Los Angeles Times

Suspect in killing extradited to U.S.

- By Kate Linthicum kate.linthicum@latimes.com

MEXICO CITY — A member of a drug-robbery ring suspected in the 2010 shooting death of a Border Patrol agent in Arizona has been extradited from Mexico to stand trial in the United States.

Heraclio “Laco” Osorio Arellanes was transporte­d to the U.S. on Tuesday, according to a statement by Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions. Osorio-Arellanes is charged with several crimes including first-degree murder and is expected to be arraigned Wednesday in Tucson, the statement said.

U.S. officials say Osorio Arellanes was a part of a group of bandits who engaged in a 2010 shootout with Brian Terry and three other Border Patrol agents in southern Arizona.

Terry, 40, a member of an elite Border Patrol tactical team, was killed in the nighttime incident. One alleged shooter was shot in the torso and unable to run, while five other suspects fled to Mexico and went into hiding.

Osorio-Arellanes has been in custody since he was arrested last year by Mexican authoritie­s in the “Golden Triangle,” a region where three states intersect and drug cartels control vast stretches of territory. Authoritie­s say he was a part of a “rip crew” that had sneaked across the border and was headed to rob marijuana dealers.

According to court testimony, Border Patrol agents noticed the six-man crew armed with “long rifles and backpacks” and ordered them to stop. The group responded with gunfire. Terry was struck by a single bullet.

Two of the weapons recovered from the scene were later traced to the Justice Department-sanctioned gun-tracking operation known as Fast and Furious, which allowed weapons to be illegally sold in the U.S. so they could later be tracked across the border to drug cartels in Mexico.

The intent was to arrest cartel leaders, but most of the firearms disappeare­d.

Terry’s death unraveled the program and triggered one of the biggest political controvers­ies of President Obama’s first term, driving out the head of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which ran it.

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