Imperial Valley Press

Pier Shooting

Murder trial starts for man who stoked US immigratio­n debate.

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A Mexican national who touched off a debate on illegal immigratio­n when he fatally shot a woman on a San Francisco pier fired the gun on purpose, a prosecutor said Monday in her opening statement at his trial.

Deputy District Attorney Diana Garcia showed jurors the Zarate handgun

that Jose Ines Garcia Zarate is accused of firing and said a ballistics expert will testify that the only way to fire it is to pull the trigger.

“It’s a very reliable, high-quality gun,” Garcia said. “It’s one that won’t go off on accident.”

Garcia Zarate’s lawyer, Matt Gonzalez, countered that his client did not know he had picked up a gun when he reached under a bench and found something wrapped in a T-shirt. The lawyer said the gun had no safety and operated on a hair-trigger motion. “He did not know he was handling a firearm,” Gonzalez said.

He added: “This gun is inherently dangerous in the hands of someone who isn’t properly trained.”

Gonzalez asked jurors if they believed prosecutor­s would have charged “a college student or Swedish tourist” with murder if they were the suspects instead of Garcia Zarate.

The shooting in 2015 touched off a political furor during last year’s presidenti­al race, with President Donald Trump citing the killing of 32-year-old Kate Steinle as a reason to toughen U.S. immigratio­n policies.

The handgun belonged to a Bureau of Land Management ranger who reported that it had been stolen from his parked car in San Francisco a week before Steinle was shot.

Prosecutor­s called Steinle’s father as their first witness.

Through tears, with a packed courtroom hanging on every word, Jim Steinle recounted the final moments of his daughter’s life after she was shot.

He told the court that he and a family friend were visiting his daughter and they went for a walk on the popular waterfront.

The elder Steinle said he heard a loud “bang” and his daughter collapsed in his arms, saying “’help me, Dad.’”

Jim Steinle said her eyes were closed and she had trouble breathing.

“I couldn’t figure out what was wrong,” he said, choking back tears. “She didn’t have any health problems.”

He rolled her on her side and discovered a bullet hole with little blood. Paramedics arrived and she was later declared dead at a hospital.

Garcia Zarate, 54, has acknowledg­ed shooting Steinle in the back. He has said he was handling the handgun when it accidental­ly fired.

Garcia Zarate is charged with second-degree murder, which could result in a sentence of 15 years to life in prison if he is convicted.

 ??  ?? Brad Steinle, the brother of Kate Steinle (left), and his wife Amy walk to a courthouse in San Francisco on Monday. A trial begins this week for Jose Ines Garcia Zarate, a Mexican man who set off a national immigratio­n debate after he fatally shot Kate...
Brad Steinle, the brother of Kate Steinle (left), and his wife Amy walk to a courthouse in San Francisco on Monday. A trial begins this week for Jose Ines Garcia Zarate, a Mexican man who set off a national immigratio­n debate after he fatally shot Kate...
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