Posted on 03/05/2007 9:16:23 AM PST by pissant
I would like to thank Polipundit and Michael Illions, who has been helping out my campaign, for giving me the opportunity to write a guest post about the injustice that has been done to two of our border guards, Jose Alonso Compean and Ignacio Ramos, both of whom have been sentenced to jail for more than a decade each.
Now certainly our border patrol agents are not above the law and it is not acceptable for them to abuse or mistreat illegal aliens. That being said, the Border Patrol is Americas first line of defense against the terrorists, drug smugglers, and gangs who try to illegally enter the United States. Acting as the first line of defense for our country, the men and women of the Border Patrol are in a very dangerous position. Every day they risk their lives guarding our borders.
I have read the relevant portions of the trial transcript. Agents Ramos and Compean have a version of the facts that is different than the drug smugglers. However, it is not necessary to determine whose testimony is more believable (although I find the Border Agents testimony more credible than the drug smugglers) for this reason: even if you believe the drug smugglers testimony that he was slightly wounded while escaping to Mexico, his wounding cannot, by the greatest stretch of criminal justice, justify the 11 and 12 year prison sentences given to Ramos and Compean. The average convicted murderer in America spends less than 8 1/2 years behind bars. That means that Ramos and Compean have been given murder sentences for the slight wounding of a drug smuggler. Thus, the prison sentences of these two agents represent a severe injustice.
For those who point out that the agents picked up the expended brass from their pistols after the incident and did not report it to their superiors, the answer is simply that picking up brass and failure to report is not murder and does not justify a murder sentence in the federal penitentiary. As a member of the Armed Services Committee for 26 years, I have never seen a Marine or soldier treated as severely as Ramos and Compean.
We cannot turn our back on Agents Compean and Ramos or the rest of the public servants in the U.S. Border Patrol and thats why I urge George Bush to pardon both agents. I intend to keep attention focused on this case to insure their safety while they are in prison and to secure their release as soon as possible so they can return home to their families. That is also why I introduced H.R. 563, which would pardon Compean and Ramos. The bill already has more than 85 sponsors in the House. If that bill fails and President Bush does not do the right thing, I pledge that if Im elected President, one of my first acts will be to grant pardons to both agents.
Mary Stillinger is no young pup and has been trying cases against Kanof for many years. She has a good reputation among the legal community in El Paso, according to my source-who admittedly is a friend of hers.
Perhaps Ramos didn't have the resources to help her put on a really good case.
I'm beginning to wonder if the union unduly influenced Ramos and Compean to believe that they couldn't get convicted. During Compean's administrative review for suspension, his union rep kept expressing that he thought they would be exonerated.
Had I been Mary Stillinger and offered a year's probation in a half-way house (or whatever the offer was--I know it was good), I would have been on my knees begging him to take it. From what I understand, he could have done his time and then been able to hire on as a deputy or officer--though not law enforcement at the federal level.
No, I don't think so. I read the testimony as Compean facing Davila with each one on the opposite lip because of the following part of the testimony I last posted.
13 Q. The -- let me point you to points B and C. Is that where 14 the irrigation ditch is, the drainage ditch?
I rather think that Mr. Loya meant the internal part of the ditch which would be 30 feet. The north and south slopes would account for the remaining 13 feet. The water would be somewhere in the bottom 30 feet. But, I suppose that it could be 13 feet from the bottom of the levee slope. That would produce
__ \ \ \ \__ ______ \ / \ / \_____WW____/ 17-30-13-------30--------| Not to scale.
>>The defendants stipulated that Ramos wounded OAD.That is as strong of evidence that is needed. There is no point to put any additional evidence. In fact if you tried, that would upset the judge for wasting the court's time. I don't know where you get your info from, but if you think the prosecutor 'bluffed' the defendants into a stipulation on this point, I have a bridge to sell you. Your whole post is full of ifs and possibly. that is not how a trial works. Why do think the defense stipulated that Ramos shot and wounded OAD?<<
Thanks.
I looked at the transcript again and could not find the weaker testimony I thought I read. So I was probably mistaken. Honest mistake. I apologize.
This was just something I had been wondering about, but now it's becoming clearer.
Caving? Did you miss the part about the foreman passing on information from the judge that was not correct? Or maybe he was correct and a hung jury is not an allowable outcome? I have not been in on any other threads discussing any caving. I discuss the testimony and what it shows.
Mr Loya spoke highly of his son-in-law's attorneys, Ms. Stillinger, and Mr. Peters. But I still don't understand how they allowed Kanof to savage Ignacio.
It will take me a while to catch up on this thread, as I can't spend much time today. As to Maria Ramirez, from the transcripts of jury selection, I remember her mentioning that she was a municipal court judge.
4 MS. RAMIREZ: Your Honor, I had submitted amended 5 proposed jury questions to the Court. And the only other 6 questions I wanted the Court to ask the panel was if they knew 7 me, because I was a municipal court judge.
If you google her name, you will find that she was elected in 2001 and then reelected, in a June 2005 runoff election, as Judge of El Paso Municipal Court No. 1 (The May 2005 election did not result in a clear winner, hence the runoff). Was the Compean defense just a second or third job for her? I did hear Compean's wife on local radio a couple months ago. She said something like "Ms. Ramirez did the best she could do..." The tone of the comment was very kind and generous--at the time I wondered if Ramirez was a family friend representing Compean as a favor of some kind.
Also, I just checked the Court Docket for when Antcliff filed with the court. Sure enough, he was very late to the party (the trial started 2/21/2006.)
Notice of attorney appearance for Jose Alonso Compean Maria B. Ramirez - Entered: 04/01/2005 Christopher Allen Antcliff - Entered: 02/17/2006 Notice of attorney appearance for Ignacio Ramos Mary Stillinger - Entered: 04/14/2005 Stephen Gordon Peters - Entered: 04/01/2005
"But I still don't understand how they allowed Kanof to savage Ignacio."
By allowing their clients to testify.
I understand, apology accepted. I have wondered why the defense stipulated to this evidence and the only explanation that I could think of, is that it was part of the trial strategy to lessen the exposure of the defendants on cross exam from the prosecutor and maybe to bolster for the jury the legal justification argument. "We come here telling the truth and admitting Ramos shot OAD, but we were justified in our actions. Believe everything we are telling you."
I'm wondering if the financial penalty that Kanof attached to that plea deal (i.e. paying all of OAD's medical bills) was what made them decline the offer. Ramos already had financial problems at the time of trial (he was basically broke at the time).
10 Q. Okay. And so from point C to point B, that's -- C to B is
11 43 feet, correct?
12 A. Yes.
13 Q. And then from point B to point A, which is the canal road,
14 that's an additional 15 feet?
15 A. Yes.
Assuming the "canal road" is the levee road, point B looks like the north edge of the canal road. The 13 feet you're missing is the levee slope to the edge of the ditch...as I said before.
22 Q. Okay. Okay. Well, let's assume it is. And I think
23 this -- so you're saying the van driver is back there, and
24 you're standing on the lip of the road, and you see his eyes?
LIP OF THE ROAD, not edge of the ditch. Am I the only one who sees this stuff right off?
"I'm wondering if the financial penalty that Kanof attached to that plea deal (i.e. paying all of OAD's medical bills) was what made them decline the offer. Ramos already had financial problems at the time of trial (he was basically broke at the time)."
Possibly but they could have raised that in 24 hours on Free Republic alone. I would have donated.
I doubt if the restitution would have made them decline the plea bargain. Restitution is typically part of a plea bargain and the defendants are normally given time over the probationary period to pay the restitution. I think that they could raise the $ from their supporters given some time.
Rep. Hunter's BP policy is only one small facet in a multitude of reasons why he should be our next President.
And according to today's leftist one-two attempted punches, he is doing very well, thank you.
Where have you been guy? He was an excellent witness. Savaging was putting words in his mouth, badgering him, and actually lying about what he testified to.
A bad witness was Juarez, who never saw Ramos, who would have been to his right and above him towards the van just behind Davila, yet he testified that Ramos chased Davila into the vega.
If you were a federal prosecutor, would you have prosecuted them? The prosecutor did have discretion not to.
>>"I'm wondering if the financial penalty that Kanof attached to that plea deal (i.e. paying all of OAD's medical bills) was what made them decline the offer. Ramos already had financial problems at the time of trial (he was basically broke at the time)."
Possibly but they could have raised that in 24 hours on Free Republic alone. I would have donated.<<
I don't know how much that amount would have been. OAD went to the Beaumont military hospital, and you know how the government charges (you are a taxpayer after all). Going by the amounts collected by the "victim" in the Sipe case, I wonder. Also, wouldn't agreeing to a payment like this give ammunition to OAD's civil case against the agents?
If Free Republic gave unlimited funds to the agents, I think we might have seen an "OJ" defense team, which would not have stipulated to the chain of evidence.
What does it mean when you agree to pay $500 a month and you can't pay it? Does that violate the plea agreement, and then what?
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