received this plea via email.

CAN YOU WRITE A LETTER TO HELP KEEP A KILLER OF TWO BORDER PATROL AGENTS IN FEDERAL PRISON?

Thanky you. )

Steve Merrill, Oklahoma City
REMEMBER, IF YOU ARE SERIOUS ABOUT DOING SOMETHING ABOUT ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION, AT THE VERY LEAST, START BY STAYING INFORMED!
---IF THE GOVERNMENT WAS SERIOUS ABOUT IMMIGRATION LAW ENFORCEMENT THEY WOULD DO MORE ABOUT IT.
We have room for but one flag, the American flag. We have room for but one language here and that is the English language ....and we have room for but one sole loyalty, and that is a loyalty to the American people. ---Theodore Roosevelt


The re-scheduled parole hearing for Florencio Mationg will now be held in Florence, Colorado on June 13th at 9:30 am. Mationg is one of the four violent killers of Border Patrol Agents Newton and Azrak in 1967. See details below. Two years ago, active and retired U.S. Border Patrol Agents swamped the U.S. Parole Commission and had his parole denied. It’s that time again. Of the 4 men convicted for these crimes, Mationg is the only one left in prison.

Several years ago, due to an error by the Parole Commission, Victor Bono was paroled. Supposedly it was because his parole hearing rights were violated? Bono and Mationg had both received 2 consecutive life terms plus 30 years. The 2 Montoya brothers have long since been gone.
The address of the U.S Parole Commission is:
5550 Friendship Blvd, Suite 420
Chevy Chase MD 30815.
Mationg’s reference # is 84256-132.

DETAILS OF THIS INCIDENT: Patrol Inspector Theodore Lawrence Newton, Jr., and his fellow officer, Patrol Inspector (Trainee) George Frederick Azrak, both of Temecula, California, were found murdered in a remote deserted mountain cabin on June 19, 1967, following an intensive 48-hour search after they disappeared while on official duty. The men were killed were kidnapped from their post during a traffic check operation along Highway 19 near Oak Grove, California, in the early morning hours of June 17, 1967. The checkpoint was located about 75 miles north of the Mexican border on a route known to have been used by illegal aliens and smugglers of aliens, narcotics, and contraband. The officers failed to report in following an all-night assignment at the road check, and a hurried search failed to reveal the whereabouts of the men and their two vehicles, a jeep and a Border Patrol sedan. The INS jeep was soon located about a mile from the check point where it had been driven through two stock fences and left under a tree in an open field. On June 19, the missing Service sedan was spotted about 9:00 a.m., by a member of a jeep club from Hemet, California. The sedan had been covered with brush. Fifty feet away was a deserted shack and there the posse located the bodies of the missing patrolmen. The cabin was located on the Bailey Ranch, a mountainous brushy area, off Highway 71 near Anza, California, and about 8 miles northeast of Oak Grove where the officers had been at work. In reconstructing the crimes, it now appears that Patrol Inspectors Newton and Azrak intercepted an old military ambulance in which over 800 pounds of marijuana were being transported. While checking this vehicle the officers were overpowered by four convicted felons, two of whom had been following the load of marijuana in a second vehicle. The officers were then taken to the mountain cabin where they were made to lie prone with their arms extended toward each other inside a shelf of an old stove. The right wrist of one man was handcuffed to the left wrist of the other, and vice versa. While incapacitated in this manner they were shot and killed. Autopsies performed revealed Patrol Inspector Newton had been shot once in the head while three shots were fired into Patrol Inspector Azrak, two in the head and one in the chest. Their bodies bore no marks to indicate there had been a struggle.
SOURCE: http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/border_secur ... rak_gf.xml


ADDITIONAL DETAILS: In the early morning hours of that June 17, 1967 Newton and Azrak stopped an old military ambulance on the remote road near Temecula. Inside the vehicle was about 800 pounds of marijuana. The two men in the ambulance, Mationg and Bono, and the Montoya brothers in a car following just behind, were all armed. They drew their weapons, overpowered the officers and forced them to drive to a remote cabin in Anza. Newton, 25, married with two small children, and Azrak, 21, a bachelor with less than two months on the job, were told they'd be left alive, said Zermeno, recounting testimony from the murder trial. "At the cabin they were given coffee and were assured that nothing was going to happen to them," he said. The two agents were handcuffed together and also cuffed to a stove. Mationg then walked up next to Newton and shot him in the head, Zermeno said. Azrak, still cuffed to his dead partner, began pleading for his life. "From the doorway of the cabin Bono shot Azrak in the stomach," Zermeno said. "He was still alive and pleading to be spared when Bono shot him again, this time in the ear." Mationg forced Bono to get closer to Azrak to finish him off, said Zermeno. Bono then moved in and shot Azrak in the head. "They were tortured," Zermeno said. "This was a brutal murder." The two agents had last radioed their supervisors at 2:30 a.m. When they failed to check in again at the end of their shift, about 6 a.m., a search was organized. Over the next two days up to 400 law enforcement officers and volunteers combed the rural back country.
SOURCE: http://rantburg.com/poparticle.php?D=20 ... 41157&HC=1

A Google Search of NEWTON AZRAK can get you some more information.