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  1. #1
    Senior Member CCUSA's Avatar
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    The Decider Won't Pardon Agents Immediately

    http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/nation/16595462.htm -


    Posted on Thu, Feb. 01, 2007

    Bush won't pardon agents immediatelyBy DAVE MONTGOMERY
    Star-Telegram Washington Bureau

    JOSE ALONSO COMPEAN
    More photosWASHINGTON -- Are they mistreated heroes or rogue lawmen?

    That question is at the heart of a nationwide uproar over Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean, who are beginning decade-long sentences in federal prison for the nonfatal shooting of a suspected drug smuggler given immunity to testify against them.

    Scores of Republican lawmakers and thousands of grassroots petitioners have besieged President Bush with demands that the agents be granted immediate pardons.

    But to federal prosecutor Johnny Sutton and his defenders, the two Texas-based agents abridged the public trust by attempting to cover up an unauthorized shooting and must face the consequences.

    "Prosecutors take cases as they come. We don't get to choose the facts, and we don't get to choose the witnesses," the San Antonio-based U.S. attorney said in a telephone interview Wednesday. "We hate the thought of having to prosecute law enforcement because those are the people we work with every day. But nobody is above the law."

    In an interview on the Fox television network Wednesday, Bush again said he is bound by strict federal guidelines on pardons and cannot immediately grant a pardon to the two agents.

    Bush explained that "there is a series of steps that are analyzed in order for the Justice Department to make a recommendation as to whether or not a president grants a pardon."

    And, Bush added, "We're not at that stage yet."

    'So many questions'

    Bush's position is likely to further agitate a growing circle of mostly Republican lawmakers who have repeatedly pressed the White House to aggressively step into the case.

    Many also blame the Bush administration for the agents' imprisonment, pointing that it was Bush who appointed Sutton as federal prosecutor in 2001.

    "There are so many questions," said Rep. Walter Jones Jr., R-N.C., who has written four letters to the president requesting a pardon. "The White House should intervene, and the president should pardon these men immediately."

    Other leading House members in the campaign include Republicans Ted Poe, Michael McCaul and Sam Johnson, all of Texas, and Dana Rohrabacher and Duncan Hunter of California.

    "On the face of it, the administration is taking the side of the bad guys," Rohrabacher said.

    The union that represents most nonsupervisory Border Patrol agents is also waging a vigorous campaign to obtain pardons for the two agents. "The front-line agents, the ones who actually do the work, are extremely upset," said T. J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol Council. "They're very concerned that the same thing could happen to them."

    The fate of the two agents has inflamed the wider debate over border security and illegal immigration.

    And although the outcry on behalf of Ramos and Compean has buzzed on the Internet and conservative talk shows, a less vocal circle believes that justice may have been done.

    "If we take all the political patina from it, the pure issue is, 'What do we want here on the border as far as accountability [in the use] of deadly force?'" said Kathleen Walker of El Paso, the incoming president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association. "We've had a clear violation of procedure, and that's not something we want to promote as the status quo."

    Ramos and Compean were convicted by a federal jury in El Paso for a Feb. 17, 2005, shooting involving Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila, who was fleeing to Mexico after abandoning a van containing 743 pounds of marijuana near Fabens.

    U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone of El Paso sentenced the men in October -- Ramos to 11 years and Compean to 12.

    They began serving their sentences two weeks ago, further igniting the emotion surrounding their case.

    "He's taking it real hard," said Joe Loya, an El Paso insurance agent and Ramos' father-in-law. "These guys were scapegoats. He's not a criminal who belongs behind bars."

    The two agents and their families have repeatedly asserted that they are guilty only of procedural violations that would normally result in a suspension, at most.

    But Sutton and his prosecution team say the agents engaged in abusive behavior and overstepped their authority.

    Convictions on 11 charges

    In an account of the case released by Sutton's office, neither agent knew the van contained marijuana.

    "The evidence was uncontroverted that, at the time the victim was shot, neither agent knew the driver was illegally in the United States or whether a crime had been committed," the statement said. "The only information they had was that the driver had failed to pull over to be identified."

    Aldrete-Davila leaped out of the vehicle and started to flee but stopped and raised his hands to surrender after jumping into a ditch.

    According to testimony, Compean tried to hit the man with the butt of his shotgun but slipped and fell.

    Aldrete-Davila began running, and Compean fired 14 shots with his pistol.

    Ramos fired once, striking Aldrete-Davila in the buttocks.

    He fled to Mexico and sought medical help.

    In an ironic twist, according to Sutton, Aldrete-Davila's mother mentioned the incident to a friend whose son-in-law was a Border Patrol officer.

    The agent passed the information to superiors, resulting in an investigation by the Homeland Security Department, which oversees the Border Patrol.

    The investigation, as presented by prosecutors, found that Ramos and Compean tried to dispose of empty casings and filed a false report.

    They were convicted of 11 of the 12 charges in the indictment, including assault with a dangerous weapon, assault with serious bodily injury, discharge of a firearm during the commission of a violent crime and willfully violating Aldrete-Davila's constitutional right to be free from illegal seizure.

    Other violations included intentionally defacing the crime scene, lying about the incident and failing to report the truth.

    Lawmakers defend agents

    The agents' defenders have attacked Sutton's account as a collection of distortions and said the two lawmen were lawfully performing their duties and believed that Aldrete-Davila was armed.

    Several lawmakers have likened the agents to U.S. service members in Iraq, saying they risked their lives daily to protect America's border.

    Among the most explosive elements in the case is Sutton's decision to grant immunity to Aldrete-Davila to enable an apparent drug dealer to testify against two agents with respected records of service.

    Ramos was nominated as agent of the year before the recommendation was withdrawn after his indictment.

    The agents' supporters also complain that the trial transcript has not been completed and made public, compounding their efforts to review the case.

    Sutton described Aldrete-Davila as "a typical dirtbag dope dealer" but said prosecutors had no usable evidence to link him to smuggling.

    Further, he said, the agents' "bad behavior" at the scene destroyed any chance of making a drug case.

    After the unreported shooting came to light, he said, prosecutors had no choice but to proceed with a case, using Aldrete-Davila as a key witness.


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Dave Montgomery, 202-383-6016 dmontgomery@mcclatchydc.com
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
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    No, he just wants to give a pardon.... aka Amnesty to 20 to 30 million Illegal Aliens.

  3. #3
    Senior Member IndianaJones's Avatar
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    Bush again said he is bound by strict federal guidelines
    Are the federal 'guidelines' more important than our nations laws? Oh yeah, the Constitution is just a _ damn piece of paper says jorge.


    Quote Originally Posted by ConcernedCitizen
    No, he just wants to give a pardon.... aka Amnesty to 20 to 30 million Illegal Aliens.
    Dumb and Dumberer.
    We are NOT a nation of immigrants!

  4. #4
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Impeach Bush!!!!!!!!!!!!
    Please support ALIPAC's fight to save American Jobs & Lives from illegal immigration by joining our free Activists E-Mail Alerts (CLICK HERE)

  5. #5
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    SOSADFORUS wrote:


    Impeach Bush!!!!!!!!!!!!

    ABSOLUTELY!

  6. #6
    Senior Member lsmith1338's Avatar
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    Freedom isn't free... Don't forget the men who died and gave that right to all of us....
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at http://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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