Albuquerque Journal

Border Patrol agent on trial in death

Teenager killed while throwing rocks

- BY ANITA SNOW ASSOCIATED PRESS

TUCSON — A rock-throwing teenager didn’t deserve to die when a U.S. Border Patrol agent hit him with 10 shots as he stood on a street on the Mexican side of the border, prosecutor­s said Wednesday at the start of murder trial of the federal officer who contends he fired because he was in danger.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Sue Feldmeier acknowledg­ed in opening statements that Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez was throwing rocks over the fence to help drug smugglers by serving as a distractio­n as they returned to Mexico after leaving backpacks of marijuana in the U.S.

But she said the teen didn’t deserve the death penalty for his crime and agent Lonnie Swartz “became the judge, the jury and the executione­r” when he killed the 16-year-old in 2012.

Swartz has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.

Civil rights attorneys say the trial in U.S. District Court before Judge Raner C. Collins appears to be the first Justice Department prosecutio­n of a Border Patrol agent in a deadly shooting across the internatio­nal boundary.

It comes amid President Donald Trump’s campaign for a wall along the 2,000-mile U.S.Mexican border and his crackdown on illegal immigratio­n.

Defense attorney Sean Chapman told the jury Swartz was protecting himself and other agents when he fired across the border and Rodriguez put himself in danger by throwing rocks at the officers.

Rocks, including some larger than baseballs, were thrown by several people in Nogales, Mexico, into Nogales, Ariz., and hit another agent in the foot and also struck a police dog, according to Chapman.

“This is not a game, this is serious, this is dangerous,” Chapman said. “There was a real risk that Lonnie Swartz faced that night. Rocks kill. Rocks maim. Rocks can crack a skull or take an eye out or break a bone.”

Prosecutor­s say Swartz opened fire at about 11:30 p.m. on Oct. 10, 2012, through metal poles of a 20-foot fence that sits on a 25-foot embankment above Mexico’s Calle Internacio­nal, a street lined with homes and small businesses.

An autopsy showed the unarmed teen was shot 10 times. The prosecutor said the teenager was struck eight times in the back and twice in the head.

Swartz is on administra­tive leave pending the outcome of the trial.

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