The Columbus Dispatch

Mystery surrounds death of Border Patrol agent

- By Caitlin Dickerson

President Donald Trump called it proof of the need to build a wall; Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said it was a “stark reminder” of insecurity along the border.

To everyone, it seemed like a horrendous example of the dangers that Border Patrol officers face as they cover vast, remote and unforgivin­g territorie­s.

But a month after a middle-of-the-night incident in which one Border Patrol agent was killed and another, who is said to have no memory of what happened, was severely injured, no one seems to know how the men came into harm’s way off an interstate in West Texas.

It was initially thought to be an attack, perhaps by migrants or drug smugglers. But the FBI says it also is possible the men were hurt accidental­ly. The Culberson County sheriff, Oscar Carrillo, who is helping with the investigat­ion, seemed to favor that theory when he told The Dallas Morning News that the men could have been hit by a truck driving along the interstate next to where they were found.

“If this was an assault, believe me, as sheriff, I’d be the first one out there emphasizin­g safety in our community and with our deputies, pairing them up,” he told the newspaper. “But from what I know and see, that was not the case here.”

That hypothesis has angered the border agents’ union, the National Border Patrol Council, whose leadership fiercely insists that the men were attacked. Chris Cabrera, a spokesman for the organizati­on, went as far as to call Carrillo a “dingbat” on his weekly podcast.

“All these other theories, it’s tarnishing the name of our agents,” he said in an interview.

The immediate, politicize­d reactions from Trump, Cruz and other elected officials have died down, as weeks have passed without any more clarity as to what happened.

It was just after 11 p.m. on Nov. 18, when, according to the FBI, the two agents at the heart of the mystery responded to unspecifie­d “activity” near a culvert, or drainage tunnel, that carries water underneath Interstate 10 near Van Horn.

One of the agents, Stephen Garland, then called for help. When colleagues arrived, they found both men with major head injuries and broken bones, and took them to a local hospital. The men then were flown to a larger hospital in El Paso, where agent Rogelio Martinez died early the next morning.

Jeanette Harper, a spokeswoma­n for the FBI, said the agency had collected forensic evidence that was being analyzed at its laboratory in Quantico, Virginia, and was also “aggressive­ly” following up on leads that came into a tip line.

Angie Ochoa, who was engaged to marry Martinez, said she even went to the scene of the incident after she became fed up with the shifting accounts of what may have happened. “None of it made sense, so I wanted to see for myself,” she said.

Martinez’s father, Jose Martinez, said that after seeing his son in the hospital, he thought the injuries were too severe to have been caused by an accident. “I believe someone put a trap,” he said.

 ?? [IVAN PIERRE AGUIRRE/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? A Border Patrol vehicle is parked next to the border fence between El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Two Border Patrol agents were attacked, one fatally, in the Texas desert on Nov. 19, 2017.
[IVAN PIERRE AGUIRRE/THE NEW YORK TIMES] A Border Patrol vehicle is parked next to the border fence between El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Two Border Patrol agents were attacked, one fatally, in the Texas desert on Nov. 19, 2017.

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