Politics & Government
Former Arizona Governor, Detained At Border Checkpoint
Raul Castro, Arizona's first and only Hispanic governor, stopped at U.S. Boarder patrol checkpoint

PHOENIX -- Former Arizona Gov. Raul Castro, who in the 1970s served as the state's first and only Hispanic governor, was detained at a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint after the vehicle he was traveling in triggered a radiation sensor.
Castro said agents questioned him outside his vehicle in 100-degree heat. He said he explained to them that he had undergone hospital testing on his pacemaker the previous day, likely triggering the sensor.
Castro told The Associated Press on Thursday that he believed the stop was prompted by a monitor being set off, not on his appearance.
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"I don't think being Hispanic had anything to do with it," Castro said. He said he was detained for 40 to 45 minutes; the federal agency said it lasted 10 minutes.
The former governor downplayed the detention, noting that he wasn't pleased with the way he was treated but didn't file a complaint. He said that he understands Border Patrol agents are "there to do a job" but that they need a better system for dealing with elderly people. He said he was exposed to the sun during part of the questioning.
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