On the Mexican Border: From Calexico to Nogales
A 55-ft. deep drug smuggling tunnel runs almost 240 yards under the U.S.-Mexico border. It is part of life along the border, as documented by photojournalist Louie Palu.
A 55-ft. deep drug smuggling tunnel runs almost 240 yards under the U.S.-Mexico border. It is part of life along the border, as documented by photojournalist Louie Palu.
Traveling near Nogales, Arizona, Louie Palu meets migrants and deportees, including two women who have walked for six days in the desert before they were arrested by the U.S. Border Patrol.
For seven generations, Sheila Russell's family has farmed the land of Pennsylvania. Now, the rush for shale gas threatens to put an end to it all.
There are thousands of lost oil and gas wells scattered across Pennsylvania, the industrial legacy of a previous era. Now, someone is looking for them.
Along the border fences that stretch between Tijuana and Tecate, U.S. Border Patrol agents use small openings to monitor the Mexican side. Heroin addiciton is prevalent along the Tijuana River.
Traveling to Tijuana, Louie Palu speaks to deportees who have become heroin addicts and to rehab center staff members who operate needle exchange programs.
Youngstown, Ohio, was once one of the centers of US steel manufacturing. Today, there are hopes that shale gas could revive the town - and fears it may destroy what little is left of it.
For decades Youngstown, Ohio, was one of the great centers of U.S. steel manufacturing. Then the industry collapsed and jobs disappeared. Now, shale gas is reviving the city's hopes - and fears.
For many in Ciudad Juarez and along the U.S.-Mexico border addiction, organized crime, gang-led violence, and corruption spawned by drug cartels have become a part of daily life.
While shale gas has revived the economy of a Pennsylvania county, it also threatens to undermine traditional farming.
In the past few years, Pennsylvania's Bradford County has become the center of shale gas extraction, but now the industry threatens to undermine traditional farming and dairy operations in the area.
Key to figuring out what goes on in Ciudad Juarez is understanding the roles played by the local police and the Federales—and most importantly the Sinaloa drug cartel.