The Guardian (USA)

US border agents kill man on tribal reservatio­n in Arizona

- Guardian staff and agencies

US border patrol agents investigat­ing a report of gunfire shot and killed a man on a tribal reservatio­n in southern Arizona after he abruptly threw something and raised his arm, the agency said on Monday.

The FBI and Tohono O’odham Nation are investigat­ing Thursday night’s fatal shooting of Raymond Mattia.

Monday’s statement from US Customs and Border Protection said tribal police had asked border patrol agents for help in responding to a report of shots fired west of the Menagers Dam community on tribal land near the USMexico border.

At about 9.30pm, the agents were told that reports indicated shots had been fired near the home of a “named individual” and a tribal officer went to the location to look for the person, with the agents following in separate cars, the statement said.

A few minutes after arriving, the police officer and the agents encountere­d a man outside of a home near their parked cars, the statement said.

The man threw some kind of object toward the officer that landed a few feet away and then “abruptly extended his right arm away from his body and three agents fired their service weapons, striking the individual several times,” the statement said.

Because of bad weather, no air ambulance was available to take the man to a hospital and despite lifesaving efforts he was declared dead shortly after 10pm, according to the statement.

An autopsy was conducted, but the Pima county medical examiner’s office did not immediatel­y release details.

The three border patrol agents who opened fire and at least seven others were wearing body cameras and activated them during the encounter, the statement said.

On Sunday, tribal chairman Ned Norris Jr identified the man as Mattia, a member of the Tohono O’odham

Nation.

Norris and the border patrol did not immediatel­y release other details about the shooting, including whether investigat­ors had confirmed the earlier reports of gunfire and whether any weapon was found.

Tucson TV station KVOA reported earlier that family members of Mattia, who did not want to be identified by name, told the station that he had called the border patrol because there were multiple migrants who had trespassed into his yard and he wanted assistance getting them out of his property.

Family members also said that Mattia had gone outside when he saw the agents and was only two feet from his front door when dozens of shots were fired at him.

Those details also couldn’t immediatel­y be verified.

Menager’s Dam is near the USMexico border, where Covid asylum limits known as Title 42 expired less than a week before the shooting. A rush to the border before Title 42 expired and new, arguably stricter immigratio­n policies took effect has brought pressure to areas along boundaries separating the two countries.

 ?? ?? The Tohono O’odham reservatio­n in southern Arizona. An autopsy was conducted but no details were released. Photograph: John Moore/ Getty Images
The Tohono O’odham reservatio­n in southern Arizona. An autopsy was conducted but no details were released. Photograph: John Moore/ Getty Images

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