Monday, November 09, 2015

BORDER PATROL AGENT CHARGED WITH CAPITAL MURDER

Joel Luna, a 6-year veteran of the Border Patrol, has been arrested for participating in the beheading of a Honduran man

Borderland Beat
November 7, 2015

A Border Patrol agent with alleged ties to a Mexican drug cartel has been arrested in connection with the beheading of a Honduran man in March.

Joel Luna, 30, was taken from his Hebbronville home on a charge of possession of a controlled substance Thursday by Cameron County sheriff’s deputies, Texas Rangers and federal agents.

On Friday morning, Luna, who had been transferred to Cameron County, was charged with capital murder, engaging in organized criminal activity and tampering with physical evidence. He is being held without bail.

The investigation into Luna, an agent for the past six years assigned to a checkpoint in Hebbronville, began shortly after the June arrest of four men who would later be charged with capital murder in the death of Franklin Rodriguez Palacios Paz of Honduras.

At the time, Cameron County Sheriff Omar Lucio declined to comment on the possible involvement of organized crime in Mexico. But on Friday, he said investigators now believe that the case is connected to the Gulf Cartel which operates across the border.

Palacios was reported missing days before his headless body was pulled from the Laguna Madre off South Padre Island by a fisherman. His chest had been mutilated with a sharp object, suggestive of organized crime violence in Mexico, officials said.

Palacios had a criminal history, including drug- and immigration-related arrests, and he had been detained by the Border Patrol for being in the country illegally. His common-law wife said he was in the country unlawfully at the time of his death. His remains were identified by his fingerprints in a federal database. His head has not been found.

In the course of the investigation, sheriff’s deputies found that Palacios has been killed in Edinburg, where he and four of the men who stand accused of ending his life worked in Veteran’s Tire Shop.

It was also revealed that two of the men charged in the case, Fernando Luna Rodriguez and Eduardo Luna Rodriguez, are brothers of Joel Luna.

Through interviews with the accused, investigators learned of a safe that Joel Luna allegedly had hidden in the home of his mother-in-law in San Juan. Stashed in the safe was a kilogram of cocaine, 17 grams of methamphetamine, two handguns and $89,000, all of which was seized by authorities.

The Border Patrol released a statement in response to the Luna arrest, stating that corruption and abuse are not tolerated within the agency. Luna will be placed on administrative leave, the agency said.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Draw a line between Corpus Christi and Laredo. Everything south might as well be in Mexico. In fact, after 9/11 the newly formed Department of Homeland Security found Customs personnel that were not U.S. citizens.

Illegally produced documents had been accepted from religious organizations verifying U.S. birth. This had been an accepted practice for years and when it was brought to light, thousands of South Texans were proven to be Mexican citizens.

High school students that were riding school buses were taken in custody at border check points when traveling to out of town football games because of the religious birth documents.

These people are living in limbo. They cannot travel North because of the check points and they can't go South because they can't re-enter the U.S. without legitimate documents.

I mention this, because a lot of Border Patrol employees are hired from South Texas. In some cases they know people who are here illegally because they are their relatives or they have close relatives living in Mexico. This has been going on for generations and corruption in staffing by hiring relatives was rampant. It isn't uncommon to find Border Patrol Agents with ties to relatives in Cartel organizations. Cartels will also threaten the lives of the Mexican relatives of U.S. officials if they don't cooperate in smuggling operations.

Corruption has always been rampant on the border. Most families live in poverty and their only way out is to assist the Cartels in smuggling drugs or humans.