Albuquerque Journal

Was border agent beaten to death, or did he fall?

FBI investigat­ing case as an assault

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EL PASO — A mysterious incident last weekend that left one Border Patrol agent dead in West Texas and another critically injured is being investigat­ed as a possible attack, officials said.

“There are a number of possible scenarios, but right now we are going to pursue it as an assault on a federal agent,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Emmerson Buie Jr. said during a Tuesday briefing in El Paso. “This is the most important investigat­ion in the El Paso division of the FBI. We will be aggressive­ly investigat­ing all leads.”

Agent Rogelio “Roger” Martinez, 36, a four-year veteran, was found with “traumatic head injuries” and broken bones at 11:20 p.m. Nov. 18 near Interstate­10 about 12 miles east of Van Horn after responding to a triggered sensor, Buie said.

Martinez was sent to a hospital in El Paso and died from head injuries on Nov. 19. Autopsy results are pending.

The union representi­ng Border Patrol officers said the two agents were attacked by migrants wielding rocks. Chris Cabrera, a union spokesman and veteran agent based in McAllen, Texas, said that calling the incident an assault was “insulting,” and he faulted federal officials for “downplayin­g” the incident instead of investigat­ing it as a potential homicide.

“He didn’t get punched in the neck. He’s dead,” Cabrera said.

Martinez’s partner, whose name has not been released, also suffered head injuries, according to Victor Velazquez, acting chief of the Border Patrol’s Big Bend sector, who called the agent “young and dedicated.”

That agent was discharged from the hospital on Wednesday.

“Our men and women deal with the constant presence of the unknown, ranging from those seeking illegal entry into the U.S., (to) smugglers of human cargo and/or drugs, transnatio­nal crime organizati­ons and dangerous terrain,” Velazquez said.

The agents were found at the bottom of a 9-foot-deep culvert in an area known for drug activity, FBI and union officials said, leading to speculatio­n that they might have fallen. The remote Big Bend sector, which includes almost a quarter of the southern border, is far from a migrant hot spot — mountains and a 510-mile stretch of the Rio Grande provide a natural barrier — but the Border Patrol reported an uptick last spring in drug smuggling all along the Texas border, with seizures of cocaine and heroin more than doubling.

Brandon Judd, president of the San Diego-based National Border Patrol Council union that represents agents, insisted the pair were attacked with rocks by a group of illegal border-crossers they were pursuing. Martinez’s partner called for backup when he found him, but by the time backup arrived, the partner was also injured, Cabrera said.

By Tuesday, officials had canvassed the area where the incident occurred, about 110 miles east of El Paso, and were investigat­ing the death as an assault, Buie said. He announced a $25,000 FBI reward for informatio­n leading to the arrest and conviction of those involved. That’s in addition to a $20,000 reward announced by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday.

“There’s no way he fell,” Cabrera said of the agent who died. “Border Patrol agents are like mountain goats. They don’t fall. Especially two at the same spot.”

In the area where the agents were found, ditches run beside the roads, he said. “Even in the dark, they know it’s there. These guys are familiar with that area. They work that area day in and day out.”

Martinez, an El Paso native, is survived by fiancee Angie Ochoa and his 11-year-old son, Sergio, officials said. He was the 125th Border Patrol agent to die in the line of duty, according to Velazquez, but the list includes natural and accidental deaths. Fatal attacks on agents are rare. Only a handful have occurred in the past decade, including shootings and an assault with a vehicle by a fleeing suspect.

 ?? BRIAN VAN DER BRUG/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? U.S. Border Patrol agents search heavy brush for migrants after they illegally crossed the Rio Grande in Fronton, Texas, in March. The FBI is investigat­ing a possible attack on two border agents.
BRIAN VAN DER BRUG/LOS ANGELES TIMES U.S. Border Patrol agents search heavy brush for migrants after they illegally crossed the Rio Grande in Fronton, Texas, in March. The FBI is investigat­ing a possible attack on two border agents.

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