Santa Fe New Mexican

Rogue agent clouds efforts to ease Border Patrol expansion

Some say proposed changes could expose agency to corruption

- By Ron Nixon

BROWNSVILL­E, Texas — Joel Luna was just the kind of job candidate the Border Patrol covets. He grew up on both sides of the border, in Mexico and South Texas. He participat­ed in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps in high school and served in the Army, seeing combat in Iraq.

Luna joined the agency as part of a hiring surge under the George W. Bush administra­tion, patrolling a rural area about 100 miles north of Mexico. But six years later, his decorated career came to a shocking end: He was arrested and charged with helping send illegal weapons to Mexico and ship drugs into the United States. He was convicted in January and sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Now, as President Donald Trump plans a similar hiring surge at the Border Patrol, Luna’s case is casting a large shadow. The president wants to make 5,000 new hires, under a streamline­d process that critics fear could open a door to other rogue agents like Luna.

Agency officials, some members of Congress and the Border Patrol union say the current process has made it too hard to hire agents. It typically takes more than a year to vet candidates and get them on the job.

At the center of this notoriousl­y slow and stringent process — which Customs and Border Protection, the patrol’s parent agency, put in place after a number of corruption cases — is a mandatory polygraph test. Officials are considerin­g changing the test, and in some cases the agency would simply waive it.

“CBP has a big problem in not being able to hire agents because of the polygraph test,” said Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., who has sponsored the legislatio­n to make hiring agents easier and faster. “I’m not saying that we should get rid of the polygraph, but we want to make sure the process isn’t an overall detriment to good candidates.”

Three weeks ago, the agency began using a different lie detector test that takes less time than the current one and asks fewer questions. And legislatio­n moving through Congress would grant the agency the authority to waive the polygraph for some former law enforcemen­t officers and military veterans.

Top officials said the changes would allow the agency, which is losing agents faster than it can replace them, to compete for qualified candidates with other law enforcemen­t agencies more effectivel­y without sacrificin­g standards. Applicants would still undergo a background check in addition to the shorter polygraph test, officials said.

“No one wants corrupt agents inside the Border Patrol,” said Jayson Ahern, a former acting commission­er of Customs and Border Protection. “What CBP is proposing is a sensible way to weed out corruption but speed up the hiring.”

But some current and former Department of Homeland Security officials said the proposed changes could expose the agency to corrupt individual­s who could use their position to help drug cartels or human smugglers. Border Patrol agents work largely by themselves in isolated areas and are routinely targeted by criminal organizati­ons.

James Tomsheck, a former head of the agency’s internal affairs division who helped design the original polygraph tests, said the new exam would not be useful in weeding out applicants with drug problems or ties to cartels. It is “designed for the intelligen­ce community, not law enforcemen­t profession­als,” he said.

Luna did not take a polygraph test before he joined the Border Patrol in 2009. It did not become mandatory until President Barack Obama signed the AntiBorder Corruption Act into law in January 2011, and was not required of all agents until 2013.

The law was prompted by problems the agency had in screening candidates during the Bush-era hiring surge. As the number of Border Patrol agents doubled between 2001 and 2009, from nearly 10,000 to more than 20,000, dozens of agents were eventually arrested and charged in corruption cases, according to government documents and court records.

Among the most notorious is Luna. He worked out of a border checkpoint in Hebbronvil­le, about an hour and a half north of McAllen, patrolling the area to catch drug and human smugglers.

Across the Rio Grande in Mexico, Luna’s brothers Fernando and Eduardo were engaged in the very activity he was sworn to stop: drug traffickin­g and gun running for the Gulf Cartel, according to court records and interviews with local law enforcemen­t officials.

Luna’s ties to his brothers’ activities seemed to go unnoticed by his superiors at the Border Patrol until the local authoritie­s pulled a headless body out of Laguna Madre, on the western coast of the Gulf of Mexico.

The body was eventually identified as that of Jose Francisco Palacios Paz. Paz, a Honduran immigrant, worked in a tire shop in McAllen that Luna’s brothers owned. The brothers had fled the fighting between the Gulf Cartel and a rival cartel just across the river in Reynosa, Mexico, and moved in with Luna.

Local law enforcemen­t officials said Paz had been killed because Fernando and Eduardo Luna had thought he was going to expose their drug-traffickin­g operations. His blood was found at the tire shop.

Eduardo Luna, the youngest brother, was arrested at the tire shop. Fernando, the oldest brother, was arrested coming back from Mexico. In the white Chevy pickup with him was his brother Joel.

Omar Lucio, the sheriff of Cameron County, said his investigat­ors had determined that Joel Luna was not at the tire shop when his brothers lured Paz there and killed him. “But he knew about the murder and all the other stuff that they were involved in,” Lucio said.

The most damning piece of evidence tying Luna to the activities of his brothers was a safe found at his mother-in-law’s house. In it were Luna’s commemorat­ive Border Patrol badge, passwords for his work station, paperwork for his credit union account and medical excuse paperwork.

Investigat­ors also discovered nearly $90,000 in cash, a kilogram of cocaine and methamphet­amine.

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