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Ballistics data don't support charge against border agents
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | January 28, 2007 | Jerome R. Corsi

Posted on 01/29/2007 2:14:21 AM PST by Man50D

Ballistics reports, used in the trial of Ignacio "Nacho" Ramos, one of two Border Patrol agents convicted of shooting fleeing drug dealer Osbaldo Aldrete-Davila, do not support the prosecution's claim the bullet was fired from Ramos' gun, according to documents provided to WND from Andy Ramirez, Chairman of the Friends of the Border Patrol.

Despite the conclusion of a laboratory criminalist that he could not conclusively link the bullet removed from Aldrete-Davila with Ramos' service weapon, a Department of Homeland Security agent swore, in an affidavit of complaint filed against Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean, that Aldrete-Davila was hit by a round fired by Ramos.

"Johnny Sutton and his assistants are guilty of malicious prosecution," Ramirez charged to WND. "The prosecutors lied to the jury and he twisted evidence to make it fit his case. And when he couldn't twist the evidence, the government demanded that the court seal evidence which would have been exculpatory to the defense."

Nearly two years after the conclusion of the trial, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas has yet to release a transcript of the trial.

WND asked Ramirez if he was aware of the seriousness of his charges.

"I am very aware and I am accusing Mr. Sutton of a felony," Ramirez told WND, "but I am basing my conclusion on the evidence I have examined in this case and the refusal by the government to provide evidence to substantiate its claim to the Congress and the American people."

"Back on Sept. 26, 2006, officials from the DHS Office of Inspector General made serious allegations against both agents Ramos and Compean to four members of Congress from the Texas delegation," Ramirez said. "The Inspector General has subsequently refused to provide their evidence to substantiate their claims to Congress. So I am also accusing the DHS Office of Inspector General of making false statements to Congress in order to prevent a congressional inquiry. I am asking the U.S. Congress to subpoena all documents pertaining to this case including the full transcripts, sealed testimony, and the sealed indictment against Aldrete-Davila in order to get to the truth of this case once and for all."

WND previously reported that Congressman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, has accused DHS of stonewalling on the release of documents. Despite persistent requests to hand over promised internal reports, Rep. McCaul told WND that Congress had not yet received the materials.

In the Sept. 26, 2006, meeting with the Texas Republican delegation, the Inspector General's office claimed it had substantiating investigative reports that could back up their criminal charges against Ramos and Compean. Among the charges made by IG was that Ramos and Compean had stated on February 17, 2005, the day of the Aldrete-Davila shooting, they "wanted to shoot a Mexican."

WND also reported Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas, last week filed a Freedom of Information Act request against the DHS Inspector General's office to obtain those investigative reports. Poe took this action after DHS informed the Texas Republican delegation the documents would not be turned over to them because the Democrats were now in control of Congress and Rep. McCaul was no longer chairman of the Investigations Subcommittee of the House Committee on Homeland Security.

Ramirez has worked on the Ramos and Compean matter for nearly two years, investigating the facts of case and interviewing Ramos, Compean, their families and others knowledgeable about the proceedings. He shared two documents with WND that, he says, undermine the prosecution's case against Ramos.

In an affidavit filed by DHS on March 15, 2005, with the U.S. District Court in the Western District of Texas, special agent Christopher R. Sanchez swore the following:

Ballistics testing confirms a government-issued weapon belonging to U.S. Border Patrol Agent Ignacio "Nacho" Ramos, a 96D Beretta .40 caliber automatic pistol, serial number BER067069M, fired a bullet (a .40 caliber Smith & Wesson jacketed hollow point) which hit the victim in the left buttocks while he was attempting to flee to Mexico.

The second document, a ballistics report completed by the Texas Department of Public Safety, interests Ramirez both because of the agency that did the testing and the results of the test.

"For some unexplained reason, U.S. Attorney Sutton had the ballistics test performed by the Texas Department of Public Safety in El Paso, rather than by the FBI," he said. "This was a federal issue that should have gone to the FBI and only to the FBI. The Texas Department of Public Safety had no business running a ballistics report on a federal case. The FBI handles all shooting incidents, whether it involves assaults or otherwise, concerning federal agents. DPS should have refused the case and demanded that the bullet be picked up by the FBI for analysis.

"If you ask the Texas DHS how many shooting cases they handle involving federal agents, they would have said, 'None'. Then, if you asked the FBI how many shooting cases they handle involving federal agents, they would have said, 'All of them.' Yet that isn't how it went in this case. Nothing was done by the rules."

The results of the ballistics tests were reported in a letter written by Joseph J. J. Correa, a Criminalist IV with the Texas DPS El Paso Laboratory, on March 18, 2005, and addressed to Brian D. Carter of DHS in El Paso.

The letter states that Correa examined one fired copper-jacketed bullet presented to him by Carter on March 17, 2005. The letter identifies the victim shot by the bullet as "Osvaldo Aldrete."

In the letter, Correa notes that he was asked to determine the manufacture of the firearm that fired the submitted bullet.

Correa could not positively identify Ramos's weapon as the one which fired the submitted bullet. His report concludes:

The copper-jacketed bullet was fired from a barrel having six lands and grooves inclined to the right. The manufacturer of the firearm that fired the copper-jacketed bullet is unknown, but could include commonly encountered models of .40 S&W caliber FN/Browning, Beretta, Heckler & Koch, and Ruger pistols.

Correa's report gives no indication the bullet submitted for analysis was disfigured or in fragments, despite having been supposedly extracted from Aldrete-Davila's body after reportedly doing massive damage to his groin area and hitting bone.

"The problem was that the ballistics report did not match the bullet to Ramos' gun," Ramirez said. "The ballistics report said the bullet could have been fired by any one of four different makes of gun. So, the affidavit of complaint against Ramos and Compean made a statement that was not substantiated by the ballistics report. That is a big problem for the prosecution. Their evidence does not support their accusation."

The arrest warrant issued for agent Ramos, a copy of which Ramirez also supplied WND, attests that Ramos was charged with, "Intentionally assaulting a Mexican national, one O.A.D., resulting in serious bodily injury." This conclusion is not supported by the ballistics letter written by Texas DPS specialist Correa.

WND has not investigative documents from the prosecutors which would establish the chain of evidence between the time the bullet was extracted from Aldrete-Davila's groin and the time Carter of DHS presented it to Correa for analysis.

"How do we know that the prosecutors didn't simply fire a round from Ramos' gun into gel?" Ramirez asks. "That could explain the nearly pristine bullet the prosecutors presented for ballistics analysis."

The failure of the prosecution ballistics reports to link the bullet with agent Ramos' weapon directly challenges a claim made by Sutton to WND in an exclusive interview. In that interview, Sutton claimed that agent Ramos hit Aldrete-Davila:

WND: So, Compean shot 14 times and missed everybody, but Ramos shot one time and hit the drug dealer in the buttocks?

Sutton: That's correct.

WND: Is Ramos that much better a shot than Compean?

Sutton: Ramos is a marksman.

WND has further learned the bullet was not extracted from Aldrete-Davila's body until DHS special agent Christopher R. Sanchez brought him back from Mexico, at some unspecified time after the February 17, 2005 incident in which Aldrete-Davila was supposedly wounded by agent Ramos' fire.

A doctor in Mexico had inserted a catheter to reverse the damage done to Aldrete-Davila's urethra, but did not extract the bullet.

The bullet was extracted by a U.S. Army doctor, at government expense. According to the physician, the bullet entered Aldrete-Davila's left buttock from the left side, traversed his groin, damaged the urethra, hitting bone in the process, and lodged in his right thigh. The bullet was extracted from Aldrete-Davila's right groin and he received reconstructive surgery for the damage done to his groin and urethra and a catheter was reinserted.

WND has obtained the post-operative release form for the U.S. operation. That document specifies that Aldrete-Davila was released to the custody of DHS special agent Christopher Sanchez. WND has not been able to obtain evidence regarding where Sanchez took Aldrete-Davila next, or why.

The Army doctor's description of the wound directly contradicts U.S. Attorney Sutton's repeated claim that agents Ramos and Compean shot Aldrete-Davila in the back.

The doctor clearly stated that the wound he observed was consistent with Aldrete-Davila turning to assume a "bladed position" with his left arm extended back toward the officers. This corroborates agent Ramos and Compean's claim they observed Aldrete-Davila turning back toward them while fleeing, extending his arm and holding an object in his hand that they took to be a weapon.

Aldrete-Davila is left-handed, consistent with the bullet entering his left buttock laterally as he fled and turned back toward the officers, possibly pointing a weapon at them.

"The doper after the surgery was transferred back to the personal custody of DHS special agent Sanchez," Ramirez said. "So Christopher Sanchez has both the doper and the bullet. Aldrete-Davila was not transferred to a hotel, escorted by federal marshals. Aldrete-Davila wasn't escorted from Mexico by the Mexican government. Everything involving Aldrete-Davila was left to the personal custody of Christopher Sanchez. Anything could have happened and who would know?"

WND is left to ask the following questions, which the Texas DPS ballistics analysis does not resolve:

How did Aldrete-Davila continue running far enough to cross the Rio Grande back into Mexico after he had been hit by a round that passed through his left buttock from the side and damaged his urethra before lodging in his right thigh? How do we know that the bullet extracted from Aldrete-Davila could not have been fired into him during an unrelated incident in Mexico subsequent to February 17, 2005, by a weapon among those of the type described in Correa's report?

Conceivably, agents Ramos and Compean did not hit fleeing drug smuggler Aldrete-Davila on February 17, 2005, despite firing multiple rounds at him.

"Johnny Sutton and his office have intentionally distorted and misrepresented the facts in this case," Ramirez charged. "There's something clearly wrong in the federal prosecutor's office in El Paso. The Ramos and Compean case is a witch hunt. Every law enforcement agent on the border from Border Patrol agents to ICE agents to deputy sheriffs and sheriffs have gotten the message."

What's the message, WND asked?

"The message is simple," Ramirez replied. "Enforce our drug laws aggressively on the border and you risk going to jail, not the drug dealers. We have a drug war going on along the Texas border and the U.S. government has backed off to the benefit of the drug lords.

Ramirez ended the interview with WND by noting: "After the Ramos and Compean case, no U.S. law enforcement officer on the border will ever again draw a weapon against a Mexican illegal transporting drugs without worrying that effort to enforce our laws may place him in jail, not the doper."

On August 17, 2006, Ramirez gave sworn testimony on the Ramos and Compean case to the U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary, a copy of which is posted on his website.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: aliens; borderagents; borderpatrol; compean; illegalimmigation; immigrantlist; immigration; ramos
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1 posted on 01/29/2007 2:14:24 AM PST by Man50D
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To: Man50D
Nearly two years after the conclusion of the trial, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas has yet to release a transcript of the trial.

!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!!!
This whole thing smells like a week old dead cat in July.

2 posted on 01/29/2007 2:20:13 AM PST by R. Scott (Humanity i love you because when you're hard up you pawn your Intelligence to buy a drink)
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To: Man50D
DHS informed the Texas Republican delegation the documents would not be turned over to them because the Democrats were now in control of Congress and Rep. McCaul was no longer chairman of the Investigations Subcommittee of the House Committee on Homeland Security.

ah, what the hell?
3 posted on 01/29/2007 2:25:24 AM PST by wafflehouse (When in danger, When in doubt, Run in circles, Scream and Shout!)
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To: Man50D
In an affidavit filed by DHS on March 15, 2005, with the U.S. District Court in the Western District of Texas, special agent Christopher R. Sanchez swore the following: Ballistics testing confirms a government-issued weapon belonging to U.S. Border Patrol Agent Ignacio "Nacho" Ramos, a 96D Beretta .40 caliber automatic pistol, serial number BER067069M, fired a bullet (a .40 caliber Smith & Wesson jacketed hollow point) which hit the victim in the left buttocks while he was attempting to flee to Mexico.

That is a pretty huge lie! This Christopher R. Sanchez character seems to be at the heart of a lot of the discrepancies and shady arrangements.

4 posted on 01/29/2007 2:31:37 AM PST by calcowgirl ("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." P. J. O'Rourke)
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To: R. Scott

I think the author screwed that one up. Compean and Ramos were convicted by the jury on March 8, 2006.


5 posted on 01/29/2007 2:32:27 AM PST by calcowgirl ("Liberalism is just Communism sold by the drink." P. J. O'Rourke)
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To: Man50D
Why all the technicalities?

The agents we doing there job. It's the system that failed them. I wouldn't want support groups on my behalf to cry conspiracy. I would want them to cry FOUL at this failed immigration policy with Mexico.
6 posted on 01/29/2007 2:59:02 AM PST by endthematrix (Both poverty and riches are the offspring of thought.)
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To: Man50D

Hasn't anybody brought up the old 'chain of evidence' question. Good grief. One of his buddies probably shot him because he lost the dope.


7 posted on 01/29/2007 3:27:35 AM PST by raybbr (You think it's bad now - wait till the anchor babies start to vote.)
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To: Man50D

George and Alberto won't let logic, patriotism or fair play get in the way of crucifying border agnets for doing a good job of fighting drug-delaing illegal invaders.

It might the Mexicans mad or discourage more illegal invaders from coming into America and taking low paying jobs from special interest groups who are lowering the American standard of life.


8 posted on 01/29/2007 3:43:05 AM PST by ZULU (Non nobis, non nobis Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam. God, guts and guns made America great.)
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To: Man50D
It's a heck of a note when border law enforcement agents get into an altercation with a Mexican drug smuggler and find out too late the drug smuggler has more friends in the Bush Administration than they have. If the President doesn't fix this one, and fix it soon, he will surely lose what little support he has left among conservatives.

And don't expect any help from the Democrat Congress, they must love every minute of this travesty for what it's doing to the GOP. I can just hear them now, "The President gives pardons to convicted drug dealers and allows his Department of Justice to "Nifong" Border Patrol Agents when they attempt to enforce our drug laws at the Mexican border."
9 posted on 01/29/2007 4:29:49 AM PST by DJ Taylor (Once again our country is at war, and once again the Democrats have sided with our enemy.)
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To: ZULU

"It might make the mexicans mad...."

There have been plenty of other Freepers on other threads who would go along with not wanting to make the mexicans mad and plenty of others who think these agents "got what they deserved". I hope, with more info coming to light, these jerks choke on the words they have written here.


10 posted on 01/29/2007 4:30:48 AM PST by freeangel ( (free speech is only good until someone else doesn't like what you say))
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To: Man50D

I'd say that, regardless of their intent and actions during the shooting, cops who shoot 15 times, then pick up their brass and fail to file a shooting report, are asking for whatever trouble a prosecutor chooses to make for them.


11 posted on 01/29/2007 4:55:30 AM PST by DWPittelli
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To: R. Scott

Sure does.


12 posted on 01/29/2007 5:32:33 AM PST by Dante3
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To: DJ Taylor

Exactly.


13 posted on 01/29/2007 5:37:22 AM PST by Dante3
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To: Toddsterpatriot; Mase; expat_panama; nopardons; William Terrell

In case you've been wondering what Prof. Corsi's been up to. "Nearly a year" has become "[n]early two years." I guess Jan. 1st throws him off.


14 posted on 01/29/2007 5:43:23 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: DWPittelli
I'd say that, regardless of their intent and actions during the shooting, cops who shoot 15 times, then pick up their brass and fail to file a shooting report, are asking for whatever trouble a prosecutor chooses to make for them.

Oh yea, sure, these agents thought that nobody would know about the shooting because they didn't file a report???? Uh, I believe their supervisor was on the scene fairly pronto - I don't understand your incredulous lack of support for these agents in light of new evidence now coming out??
15 posted on 01/29/2007 5:54:09 AM PST by RushingWater
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To: Man50D
...no U.S. law enforcement officer on the border will ever again draw a weapon against a Mexican illegal transporting drugs without worrying that effort to enforce our laws may place him in jail, not the doper.

Could this be the objective of the open border mindset?

16 posted on 01/29/2007 6:08:58 AM PST by WesternPacific
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To: calcowgirl
In an affidavit filed by DHS on March 15, 2005, with the U.S. District Court in the Western District of Texas, special agent Christopher R. Sanchez swore the following:

Ballistics testing confirms a government-issued weapon belonging to U.S. Border Patrol Agent Ignacio "Nacho" Ramos, a 96D Beretta .40 caliber automatic pistol, serial number BER067069M, fired a bullet (a .40 caliber Smith & Wesson jacketed hollow point) which hit the victim in the left buttocks while he was attempting to flee to Mexico.


Contrasted with the actual contents of the lab report, this combination of documents provides prima facie of a FELONY by FBI agent Sanchez of PERJURY.

Remember that Congress impeached Bill Clinton for committing perjury. If perjury was so serious by Bill Clinton to impeace a sitting President, can we simply overlook it in the FBI? In Clinton's case, it was a one-time thing about Paula Jones.

But in the case of the FBI, it is probably going to happen again unless we put a stop to it. How many other people are going to go to jail based on lies from the same special agent? Or is it the culture of the entire office?
17 posted on 01/29/2007 6:40:02 AM PST by Moseley (http://www.ColdPeace.com)
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To: calcowgirl
Of course you can think that (that it is okay because a jury found them guilty). But I think it is abundantly obvious that the jury would probably not have found them guilty if the jury had known that the FBI special agent was LYING TO THEM about the ballistics report.

I think you also underestimate the tendency of juries to be railroaded by prosecutors. Most people assume defendants are guilty if the prosecutor says so. That is why it is essential that we police the police (and FBI) to eradicate any dishonesty or abuse.
18 posted on 01/29/2007 6:42:45 AM PST by Moseley (http://www.ColdPeace.com)
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To: DWPittelli
I'd say that, regardless of their intent and actions during the shooting, cops who shoot 15 times, then pick up their brass and fail to file a shooting report, are asking for whatever trouble a prosecutor chooses to make for them.

Would it change your opinion if you learned (as the White House and Prosecutor Sutton don't want you to know) that supervisors came on the scene shortly after and were informed directly, live, and that DHS procedures prefer a verbal report to a paper one?
19 posted on 01/29/2007 6:47:35 AM PST by Moseley (http://www.ColdPeace.com)
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To: Moseley

Sure it would. Please go on.


20 posted on 01/29/2007 6:48:16 AM PST by 1rudeboy
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