Posted on 03/29/2012 4:27:10 PM PDT by Nachum
The family of a murdered U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent is demanding to know if U.S. agencies could have seized the weapons used to kill him before they crossed the border into Mexico.
Amador and Mary Zapata also believe their son Jaime, who was only in Mexico for 9 days before his death, was not adequately trained for his assignment, a trip on one of Mexicos most dangerous roads in a $160,000 armored Suburban.
We want to find out the truth, Amador Zapata said from the living room of his Brownsville, Texas home. Who thought of this program? How come they let those weapons go when they knew who had bought them? How come they let them go through the border without trying to stop them? Thats what we want to know.
The Zapatas had four sons employed by ICE, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency. Jaime, the second oldest, was gunned down while driving from Mexico City to Monterrey last February by assassins for the Zeta cartel. The guns used to kill him were purchased in Texas.
I dont know anything now that I didnt know the first day, said Mary Zapata, surrounded by photos and memorabilia associated with her sons life. I expected them (ICE supervisors) to sit with us and give us a report. This is what we have so far. We do not know.
The Zapatas hired former Assistant U.S. Attorney Trey Martinez and Ray Thomas, a south Texas litigator, to find out the facts.
The family would like answers. The family would like closure, said Martinez. We dont know if this is a gun walking operation but there is circumstantial evidence that there was.
Martinez is referring to two guns found February 15, 2011 at the murder scene in Mexico.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
The list, Ping
Let me know if you would like to be on or off the ping list
“...$160,000 armored Suburban.”
Did he get out of it and was killed? If not, that was a crappy armoring job for $160k. He should have been able to ride it out inside until help arrived if it was done properly, unless the ambushers used RPGs or mortars. I can’t remember the details of the story.
Just read this article, but it doesn’t give any real detail:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/16/jamie-zapata-killed-mexico-us-immigration_n_824084.html
Yuk, huffpo-trash; now I have to scrub the computer.
Found another with a little more detail:
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-20032296-504083.html
They rolled down the window to talk and were shot. Sad.
We won’t know it all for a while.
Jaime Zapata’s family speaking out now. Ping.
Armored SUV could not protect U.S. agents in MexicoZapata put the vehicle in park. The door locks popped open.
That terrifying sound a quiet click set into motion events that remain under investigation. When Zapata needed it most, the Suburbans elaborate armoring was rendered worthless by a consumer-friendly automatic setting useful for family vacations and hurried commuters but not for U.S. agents driving through a red zone in Mexico.
Oh man, that’s so sad. Thanks for the details, TigersEye.
It was a terrible oversight. The need for tactical vigilance never ends.
The “details” will kill you. (Old business maxim)
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