The Mercury News

U.S. appeals court: No immunity for agent in cross-border killing

- By Astrid Galvan

PHOENIX >> A federal appeals court uled that a Border Patrol agent who fatally shot a Mexican teen on the other side of the border doesn’t have immunity and can be sued by the boy’s family for violating his civil rights.

The ruling on Tuesday has wide implicatio­ns and came almost two years after the agent’s attorney argued he was immune from a civil lawsuit because the U.S. Constituti­on didn’t extend to 16-year-old Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez, who was in Mexico when agent Lonnie Swartz shot him about 10 times through a border fence.

The Border Patrol has said Elena Rodriguez was throwing rocks at Swartz, endangerin­g his life.

The central question in the case is whether Elena Rodriguez was protected by the U.S. Constituti­on as a Mexican citizen on Mexican soil.

In a very similar case out of Texas, a different appeals court ruled that a teen boy who was also fatally shot by an agent in a rock-throwing incident was not protected by the constituti­on. That case made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which appeared to be divided on the issue and which sent it back to the lower court without making a decision. The lower court then reaffirmed its decision that the boy wasn’t constituti­onally protected.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in its decision that the agent “violated a clearly establishe­d constituti­onal right and is thus not immune from suit.”

The conflictin­g opinions in the different appeals courts, both of which cover cases on the U.S.-Mexico border, could mean the Elena Rodriguez case ends up back in the Supreme Court.

“This ruling is important both as to border shootings specifical­ly, but more generally that the constituti­on does not have a hard stop at the border,” said ACLU attorney Lee Gelernt, who is representi­ng Elena Rodriguez’s mother in the civil lawsuit. “It’s an enormous victory for the family and I think for the rule of law at the border.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A poster in the likeness of Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez hangs in 2014 next to a makeshift memorial in Nogales, Mexico, where he was fatally shot through a border fence by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in 2012.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A poster in the likeness of Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez hangs in 2014 next to a makeshift memorial in Nogales, Mexico, where he was fatally shot through a border fence by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in 2012.

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