Los Angeles Times (California)
By Javier Panzar
August 18, 2015
Inice
Edwards was one of two dozen protesters standing outside the courthouse
here last week when Victor Aureliano Martinez Ramirez appeared to face
charges that he raped,
tortured and killed a Santa Barbara County woman.
Ramirez,
29, was living in the country illegally at the time of the July 24
attack and was arrested several times in recent years for a variety of
offenses. He was released
from jail days before police say he and another man broke into the home
of 64-year-old Marilyn Pharis and attacked her with a hammer and
sexually assaulted her.
Pharis died Aug. 1 from her injuries.
"I
don't understand why illegals have all these rights," Edwards, 78, a
Santa Maria resident said. "He should never have had a chance to do what
he did."
Standing
across the street were two dozen counter protesters, including Arnulfo
Romero, 55, also a resident of this agricultural and mostly Latino city
of 100,000. Romero,
a furniture store owner, has lived in Santa Maria since 1969 when he
came to the U.S. as a legal resident from Zacatecas, Mexico.
He
agreed with protesters that Ramirez should have been deported. But he
said the killing, along with a San Francisco case, was being used by
politicians and pundits to
indict all Latino immigrants in the U.S.
"When
white people kill each other they say it's because of mental issues,"
he said. "Then they use these cases to go against any and all Latinos
here."
The
Ramirez case has served as yet another flashpoint in the national
debate on illegal immigration. Many have compared it to the case of Juan
Francisco Lopez-Sanchez,
a Mexican immigrant who was charged with the fatal shooting of Kathryn
Steinle, 32, on Pier 14 in San Francisco on July 1.
Lopez-Sanchez had been deported five times and had seven felonies on his record.
Pharis'
brutal assault also became national news and has stirred emotions among
residents of Santa Maria, a city better known for its style of tri-tip
and sprawling strawberry
fields than for violent crime.
Latinos
make up 70% of the city's residents — a huge leap from 1990 when the
group made up 45% of the population. Whites account for 20% of
residents.
The growing numbers of Latinos are making themselves known in city politics.
The
demographic shift has resulted in more Latino activism. Thousands took
to the streets last year to protest a proposal to build a processing
center for convicted criminals
who are in the country illegally.
A
divided City Council approved the center in a 3-2 vote, but the large
protests signaled the arrival of Latinos, said Hazel Davalos, head of
the Santa Maria chapter of
Coastal Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy, or CAUSE, an
organization that helps working families in the region.
Ramirez's
case, the resulting protests and counter protests are part of a complex
drama playing out in Santa Maria — the largest city in Santa Barbara
County and no longer
the conservative bastion it once was.
"In
years past you would have seen the tea party and seen anti-immigrant
protesters get away with blaming this on immigrants and no one would
speak against that or speak
counter to that," Davalos said. "Mexicans and Latinos are defending
themselves whereas before we might not have."
Despite
the Ramirez and Lopez-Sanchez cases, national studies have found no
link between the numbers of people living in the country illegally and
the amount of violent
crime in any given area.
In
recent years, many cities in Southern California, including Los
Angeles, and around the country have experienced some of their lowest
levels of violent crime, including
homicides, in recent decades even as the number of people in the U.S.
illegally climbed to an estimated 11 million.
Last
year, a study by Jörg Spenkuch, a professor of economics at
Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, compared 20
years of national FBI crime statistics
with records listing the percentage of immigrants in every county in
the continental U.S.
"There's
essentially no correlation between immigrants and violent crime," he
said in a summary of his study, noting immigrants tend to live in poor
areas prone to crime.
"So there's this anecdotal association that just doesn't turn out to be
true in the data."
In
the Ramirez case, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had
asked Santa Barbara County custody officials to put a detention hold on
the Mexican immigrant last
year after he was charged with felony assault with intent to commit
sexual assault. The detainer was meant to ensure Ramirez would be
transferred into federal custody before his release.
But
prosecutors eventually downgraded the charges to a misdemeanor. Santa
Barbara County custody officials concluded that keeping Ramirez would
violate the state's Trust
Act, which allows local law enforcement to hold inmates for immigration
authorities only if they have been charged with a serious crime.
On
July 17, just days before Pharis' was attacked, Ramirez was booked into
Santa Barbara County Jail on drug and weapons charges, according to the
sheriff's office. He
was ordered released July 20 after pleading no contest to the weapons
charge.
A
second man, 20-year-old Jose Fernando Villagomez — who is a U.S.
citizen — has also been charged in connection with Pharis' death.
At
a news conference on Aug. 7, Santa Maria Police Chief Ralph Martin
denounced state and federal detention policies for immigrants living in
the U.S. illegally, saying
"there's a blood trail leading to the bedroom of Marilyn Pharis" from
Sacramento and Washington.
Mayor
Alice Patino said Santa Barbara County law enforcement officials will
discuss how Ramirez came to be released at a September Board of
Supervisors meeting in Santa
Maria.
"We
need to find out how this guy fell through the cracks," she said.
"There are different issues going on here. This was violence against a
woman, there are immigration
issues of course, the crime issue is always there. It is a tragedy."
Women
from the North County Rape Crisis and Protection Center plan to hold a
vigil for Pharis at 7 p.m. Friday in front of Santa Maria City Hall.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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