San Diego Union-Tribune

BORDER AGENT ARRESTED IN UNDERCOVER DRUG STING

Also accused of opening U.S.-Mexico border gate for migrant to cross

- BY ALEX RIGGINS

A San Diego-area Border Patrol agent was charged Thursday with federal crimes related to on-duty corruption, including moving what he believed was 23 pounds of methamphet­amine and opening a border gate to allow the passage of an undocument­ed immigrant.

Federal authoritie­s arrested Agent Hector Hernandez, 55, on Wednesday morning in Chula Vista where he believed he’d be handing over the drugs in return for a $20,000 payment, according to court documents. Instead, his contact turned out to be an undercover agent from the Border Patrol’s parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security.

Hernandez was arraigned Thursday

on one count of attempted distributi­on of controlled substances and two counts receiving a bribe as a public official. It was not immediatel­y clear if he had an attorney who could comment on his behalf.

The investigat­ion into Hernandez began last month when agents from DHS’s Office of the Inspector General learned he “was engaged in border corruption activities,” according to a criminal complaint and a search warrant. Those alleged activities are not detailed in the court documents, and as of Thursday he did not face charges related to those accusation­s.

The undercover DHS agent spoke with Hernandez on Monday and set up a plan to pay the Border Patrol agent $5,000 if, during his shift that night, he opened a gate along the U.S.-Mexico border fence to allow an undocument­ed immigrant to pass through, according to the complaint and search warrant.

During one phone call that day,

Hernandez allegedly asked the undercover investigat­or to send three undocument­ed people instead of just one so he could receive a higher payment, according to the court documents. Later that night, he allegedly drove his Border Patrol vehicle to the agreedupon location and opened the fence.

Nobody actually crossed through the gate, but Hernandez was told that one person did, according to the court documents.

The undercover investigat­or met with Hernandez the next day and paid him $5,000 for opening the fence, according to the court documents. The undercover agent then pitched Hernandez on a new scheme: helping move drugs across the border.

At first Hernandez was hesitant, citing the example of another Border Patrol agent, Noe Lopez, who’d been caught smuggling drugs, according to the complaint and search warrant. Hernandez said he didn’t want to pick up the drugs between the primary and secondary border fences, the documents allege.

The undercover agent assured Hernandez he wouldn’t have to, telling him instead that the drugs would be hidden somewhere just along the fence on the U.S. side of the border, according to the court documents. From there, he’d only need to pick them up and transport them to Chula Vista.

Hernandez agreed to that plan, and during his shift on Tuesday night he drove his Border Patrol vehicle to the spot where he was told the drugs would be stashed, according to the court documents. Once there, he retrieved the duffel bag — investigat­ors had filled it with 1 pound of real methamphet­amine, 22 pounds of sham drugs and a tracking device — and then drove to his Chula Vista home, authoritie­s allege.

After dropping the bag inside his home, Hernandez went back to work for the rest of his shift, according to the court documents. When he was off work in the morning, he retrieved the bag and drove to the meeting place in Chula Vista, where he handed over the bag, the documents say. That’s when agents arrested him.

Border Patrol officials in San Diego did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? HAYNE PALMOUR IV PHOTOS FOR THE U-T ?? Stephany Polanco paints the eye of an elephant as she and other former foster youths create art Thursday with a theme of abstract animals. Their work will be displayed at the San Diego Watercolor Society’s Liberty Station gallery during a First Friday event June 2. The nonprofit Just in Time for Foster Youth and the Watercolor Society are collaborat­ing on the activity. Right, instructor Michele Joy (outstretch­ed arms) and other instructor­s help the artists.
HAYNE PALMOUR IV PHOTOS FOR THE U-T Stephany Polanco paints the eye of an elephant as she and other former foster youths create art Thursday with a theme of abstract animals. Their work will be displayed at the San Diego Watercolor Society’s Liberty Station gallery during a First Friday event June 2. The nonprofit Just in Time for Foster Youth and the Watercolor Society are collaborat­ing on the activity. Right, instructor Michele Joy (outstretch­ed arms) and other instructor­s help the artists.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States