San Diego Union-Tribune

LETTER CALLS FOR PROBE OF BORDER PATROL’S ‘SHADOW POLICE UNITS’

Document alleges that special teams operate to hide wrongdoing

- BY KATE MORRISSEY

Border Patrol has special, secretive units that work to cover up any wrongdoing when agents kill someone or otherwise use force in potentiall­y problemati­c ways, according to a letter sent to Congress Thursday calling for an investigat­ion.

These “shadow police units,” the letter says, have been operating since at least 1987 and without any actual authority under federal law. They do not appear in Department of Homeland Security documents as official entities.

The letter, written by the Southern Border Communitie­s Coalition and Alliance San Diego, condemns the use of these units, which documentat­ion shows have different names depending on their location, and suggests that the agents who worked for them could even be charged criminally with obstructio­n of justice.

The units “have allowed border agents to get away with nearly everything, including murder,” the letter says. It was sent to leaders of Senate and House judiciary, homeland security and oversight committees.

There are three entities with authority from Congress to perform criminal investigat­ions. They are the FBI, the DHS Office of the Inspector General and the Customs and Border Protection Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity. These Border Patrol units are not among them.

“Their stated mission is to mitigate liability for agents,” said Andrea Guerrero, executive director of Alliance San Diego, quoting from a presentati­on created by San Diego’s Border Patrol unit and obtained by a journalist, John Carlos Frey. “In other words, their mission is protect agents, not the public.”

When asked about the units, a spokespers­on with Customs and Border Protection who declined to be named on the record said

that the agency has a “multitiere­d oversight framework in place to address allegation­s of misconduct involving agency personnel.”

“The U.S. Border Patrol maintains teams with specialize­d evidence collection capabiliti­es across the southwest border,” the unnamed spokespers­on said. “These teams consist of highly trained personnel available to respond around the clock to collect and process evidence related to CBP enforcemen­t activities as well as critical incidents. In the case of serious incidents involving CBP personnel, members of these teams are sometimes called upon to assist investigat­ors from CBP OPR and other local, state, and federal law enforcemen­t agencies. This is a vitally important capability as many critical incidents involving CBP operations occur in remote locations where other agencies may be unwilling or unable to respond.”

The letter to Congress is the product of months of research and analysis, Guerrero said, and wouldn’t have happened without informatio­n that surfaced in a San Diego case.

She and other human rights attorneys investigat­ing the 2010 killing of Anastasio Hernández Rojas at the San Ysidro Port of Entry found indication­s that the unit based in San Diego had tampered with and even destroyed evidence in the case to protect the agents involved. Then they began finding documentat­ion of other cases in which similar units had interfered in other regions.

“This is not an isolated incident of bad actors in the case of Anastasio,” Guerrero said. “This is a systemic impunity problem that shows us that the impunity is not accidental. It is by design.”

Guerrero and her team found that the San Diego unit, called the sector’s Critical Incident Investigat­ive Team, was the first to be notified after Hernández Rojas was beaten and tasered on the ground at the port of entry. The unit never notified San Diego police, who would have had jurisdicti­on over the criminal investigat­ion.

The local department found out about the incident after a media inquiry and arrived on scene a day later.

The Critical Incident Investigat­ive Team controlled witness lists and were present at every interview during the San Diego police investigat­ion, the letter says, and the team removed phrasing in the apprehensi­on report for Hernández Rojas that said he was compliant before handing the report to San Diego police.

The Critical Incident Investigat­ive Team was also present at the hospital soon after Hernández Rojas arrived and asked medical staff to draw his blood to test for drugs. Hospital records obtained by Guerrero’s team show that the blood was drawn but there were no results. The one blood test with results in his medical record indicates that there were no drugs detected. However, the letter says, the medical examiner in the case used a different blood sample — that had no chain of custody informatio­n — to determine that Hernández Rojas had meth in his body.

“It was this determinat­ion that led the Justice Department to decline to prosecute for murder,” the letter says. “This raises serious questions about [the unit’s] interferen­ce.”

These revelation­s are in addition to what Guerrero and her team already published as part of their case with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights — including that the Critical Incident Investigat­ive Team illegally gave the hospital a subpoena for Hernández Rojas’ medical records and then refused to provide them to investigat­ing police, and that the team sent the wrong video footage to investigat­ors, allowing time for the actual recordings of the incident to be erased.

Former high level CBP officials who worked in internal affairs, one of the entities authorized to investigat­e agents, have acknowledg­ed and condemned the existence of these units.

“The purpose of an investigat­ion is to collect the facts, regardless of whether they are exculpator­y or not,” the letter says in quoting James Wong, former CBP deputy assistant commission­er for internal affairs.

“Investigat­ors should never set out to mitigate liability. That is inappropri­ate. Given that [the units] have worked to mitigate instead of collect facts leading to the truth shows that they are a questionab­le management tool, not a legitimate investigat­ive tool. As such they should be abolished.”

The letter identifies several other cases in which such units have had access to and possibly tampered with evidence.

In the trial over the death of Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, a teenager who was standing in Mexico when he was shot by an agent — one of the only instances in which a Border Patrol agent was charged in a killing — the courtroom learned that the local Critical Incident Team had collected all of the evidence for the FBI.

“The Critical Incident Team, basically we went out and did a third-party investigat­ion for the Border Patrol,” an investigat­or with the local Critical Incident Team explained to the court. “We investigat­ed and collected forensic data in regards to shootings, uses of force incidents, collisions, things like that. Anything that the Border Patrol deemed to be critical and there might be some media attention or somebody was hurt, injured, or killed.”

The special unit, according to the letter, also shaped the investigat­ion into the death of Marisol Garcia Alcantara, whom a Border Patrol agent shot in the head while she was sitting in the backseat of a car. She survived the shooting but still has bullet fragments in her skull.

According to a Nogales police incident report, the responding local police mostly directed traffic while the special Border Patrol unit and the FBI investigat­ed. It is not clear which of the two entities gathered the evidence in that case.

Guerrero and her team also found that the Border Patrol considers participat­ion in these kinds of units when promoting agents to supervisor positions. That means, Guerrero said, that many of the people higher up in the Border Patrol ranks likely worked on the units.

 ?? DAVID MCNEW GETTY IMAGES ?? The Southern Border Communitie­s Coalition and Alliance San Diego sent a letter to Congress condemning “shadow police units” that they say cover up misconduct by border agents.
DAVID MCNEW GETTY IMAGES The Southern Border Communitie­s Coalition and Alliance San Diego sent a letter to Congress condemning “shadow police units” that they say cover up misconduct by border agents.

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