Prosecutors want death penalty for immigrant
Appeal pursued against mentally disabled man
Prosecutors asked an Arizona appeals court to let them pursue the death penalty against a Mexican immigrant charged with murder in the 2015 shooting death of a convenience store clerk.
A lower-court judge ruled two weeks ago that prosecutors could no longer seek the death penalty against Apolinar Altamirano because he is intellectually disabled. They said Altamirano had completed only the fifth grade and needed special education courses, but none was offered in rural Mexico where he lived before moving to the U.S.
In an appeal filed a week ago, prosecutors asked the Arizona Court of Appeals to reinstate their effort to seek the death penalty in the shooting death of clerk Grant Ronnebeck, 21, arguing the judge failed to make an overall assessment of Altamirano’s ability to meet society’s expectations of him. The judge “did not give any consideration at all to Altamirano’s ability (to) adapt and adjust to the requirements of daily life as an adult,” prosecutors wrote in the appeal.
They noted Altamirano learned to drive at an early age, traveled on his own to the U.S. as teenager, operated rental properties in the U.S., served as an elder in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and advised his mother on visas and exchange rates.
Joel Brown, one of the lawyers representing Altamirano, didn’t return an email Monday seeking comment on the appeal.
The case against Altamirano has been cited by President Donald Trump, who has railed against crimes committed against American citizens by immigrants who are the U.S. illegally. Trump, who has created a new office to serve victims of immigration crimes and their relatives, has invoked such crimes at rallies, pointing out cases in which people were killed by
immigrant assailants who slipped through the cracks.
Altamirano is a citizen of Mexico who has lived in the U.S. without authorization for about 20 years. He was deported after a marijuana possession arrest and returned to the U.S.
He is accused of fatally shooting Ronnebeck after the store clerk insisted that Altamirano pay for a pack of cigarettes. Authorities say Altamirano stepped over Ronnebeck to get several packs of cigarettes before leaving the store.
He led officers on a high-speed chase before his arrest, and handguns and unopened cigarettes were later found in his vehicle, police said.
Altamirano has already been sentenced to six years in prison for his earlier guilty pleas in the case to misconduct involving weapons.
He still faces murder, robbery and other charges in Ronnebeck’s death. He has pleaded not guilty to the remaining charges. His trial is scheduled for Aug. 1.
In an October decision, a judge prohibited prosecutors from introducing evidence at Altamirano’s trial that he was in the U.S. illegally. The judge said the prejudice from Altamirano’s immigration status outweighs any relevance it may have.
The U.S. Supreme Court in 2002 barred the execution of intellectually disabled people.