias have been operating along the border for years to try to curb the flow of undocumented migrants into the U.S., but the recent targeting of families — which are allowed by law to request asylum and typically surrender to Border Patrol agents — is raising the ire of human rights groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union, the Times reported.
Allegra Love, executive director of the Santa Fe Dreamers Project, which provides free legal services to immigrants, expressed outrage Saturday over the militia’s activities.
“We don’t need citizens confronting them at gunpoint,” she said, referring to the men, women and children who have been making the arduous trek to the U.S. border in droves from nations such as Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.
The Facebook page for Hopkins’ group shows a video of masked men pointing guns at families with young children as they sit on the ground, awaiting Border Patrol officers.
“They’re already fleeing violence in their home countries,” Love said. “It’s an incredibly difficult journey, morale is low, only to be assaulted by citizens of this country? We can meet these folks with compassion.”
Political leaders in New Mexico also have condemned the armed groups.
“This is a dangerous felon who should not have weapons around children and families,” New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas said of Hopkins in a statement issued Saturday. “Today’s arrest by the FBI indicates clearly that the rule of law should be in the hands of trained law enforcement officials, not armed vigilantes.”
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said in a Twitter message a day before Hopkins’ arrest, “We are actively working with @NewMexicoAOG as well as local and state police. Menacing or threatening migrant families and asylum-seekers is absolutely unacceptable and must cease.”
But state Sen. Joseph Cervantes, who ran against Lujan Grisham in the Democratic primary race for governor last year, said Balderas must do more.
“NM Attny Gen. must arrest, charge and prosecute those kidnapping and pulling guns on immigrants in my Senate District/Sunland Park. Scolding them won’t cut it,” Cervantes tweeted Saturday.
Even Gavin Clarkson — a New Mexico Republican running for U.S. Senate who met with members of Hopkins’ militia in March, according to a video posted on Facebook — decried their efforts Saturday. He said on Twitter that “masked militiamen are the antithesis of what a free republic looks like. I absolutely condemn their lawless activities.”
It wasn’t clear Saturday how Hopkins’ arrest would affect the activities of United Constitutional Patriots at the border. One member, though, appeared to warn supporters on Facebook that the group was under siege.
Chuck Davis, who identified himself as the head of intelligence and chaplain of United Constitutional Patriots, said in a post Saturday, in all capital letters, “We have an emergency. The commander was arrested by the FBI at base camp. It was a set up.”...