Ex-border agents on run for 2 years held in Mexico
ELLIOT SPAGAT
PASADENA, Calif. - Two former Border Patrol agents were arrested in
Mexico after more than two years on the run and were charged in the U.S.
with taking bribes to help illegal immigrants cross the border, authorities
said Monday.
A federal indictment unsealed Monday in San Diego accuses brothers
Raul and Fidel Villarreal of taking bribes, smuggling illegal immigrants,
tampering with witnesses and conspiring to launder money.
The brothers were captured by Mexican authorities Saturday at a gated
apartment complex near the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana, said Mike Unzueta,
special agent in charge of investigations at U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement in San Diego. They vanished in July 2006.
"I think they were very, very surprised," Unzueta said.
ICE spokeswoman Lauren Mack said Raul, who was a Border Patrol spokesman,
looked as if he had aged 10 years.
The indictment charges that Raul, 39, and Fidel, 40, picked up illegal
immigrants in their Border Patrol vehicles and released them since at least
the spring of 2005.
The U.S. attorney's office in San Diego said it would seek to extradite
the Villarreal brothers and two others charged in the indictment, a Mexican
man and woman who were also arrested Saturday at the apartment in connection
with the alleged smuggling operation.
"Those who betray their offices and the public trust will find this
office's pursuit of justice thorough, unrelenting and uncompromising,"
said U.S. Attorney Karen Hewitt.
An attorney for Raul Villarreal, Jan Ronis, said his client would plead
not guilty.
The Villareals are naturalized U.S. citizens from Mexico, which means
they can be deported, Ronis said.
"There is no need to go through extradition proceedings," Ronis said.
"That would be time-consuming and expensive and they can simply be deported."
The Villarreals were veteran agents in the San Diego area. Raul served
as a public face for the agency, often granting interviews to Spanish-language
media.
The former agents are suspected of helping to smuggle Mexicans and
Brazilians into the United States, Unzueta said. It was unclear how long
or how many people were allegedly involved.
Their disappearance in July 2006 derailed the investigation, which
was led by ICE.
"We're interested to see what happens next," said Border Patrol spokesman
Daryl Reed. The allegations, he said, "were a complete shock to all of
us."
Mexico's attorney general office in Tijuana did not respond to a request
for comment.
A federal law enforcement official, who spoke on condition of anonymity
due to the sensitivity of the investigation, previously told the AP that
the brothers failed to show up for work one Monday morning in July 2006
and later told supervisors they were quitting due to a family illness.
The indictment handed down in April also charges that Armando Garcia,
40, served as a foot guide in the operation and that he and Claudia Gonzalez,
32, bribed the Border Patrol agents. Besides bribery, the Tijuana residents
were also charged with smuggling illegal immigrants, witness tampering
and conspiring to launder money.
The indictment says the Villarreal brothers and the other defendants
threatened witnesses in the grand jury investigation with "physical force."
The AP could not locate attorneys for Fidel Villarreal, Garcia or Gonzalez.