El Paso "Cat and Mouse" Turns Fatal
Sunday 13 June 2010
by: Dennis Bernstein and Jesse Strauss | Consortium News

(Photo: Vetto; Edited: Jared
Rodriguez / t r u t h o u
t)
It was a blistering Monday evening in El Paso. The heat had jumped past 95 degrees and it was about to get a lot hotter in this militarized border town, with checkpoints and helicopters flying over head.
Pedestrians, who were crossing the Paso del Norte International bridge that links El Paso, Texas to Juarez, Mexico, had stopped to watch a real-life drama play out in the dried waters of the Rio Grande just below the bridge – a dangerous drama that occurs more and more in this highly militarized region of the Southwest U.S.
On this Monday, the daily confrontation between U.S. border patrol and so-called “illegal aliens” swiftly turned deadly, ending with a 14-year-old junior high student, from Juarez, being shot through the eye and killed.
Sergio Adrian Hernandez Huereka and several other teens were heading back to the Mexican side of the Rio Grande, when they were spotted and pursued by an armed border patrol agent on a bicycle. According to the initial FBI investigation, the border patrol agent was surrounded by stone throwing teens, and opened fire in self-defense.
FBI spokesperson Andrea Simmons characterized the slain Mexican teen as a “juvenile smuggler.” She said the Border Patrol agent “had the second subject detained on the ground, and then gave verbal commands to the remaining subjects to stop and retreat. However, the subjects surrounded the agent and continued to throw rocks at him. The agent then fired his service weapon several times, striking one subject who later died.”
But a cell phone video provided by one of many eyewitnesses appears to contradict the FBI and Border Patrol's claims that the agent fired only to protect himself from bodily harm. The video shows the agent drawing his gun as soon as he jumps off his bicycle. He then drags one teen to his knees, takes a second into custody at gun point, and then takes aim and opens fire at the two others, who had already fled, crossing the Mexican side of the border.
One eyewitness told El Diario from Juarez, “I was at the flagpole on the [Paso del Norte] bridge waiting for my wife, and I suddenly saw the boys entering the American side. Immigration agents chased them, as they returned back. The boys were on the Mexican side, and an immigration officer or a police officer on a bicycle shot at the boys.”
Another eyewitness, 53-year-old Bobbie McDow, was walking across the Paso del Norte bridge as well. She paused to watch the young men crossing back to Mexico. She said that the border patrol agents arrived and detained two men, but the others escaped back to Mexico.
McDow said the 14-year-old teen was slain on the Mexican side of the border and was not throwing stones.
“At first,” she said “I didn't think anyone was hit. I thought he had missed. As I was looking down there, I saw something lying by the Black Bridge. Then I realized the body was not moving, and I got very upset. ... I never expected it to escalate like that. I never saw that coming, that there would be a shooting over this. I'm not saying that they [the teens] did the right thing, but kids are kids. It's like a little game of cat and mouse.”
The Border Patrol maintains the video actually confirms their claims, that their agent was in harm’s way, and Fox News is reporting that the Border Patrol had the slain teen on a "most wanted" list of juvenile smugglers that was compiled by U.S. authorities.
But by Friday, with the revelations of the cell-phone video, even the FBI began to shift their stance, opening up a civil rights investigation into the killing. It also was reported that President Obama was briefed on the story.
The boy's family – along with activists, local residents and Mexican politicians – angrily rejected the Border Patrol's claims that young Hernandez Huereka was a seasoned alien smuggler. Juarez Mayor José Reyes Ferriz said – after watching the cell phone video of the killing – that “it is going to be very difficult to prove that there was [a] substantial threat to life or safety for the officer to use lethal force like he did.”
The deadly incident, the second killing of an unarmed Mexican national at the border by U.S. Border Patrol agents in less than two weeks, has not only inflamed residents throughout the border region but has turned it into an international incident. Mexican President, Felipe Calderon, said he was “concerned about the growing violence against Mexicans” at the border. "I demand the United States government conduct a thorough, impartial, investigation,” Calderon said on Thursday, “concluding with an establishment of the facts and punishment of the culprits.”
The family of Hernandez Huereka gathered Thursday in Juarez to to memorialize the slain teen. Above his casket was a photograph of him dressed in his soccer uniform and several of his report cards filled with A's and B's.
He was a good student, his mother said, and he had just gone to visit his brother who works near the border when he met up with a few friends and decided to play by the river.
“May god forgive (the shooter)” she told a local reporter, “because I know nothing will happen to them.”
El Universal of Mexico, reported that one of the teen's four sisters, Rosario Hernandez, was outraged by the Border Patrol's claims, that her brother was an alien smuggler who had been caught many times going back and forth across the border. She said he was a good person who stayed out of trouble, exclaiming:
“Who has respect now? No one... until justice is done for my brother!"
"Palestine" at the Border
According to the Mexican Foreign Ministry, including this latest border killing, 17 Mexican nationals have been killed or injured this year in actions that involve the use of force by U.S. agents, up from five for all of 2008 and 12 in 2009.
On Wednesday night, activists gathered near the U.S. side of the Paso Del Norte Bridge to hold a vigil and protest the killing of the Mexican teen. One of the organizers, Mikey Velarde, said the militarization of the border has turned the area into a constant confrontation point.
“Early in the 90’s, we saw a militarization of this area...and an enormous jump in the number of Border Patrol agents and their various apparatuses,” Velarde said. “In the case of Sergio Adrian Hernandez Huereka, he was killed point blank by a Border Patrol agent. It’s a very ... violent space, as we see the mix of people” and the “state repression that exists there in all its forms.”
Velarde compared the U.S.-Mexico border to occupied Palestine. He said:
“The similarities are so obvious, especially to somebody who lives on the border. The fact that they can justify deadly force against somebody throwing a rock is absurd to me. There’s a great similarity with Palestine and Gaza. What really strikes me is that these egregious incidents are taken as normal or unproblematic in [the] larger public sentiment.”
Nativo Lopez, President of the Mexican American Political Association, one of the oldest and most prestigious Mexican-American organizations in the country, agreed: “The analogy to young Palestinian youth throwing pieces of Palestine at the colonizing army is appropriate. This can only escalate from here on in.”
Lopez added that the escalation of violence by U.S. officials along the border adds up to nothing short of war.
“Over the last 22 years… we’ve seen the escalated militarization of the border,” Lopez said. “It has exceeded 20,000 Border Patrol agents and National Guard on a line that 80 years ago was almost absent of such enforcement. … That constitutes an act of war, and the people of Mexico will not put up with it.”
Hernandez Huereka was the second victim in just 10 days. After living in the U.S. for 28 years, Anastasio Hernandez Rojas, a 42-year-old Mexican national, was killed on May 28 by Border Patrol agents in San Diego. Hernandez Rojas was the father of five children, all U.S. citizens, and had been in the U.S. since he was 14 years old.
On Monday afternoon, Enrique Marones, an immigrant rights activist and founder of LA’s Border Angels organization, explained that the violence needs to be controlled by accountability. Otherwise, more unjust deaths will occur.
Speaking about last week’s killing of Hernandez Rojas, he explained that the Mexican government is “asking the international court in Geneva, Switzerland, to look at this case. We’re really concerned that [because of] the militarization of the border and the inhumane immigration policy that exists now, there will be more [cases like] Anastasio Hernandez.”
Little did he know that the next case would come so quickly. The interview with Marones occurred only 30 minutes before 14-year-old Sergio Adrian Hernandez Huereka was shot through the eye and killed by U.S. Border Patrol agents under the Paso del Norte bridge.
Jesus Hernandez, father of Hernandez Huereka, told Juarez newspaper El Diario on Wednesday, that all he wants is an end to the war.
“I don’t want vengeance, only justice,” he said.
Dennis Bernstein and Jesse Strauss based this report primarily on interviews done for "Flashpoints" on the Pacifica radio network. You can access the audio archives at www.flashpoints.net. You can get in touch with the authors at dbernstein@igc.org and jstrauss@riseup.net.
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.



Comments
This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.
Agree regarding how the
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 11:42 — Anonymous (not verified)Agree regarding how the border appears to be maintained, do not agree regarding US immigration policy.
What nation in the world allows unlimited & open immigration? None that I'm aware of. Mexico does not.
Another wicked "terrorist"
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 11:46 — Gordon UK (not verified)Another wicked "terrorist" about to attack the peace-loving USA?
This appalling incident is reminiscent of the recent boarding of the Turkish vessel in international waters when the innocent and lovable Israeli commandos were viciously attacked by wicked peace-activists.
Who are the "terrorists"?
This article loses all
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 11:49 — Bill (not verified)This article loses all credibility when compared to Palestine. Mexico is a large autonomous STATE, universally RECOGNIZED, with MANY points of entry along its many seaports, airports, NAFTA trucks, etc. You may have some valid points here. But given that this is a conflict between citizens of two truly independent states, unlike Palestine/Israel, one of which happens to be relatively well off, and another which needs illegal immigration and foreign exchange from these immigrants because it has not taken care of its own people, the article loses all credibility. Because some kids throw rocks and a couple get killed does not make it Palestine--the whole argument is laughable. It's really the conflict between rich and poor, with the implication that there is some obligation by the US to help a deeply corrupt country with massive poverty and unemployment. Which relies on illegal immigration to act as a "safety valve" for its own inability to effectively govern.
And just how does killing a
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 12:13 — John C. Bonser (not verified)And just how does killing a 14 year old boy and then lying about it, help keep us safe!?
Israel/Palestine comparison
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 12:20 — Anonymous (not verified)Israel/Palestine comparison ridiculous. Gaza is an occupied territory with a brutal oppressor. Mexico is an independent nation that we're not occupying.
A border agent opening fire on retreating kids is also ridiculous. While there's not a cop on earth who won't fire on what appears to be a gang of youth surrounding him throwing rocks, sounds like video proved this did not happen.
Thank God for cell phones cameras, or cops would never have accountability.
bringing a blade to a
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 12:44 — Anonarcmous (not verified)bringing a blade to a fistfight...
Cops who are killers should
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 14:05 — Anonymous (not verified)Cops who are killers should be treated as murderers,but here in California they kill and are never prosecuted. Legal history shows that in over 100 years no police officer has ever been convicted of perjury in California,yes, they are perfect liars committing perfect murders. The abuse of their position in this matter should have enhanced penalties instead of the typical silence from government claiming that killer/criminal cops are "personnel" issues and therefore any info is confidential. Soon the citizens will have to start arming themselves to protect their loved ones from these gun toting criminal cops.
A deeply corrupt country
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 14:06 — Rodrian Roadeye (not verified)A deeply corrupt country with massive poverty and unemployment? That sounds like us!
The real point is the
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 15:48 — Straight-Ahead (not verified)The real point is the disregard for human life that pervades the law-enforcement system in this country. These guys think that they are justified in using deadly force against anyone who is not abjectly obeying their orders.
Betcha the trigger-man is a born-again right-to-lifer, too.
unfortunate that once the
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 15:54 — Anonymous (not verified)unfortunate that once the three young men had eluded capture they didn't keep going ,why stick around to exacerbate the situation,the immediate border area is becoming an undeclared combat zone with agents ambushed ,
Americans gunned down in in Juarez ,to be an agent on duty within eyesight of the kill zone of Juarez and be casual and relaxed would be foolish
"On this Monday, the daily
Sun, 06/13/2010 - 21:29 — Jerry (not verified)"On this Monday, the daily confrontation between U.S. border patrol and so-called “illegal aliens” swiftly turned deadly, ending with a 14-year-old junior high student, from Juarez, being shot through the eye and killed."
So, called illegal aliens?????????? They WERE ILLEGAL ALIENS!!!!!!!!!!!
Calderon needs to clean out his own cupboard, before he tries to tell us how to clean ours.They were wrong, they were criminals,moo tpoint!!!!!
The boy died on Mexican
Mon, 06/14/2010 - 02:12 — Anonymous (not verified)The boy died on Mexican territory, that puts the crime in Mexico's jurisdiction.
Send the shooter to Mexico to stand trial for the murder (for what else is an unprovoked shooting) and let him serve out his sentence in Mexican prisons.
It's only just.
Not only predictable, but
Mon, 06/14/2010 - 10:56 — FR Tothus (not verified)Not only predictable, but predicted. NAFTA ensures that only goods and capital can cross borders, not people. Our corporate news media turns the world upside down as it blames the victims for the economic crimes of the behemoth to the North.
Comparisons with the Nazis are not far off the mark. The Gestapo goes by many names. In English, it's called the National Security State.
Albert Bartlett [professor
Mon, 06/14/2010 - 12:09 — Anonymous (not verified)Albert Bartlett [professor emeritus of physics, University of Colorado] has stated:“Can you think of any problem, on any scale from microscopic to global, whose long-term solution is, in any demonstrable way, aided, assisted, or advanced by having larger populations at the local level, the state level, the national level, or globally?”
Very sad but this is what
Mon, 06/14/2010 - 23:21 — 4Truth&Justice (not verified)Very sad but this is what happens when the judgment of youth underestimates the risks of violating national sovereignty and "trusts" the notion that they'll never get hurt.
If it turns out the Border Patrol agent acted improperly, then let justice be done. But that in no way negates American anger over the blatant fact that Mexico makes it a necessity for some of its own citizens to violate reason and the law.
It is the FAULT of Mexican leaders and the leaders of other Central American countries that so many of their own citizens are so desperate. These so-called leaders must be held accountable and if necessary forced to reform their governments and economies. And lets not forget: some American companies have been complicit in this repression of Mexicans and other peoples down there.
MEXICO should send ITS ARMY
Tue, 06/15/2010 - 21:54 — Anonymous (not verified)MEXICO should send ITS ARMY to the border to protect its citizens against the American terrorists.
I am an American and I'm sick and tired of living under terrorist occupation of my country.
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