jim tomsheck: let there be no doubt, that is exactly the case. sharyl: but tomsheck says his anti-corruption efforts were stymied by then-head of border patrol david aguilar. jim tomsheck: i was very surprised to hear his response, which was one of anger, not one of appreciation. he was yelling when he said, "this is not what we do, we manage this problem." sharyl: what do you think he meant by we manage it? jim tomsheck: they attempted to manage the problem by hiding the problem and dealing with it within the ranks of the border patrol. sharyl: later, in a whistleblower complaint, tomsheck alleged the border patrol's aguilar called him and meeting and gave them a strange order -- to redefine corruption. jim tomsheck: what we were told to do was redefine corruption in a way that would reduce the actual number of corruption arrests, from what was at that point 80-something to a number that was less than 30. mr. aguilar actually took a sheet of paper and wrote a number on it that was 20-something and kept tapping it with his pen as he was explaining