Albuquerque Journal

El Paso border chief’s husband faces sex charges

Former senior agent indicted by Ariz. grand jury

- BY ANGELA KOCHERGA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

A former senior Border Patrol agent married to the interim chief of the El Paso sector has been charged with sexually assaulting a female agent in Arizona.

Gus Zamora, 51, was indicted by a Pima County grand jury in July on three counts of felony sexual assault and one felony count of kidnapping. He retired at the end of July.

During a pre-trial conference on Monday his trial was set for April 28.

A female Border Patrol agent called police

to report a sexual assault on May 25. The woman, a junior agent, told authoritie­s she considered Zamora a mentor. She said that at dinner at a restaurant in Tucson, Zamora bought several rounds of tequila shots and other drinks and then took her back to his hotel room and forced himself on her. Zamora has pleaded not guilty and told police the sex was consensual.

He was arrested in July, the same month his wife, Gloria Chavez, a highrankin­g Border Patrol Chief, took the helm of the troubled El Paso sector that includes all of New Mexico.

Chief Chavez in an interview with the Journal said improving conditions in the field is among her top priorities. She has gotten high marks from the local agents’ union in the two months she’s been on the job.

The Border Patrol’s handling of her husband’s case, though, is raising questions. Zamora retired on July 31 before an internal investigat­ion was complete.

“They allowed him to resign and get his full benefits so nothing could happen to him,” said Jenn Budd, a former Border Patrol agent.

Budd, an agent from 1995 to 2001, said, “Every woman in the Border Patrol has received some sort of sexual harassment.” She said she was sexually assaulted by a classmate at the Border Patrol academy, adding that leadership has failed female agents who report sexual assaults.

She questions the actions of Roy Villareal — the Border Patrol chief of the Tucson sector — who attended the dinner with Zamora and the female agent the night of the alleged assault.

“Nobody at any point said this is not appropriat­e,” Budd said. Villareal told police he did not notice anything inappropri­ate that night.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, in a statement released by headquarte­rs following the criminal investigat­ion, said the CBP Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity will “review all the facts uncovered to ensure all allegation­s of misconduct by any CBP employee involved are thoroughly investigat­ed for appropriat­e action by the agency.”

About 8% of the Border Patrol’s 20,000 agents are women. The woman leading the Border Patrol, Chief Carla L. Provost, came under fire earlier this year after it was revealed she was a member of a private Facebook group for current and former agents where some posted vulgar comments and images about Democratic members of Congress.

Chavez, meanwhile, has not commented on her husband’s case. She and Zamora have been married for 20 years.

“She’s not responsibl­e for his behavior, but she is responsibl­e as the chief of a sector to say ‘I support my agents, and this isn’t going to happen,’” Budd said.

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Gus Zamora

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