New York Times
By Jennifer Medina
October 29, 2014
LOS
ANGELES — It would seem to be a worst case that opponents of the Obama
administration on immigration had long forecast: An illegal immigrant —
one who had been deported
twice, yet returned to the country each time — is accused of killing
two Northern California sheriff’s officers in a six-hour shooting
rampage Friday.
The
suspect led the authorities on a manhunt through two counties. After he
was booked into the Sacramento County jail, federal immigration
authorities used his fingerprints
to identify the man, who gave his name as Marcelo Marquez: They said he
was Luis Enrique Monroy Bracamonte, a Mexican who lived without papers
in this country for more than a decade after he was deported in 1997 and
again in 2001 because of drug- and weapon-related
arrests.
“This
case shows that our laws are not being enforced, and there are tragic
consequences to not enforcing them,” said Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for
the Federation for American
Immigration Reform, or FAIR, a group that advocates tougher immigration
controls.
The
case could create a new problem for the Obama administration, as
officials weigh steps the president could take after the Nov. 4
elections to expand protections from
deportation for immigrants here illegally.
Emerging
details of the suspect’s history — he gave his second last name in
court in Sacramento on Tuesday as Bracamontes, not Bracamonte — show
that he crossed the southwest
border at least twice in a wave of illegal immigration more than a
decade ago, then used several aliases and stayed out of trouble just
enough to elude detection as the Obama administration ramped up
deportations in recent years and expanded systems to identify
foreigners who committed crimes.
Under
the name Marcelo Marquez, Mr. Monroy Bracamontes was arraigned Tuesday
on 14 felony counts, including the murders of the two sheriff’s
officers, theft of a sheriff’s
vehicle and a shotgun, four carjackings and the attempted murders of
three deputies and a civilian. The 13-page complaint, which the
Sacramento judge read in its entirety, also lists special circumstances
in the case against him, including killing an officer
engaged in his duties and killing the officers to avoid arrest, which
could allow prosecutors to seek the death penalty.
His
wife, Janelle Marquez Monroy, who was with him throughout the shooting
rampage but was captured first, was charged with murder in the killing
of one deputy, with prosecutors
saying she was an accomplice, and she faces other charges. She is a
United States citizen, immigration officials confirmed.
During
a brief news conference after the arraignment, the Sacramento County
district attorney, Jan Scully, said she would not discuss whether
prosecutors intended to seek
the death penalty. She said that investigators had not determined
whether Mr. Monroy Bracamontes was affiliated with a gang or a drug
cartel, but that they were holding him in maximum security as a
precaution.
Immigration
and Customs Enforcement officials said Mr. Monroy Bracamontes was
deported for the first time in 1997 after he was convicted in Arizona of
narcotics dealing.
He was arrested again in Arizona in May 2001 on drug and weapons
charges, but those were dismissed, and that month he was deported for a
second time.
He
was hardly an isolated example of a foreigner coming back to the United
State illegally after deportation. From 2003 to 2013, about one-third
of all deportations, 1.1
million, were based on reinstatements of court orders from previous
deportations of the same immigrants, according to Marc R. Rosenblum, a
researcher at the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan group in
Washington.
In
2013, 60 percent of all removals carried out by Immigration and Customs
Enforcement were of foreigners who had previously been deported, said
Jessica M. Vaughan, director
of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, an
organization that favors reduced immigration.
Sometime
after his second deportation, Mr. Monroy Bracamontes returned to the
United States and moved with his wife from Arizona to Utah, where
officials said he lived
at least until last year. To judge from Utah court records for Marcelo
Marquez, he was an exceptionally bad driver, with 10 misdemeanor
violations from 2003 to 2009.
But
none of those violations were serious enough to create a fingerprint
record in state databases. After May 2009, the traffic violations
stopped. A federal program known
as Secure Communities, which checks immigration records based on
fingerprints of people booked into jails, started in Utah in March 2010.
Mr.
Monroy Bracamontes did not make a secret of the fact that he was using
several names. On Facebook, he created at least two pages under
different aliases, and the two
aliases were “friends” with each other.
“This
is a very muddy investigation with multiple identities,” Sgt. Lisa
Bowman, a spokeswoman for the Sacramento County sheriff, said Tuesday.
Two
Sacramento County deputies approached Mr. Monroy Bracamontes and his
wife on Friday as they sat in the car in front of a Motel 6 in a
Sacramento neighborhood where
business owners had complained about a series of thefts, drug dealing
and other crimes, Sergeant Bowman said.
“They
were just sitting in the car — not looking to go in or out anywhere —
and that obviously raised a red flag in this area,” Sergeant Bowman
said. “The officers simply
just tried to approach them, and they just didn’t get that far. The
shots came from within the car very quickly, and that’s what started
everything.”
After
killing the Sacramento deputy, Daniel Oliver, with a handgun, Mr.
Monroy Bracamontes shot a motorist, Anthony Holmes, while trying to take
his car, Sergeant Bowman
said. Mr. Holmes is recovering from multiple gunshot wounds.
The
couple then fled to Placer County, northeast of Sacramento. There, Mr.
Monroy Bracamontes shot and killed a sheriff’s detective, Michael Davis,
and wounded a third
officer using an AR-15 assault rifle, according to the charges against
him. The couple is also charged with attempting to murder two other
Placer County deputies.
Immigration officials said the rapid identification of the suspect showed that federal programs now in place were effective.
“This
is underscores why technology like Secure Communities is so important,”
said Virginia Kice, a spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. “It relies on
fingerprints, and it gives us a virtual presence in jails and prisons
across the country.”
Last
fall, California passed a law known as the Trust Act under which
traffic violations that do not result in an arrest would not activate
any alert to federal immigration
authorities, said Kevin R. Johnson, the dean of the law school at the
University of California, Davis.
“This
is a tragic case that is already being used by advocates to argue
against any kind of changes,” Mr. Johnson said. “But everyone agrees
that this is the sort of person
we should be focused on not having here.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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