Posted on 03/13/2003 8:08:49 AM PST by wildbill
Slain girl's mom files $30 million lawsuit
Claiming federal agents had no reason to use deadly force against her daughter, the mother of a slain 14-year-old girl filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the two agents who she claims fired at Ashley Villarreal. The complaint seeks $30 million and potentially offers the most public review of the Feb. 9 encounter between the teenager and agents who were waiting to arrest her father, cocaine-trafficking suspect Joey Villarreal.
The case was filed in federal court a day after authorities asserted that Joey Villarreal knew about the stakeout and that his daughter was acting as a decoy when she drove along the street with her headlights off.
When investigators tried to stop her sedan, officials said, she rammed their unmarked vehicles and accelerated toward agents, who opened fire without being able to see who was at the wheel.
A lawyer for the girl's mother, Deborah De Luna Villarreal, dismissed this account as "the government laying out an alternate reality."
"I think there is a grave danger that reality is going to be distorted dramatically," said the attorney, Marynell Maloney. "How is a 14-year-old girl responsible to such a degree that she should be killed?"
The lawsuit is directed at two agents who, it asserts, are believed to have fired at the car: Bill Swierc and Jeff Kinnaman. The agents could not be reached for comment.
Authorities have not said who fired the fatal shot.
Maloney said a similar complaint against the agents' employer, the Drug Enforcement Administration, is in the works. Lawyers for Joey Villarreal have indicated they are preparing their own civil suit.
Should the case go to trial, it would offer possibly the most public review of the shooting at the intersection of South San Joaquin and Motes streets.
While the DEA and the San Antonio Police Department are separately examining the incident, it is unclear whether their findings will be released in detail.
A DEA spokesman, noting that the reviews still are under way, said it would be inappropriate for the agency to comment on the lawsuit.
The narrative described in the lawsuit says Ashley believed the agents were gang members. It also faults investigators for not seeing the girl climb into the car, emphasizing that minutes earlier she and a friend had put garbage cans on the stoop.
"This is a girl who's carrying out the trash, standing out there in the streetlight, and they're shooting her dead moments later," Maloney said. "It doesn't add up."
Described by Maloney as traumatized and grieving, Ashley's mother wasn't at a news conference held at the lawyer's office Wednesday.
Maloney said that, while the lawsuit seeks $10 million in actual damages and $20 million in punitive damages, what Ashley's mom wants most is to prove that her daughter was a victim.
"The numbers are really difficult to determine. What is the worth of human life?" Maloney said. "The main point is this thing shouldn't have happened."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- mrobbins@express-news.net
03/13/2003
Click here to return
Do you believe that a 14 year old girl would be practicing driving with her uncle at night with no lights on?
But if they did, how much would a daughter or son be worth?
Personally, I'd sue for a lot more than $30M.
It sounds to me as if the mother is angling for a settlement.
Prediction time?
My tea leaves say:
* case settled out of court (but for the full amount)
* DEA perps get "promoted" to lifetime meter maid positions, or (and perhaps more likely) see early "retirements" for health reasons
Unresolved issue:
* Does the DEA have meter maids?
She can't get a driver's permit until 15, but she was practicing at 14.
Her uncle was in the car teaching her, but he didn't go over the check points to make sure she turned her lights on.
When she hit the car in front of her, she then put the car in reverse and hit the car behind her. She then put the car back into drive and accelerated at officers who had guns drawn. All while her uncle was "teaching her how to drive."
This is what you are asserting?
He musta been teaching her drug dealer driving.
Irrelevant. You have a 14 year old girl, with no license, "operating" a motor vehicle. If you go to the root of the problem, the girl shouldn't have been behind the wheel, in the first place. If this were the case, this never would have happened.
Priceless, well thought out paragraph that makes perfect sense to me. For what it's worth, and I'm not kissing a*s here; you're one of the few participators in this thread who is GENUINELY making sense, introducing and subsequently validating excellent points.
Per the original story, she was moving the car to the garage at the back of the home. The car had been washed and waxed earlier, and it was going to rain soon. She asked if she could pull it around back under her uncle's supervision. He owned the car. No one claimed she was driving up and down the street "practicing" anything. Moving a car around the block would be a very typical thing a youngster would be allowed to do as "practice".
Do you believe that a vehicle driven by a 14 year old is less dangerous than a vehicle driven by a 40 year old?
Irrelevant question. Situation explained above.
Do you believe that a person has the right of self-defense?
Yes, especially when two cars box you in at dusk/after dark.
Do you believe that you should check the age of a person threatening your life before you take action to stop them from doing so?
I do not believe DEA agents, who supposedly have top-notch training, could reasonably believe they were being threatened by a person in a boxed-in car.
The DEA agents cleary made a situation out of a non-situation by not using common sense.
So your assertion is that a 14, look at that number, year old was practicing driving with her Uncle at night with no lights on?
She can't get a driver's permit until 15, but she was practicing at 14.
Her uncle was in the car teaching her, but he didn't go over the check points to make sure she turned her lights on.
What exactly was she supposed to be a decoy for?
How did her father even know undercover DEA agents were outside if she was supposed to be a decoy for something?
Since the claim is that she was a decoy, Did he(the father) try to "flee" during the ordeal? Use a decoy, but sit there?
So, how often does underage driving, with an adult supervising, result in a shootout with the DEA??
Her uncle was in the car but not driving. DEA says she was a decoy. Family says she was learning to drive and wanted to drive the car around block and put it in garage.
Ok, I'm sorry. When I read that the "Family says she was learning to drive" I assumed that meant she was practicing.
Why were the lights off on the car? Did the family normally leave a spot open in their garage for the Uncle's car? Did she hit two cars, and then drive at agents who had their guns drawn?
A lot of questions.
Of course, on this thread you would have thought that the agents hit her car and then just walked up to the window and shot her.
There are many cases where the DEA has overstepped every possible limit, but this is not one of those cases. Hanging your anti-WOD agenda on this case is like Pro-lifers hanging their case on a nutjob who kills an abortionist. It weakens your message.
You say you love this country, but you hate all laws and anyone who would enforce them.
Which details are made up?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.