Los Angeles Times
By Brian Bennet
June 15, 2015
U.S.
Border Patrol agent who killed an unarmed 15-year-old Mexican boy by
shooting him in the face after a rock-throwing incident on a border
bridge to El Paso in 2010
was recently cleared of wrongdoing by the agency's internal affairs
office.
So
was a Border Patrol agent who shot and killed a 17-year-old Mexican who
threw rocks from the Mexican side of the border fence near Nogales,
Ariz., in 2011.
Internal
affairs also cleared an agent who shot and killed a 19-year-old U.S.
citizen as he climbed over a border fence into Mexico near Douglas,
Ariz., in 2011. Agents
said the man was seeking to flee after driving a narcotics-laden truck
into a Border Patrol vehicle.
In
all, an internal investigation of 67 shooting incidents, which left 19
people dead, absolved agents of criminal misconduct in all but three
cases, which are still pending.
The review was completed last month.
None
of the agents involved has been charged with a crime, said Anthony
Triplett, who helped direct the review at the office of internal affairs
for U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, the parent agency of the Border Patrol.
Only two agents faced disciplinary action. Both received oral reprimands.
Criminal
charges are still possible in the three pending cases, officials said.
Prosecutors in the Justice Department's civil rights division have been
investigating those
lethal shootings, all from 2012, since they occurred.
The agents in those three cases are still conducting armed patrols on the border, officials said.
Critics
along the Southwest border and in Mexico long have argued that the
Border Patrol, the federal government's largest law enforcement force,
operates with little
transparency or accountability in cases involving purported abuses.
The
agency's broad approval of its own record in scores of shooting cases,
despite vows by the Obama administration to crack down on agents who use
excessive force, is
unlikely to change that perception.
"We
are deeply disappointed" with the lack of action, said Juanita Molina,
executive director of Border Action Network, a human rights organization
based in Tucson. "When
you have someone throwing rocks and someone responding with lethal
force, it is just not proportional."
"Turning
the page doesn't mean burying the past," said Chris Rickerd, a border
security expert at the American Civil Liberties Union in Washington.
"There is no assurance
to border residents that agents who have used excessive, improper
lethal force aren't on the job in their communities."
Administration
officials say they are determined to restore public trust in the Border
Patrol despite its tradition of closing ranks around its paramilitary
culture.
Last
month, Customs and Border Protection made it possible for people to
file written complaints against officers in Spanish for the first time.
The move came after pressure
from activists who said the Border Patrol deliberately made it
difficult to file complaints.
Unlike
domestic police departments, the 21,000-member Border Patrol released
almost no public information about shootings, including the outcome of
its investigations,
until recently. That practice has started to ease slightly as
supervisors have been granted more latitude from headquarters to
describe individual incidents.
The
internal affairs review was started in July after an earlier study of
the same 67 shooting cases by an independent group of law enforcement
experts found a pattern
of agents firing in frustration at people throwing rocks from across
the border, as well as agents deliberately stepping in front of cars
apparently to justify shooting at the drivers.
That
study by the Police Executive Research Forum, a nonprofit research and
policy organization in Washington, criticized the Border Patrol for a
"lack of diligence" in
investigating its deadly incidents. The Border Patrol did not give a
copy to Congress until the Los Angeles Times Washington Bureau disclosed
its contents in February 2014.
In
response, R. Gil Kerlikowske, commissioner of Customs and Border
Protection, ordered new limits on when Border Patrol agents were
permitted to fire their weapons and
revamped weapons training. He also removed the longtime head of
internal affairs and created an internal panel to review incidents of
deadly force.
He
also tapped an FBI agent, Mark Morgan, to temporarily lead the office
of internal affairs and to review the 67 cases, which date from January
2010 to October 2012.
Before he returned to the FBI in December, Morgan had helped identify
cases with gaps, a lack of witness statements or other discrepancies.
Sixty-three
cases were subsequently cleared. Three others are with the Justice
Department. Disciplinary action is still possible in the final case.
Last
Monday, Kerlikowske named a new head of internal affairs. Matthew Klein
spent 26 years in the police department that serves Washington, D.C.,
and he oversaw deadly
force investigations when the department was following a federal
mandate to improve its treatment of citizens.
In
an interview, Klein said he wanted the Justice Department to decide
more quickly whether to bring charges in border shootings.
"We would prefer a faster resolution," Klein said.
He said he would bring up the three pending cases with Justice Department lawyers.
Until
recently, internal affairs officers were not permitted to begin
criminal investigations of Customs and Border Protection officers and
agents. Jeh Johnson, secretary
of Homeland Security, expanded their authority last year, and Klein
said the new powers should allow them to investigate "more completely."
Janet
Napolitano, who headed Homeland Security from 2009 to 2013, said Friday
that she sought to take on the spate of border shootings during her
tenure. She expressed
frustration that some of the cases were still pending.
"I
think part of it was just the civil rights division is only so big and
it can take that long," said Napolitano, who now heads the University of
California system. "I
would say that ideally, yes, those cases would move more quickly."
Napolitano
would not discuss specific lethal-force cases because she is a
defendant in multiple lawsuits brought by families of people killed by
Border Patrol agents.
The
three cases still under investigation at the Justice Department involve
three Mexican men who were shot and killed from across the border.
In
one, Border Patrol agents repeatedly shot at Juan Pablo Perez
Santillan, 30, as he stood watch for a group of migrants crossing the
Rio Grande illegally near Brownsville,
Texas, in July 2012.
According
to a lawsuit his family filed in U.S. District Court in Texas, an agent
used a high-power scope on his rifle to aim at Perez Santillan and
fired at least five
times, hitting him in the chest.
After
Perez Santillan's brother Damien pleaded for help, one agent shouted
back, "Que se muera el perro," meaning "Let the dog die," the lawsuit
states. He died at a hospital.
Two
months later, a Border Patrol agent in an airboat shot and killed
Guillermo Arevalo Pedraza, 37, in a park across the Rio Grande from
Laredo, Texas. The agent later
said he had been pelted with rocks from shore. Witnesses told the Los
Angeles Times last year that Arevalo was at a family barbecue.
That
October, an agent in Nogales, Ariz., shot through a border fence after a
rock-throwing incident and killed Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, 16. The
official incident
report says the agent fired 15 times. The official autopsy says
Rodriguez was hit eight times in the back.
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