Minuteman leaders begin 12-city tour



LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Leaders of the Minuteman Project began a cross-country tour Wednesday to seek support for tighter border security, launching a caravan to the nation's capital from a heavily black neighborhood where many residents shouted at the civilian patrol group to go home.
Minuteman leaders started the trip from a park in a black neighborhood as part of a push to attract more blacks as members.
"If we are going to be giving preference to anybody ... preference should go to the American-African community that has suffered more than anybody," Minuteman founder Jim Gilchrist told a crowd of 40 supporters that included about 10 blacks.
Getting loud
But the event soon provoked screaming matches about whether illegal immigrants were taking jobs from blacks or should be embraced as fellow minorities looking for a better life.
Gilchrist had to yell over a dozen mostly black protesters who chanted "Minutemen go home!" and "KKK go home!"
Gilchrist repeatedly stopped his speech to address the protesters, telling them: "Ours is not a racial cause. It's a rule-of-law cause."
Organizers hoped the trip would help counter marches staged Monday around the nation by more than 1 million people demanding amnesty for illegal immigrants.
The caravan is scheduled to stop in President Bush's vacation haven of Crawford, Texas, as well as Phoenix, Albuquerque, N.M.; Abilene, Texas; Little Rock, Ark.; Memphis, Tenn.; Nashville, Tenn.; Montgomery, Ala.; Birmingham, Ala.; Atlanta; Greensboro, N.C.; and Richmond, Va.
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