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Topic: Convicted border agent trying to start over (Read 270 times)
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IBMMuseum
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Convicted border agent trying to start over Now in Katy, he wants a new trial in shooting of immigrant By SUSAN CARROLL HOUSTON CHRONICLE Jan. 18, 2010, 6:06AM http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/hotstories/6820905.html
Five years ago, Ignacio Ramos was pulling long shifts as a senior U.S. Border Patrol agent, chasing smugglers and immigrants along the Rio Grande. He'd coached Little League long enough that dozens of teenagers called him “Coach Nacho.”
He and his wife, Monica, both born and raised in El Paso, were busy working and raising three boys.
Their life was, in his words, completely normal. Not boring. Just normal.
All he wants now, he says, is to have that back.
Ramos, now 40, has become a polarizing figure in the U.S. border security debate. To supporters, he is a martyr, wrongly sentenced to more than a decade in prison for doing his job — shooting at a drug smuggler he believed was threatening his partner. To critics, he and his former partner, Jose Compean, are rogue lawmen who shot a man and tried to cover it up, and caught a break when former President George W. Bush commuted their sentences amid a firestorm of publicity and public pressure.
In the 11 months since Ramos was released from federal prison, he and his family have been trying to piece their lives back together. Six months ago, they packed up their home in El Paso and moved to a four-bedroom rental home in a Katy subdivision with winding streets and cul-de-sacs and good schools.
They got jobs, put the boys back in baseball, and are trying to build new lives.
But Ramos is planning to reopen a door to the darkest chapter of his life. Within the next two months, his attorney plans to ask for a new trial.
‘Rolling the dice' Ramos said new evidence came out while he was incarcerated that he believes would change the guilty verdict, though he said his attorney won't allow him to discuss specifics. Though Bush commuted his prison sentence, he did not offer Ramos a full pardon, and Ramos remains a convicted felon.
“I know I'm rolling the dice,” Ramos said, glancing at his wife.
“We don't go into it blind. We talk about it, and we both know the risks,” Ramos said. “And it's hard knowing what the possibility is. But it is important for me to be cleared.”
The risk, he said, is that asking for a new trial could result in prosecutors bringing new charges, though his attorney told him that was only a slim possibility.
Ramos took his chances at his first trial, saying he turned down a plea deal that offered him 18 months in prison. A federal grand jury had indicted him on seven charges and Compean on nine related to the Feb. 17, 2005, shooting of Oswaldo Aldrete Davila, an illegal immigrant from Juarez.
Aldrete, who was given immunity for his testimony against the agents, had crossed the Rio Grande and picked up a van southeast of El Paso loaded with marijuana. After a car chase toward the river, Aldrete was shot in the buttocks as he ran from the agents.
Prosecutors accused the agents of orchestrating a cover-up, charging that they never reported the shooting to superiors and made false reports, and that Compean picked up shell casings at the scene. The agents said they believed Aldrete had a weapon in his hand.
“I really believed whoever was on the jury would hear the story and would believe us, and not the story of a drug smuggler,” Ramos said.
A jury found Ramos and Compean guilty of charges including assault with a dangerous weapon and discharging of a firearm in commission of a crime of violence. In October 2006, a judge sentenced Ramos to 11 years in prison and Compean to 12.
Prosecutor defends case Ramos started serving his time in a prison in Mississippi, but was assaulted in February 2007 and transferred to another facility in Arizona. He was put into solitary confinement for his own protection, which meant that he had no access to TV, showered three times a week, and got a monthly, 15-minute call home.
Long after the agents' convictions, the case continued to cause an uproar on talk radio and cable TV programs. Supporters, including dozens of members of Congress, called for pardons for Ramos and Compean.
Johnny Sutton, the former U.S. attorney who prosecuted the agents, defended the case, saying a jury convicted the two agents of serious crimes, and the case was “about the rule of law.”
Stays on federal record With the conviction on his record, Ramos said he had trouble finding work in El Paso, and he worried for his family's safety. After a few months, he and Monica decided to start over in Katy, saying they were encouraged in large part by the amount of support they'd received in Houston during Ramos' legal battles.
Louise Whiteford, the president of the Houston-based organization Texans for Immigration Reform, said she and other members have participated in fundraisers for Ramos and Compean, calling the way the case was handled in the court and prison system questionable.
Monica found work here right away, but Ramos sent out dozens of applications and resumes, with no response. He finally landed a job assisting pipe fitters at a plant on Houston's east side through a supporter familiar with his case, he said.
Still, even as the family regains some normalcy, Ramos said he's compelled to try and clear his name.
“Even though there are people that believe in you, and there are people helping you, it's not easy to live with. It's very hard,” he said. “Because if you didn't know the story, ... if you just look at what's left on my record, you'd be like, ‘Oh my god, I can't leave my kids around this guy, or I can't be around this guy. This guy is dangerous.'”
Ramos said he knows that even if he's granted a new trial and then acquitted of the charges, the earlier convictions still will remain on his federal record. It would show he was convicted, but later exonerated.
That, he said, is still worth fighting for.
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tony_cheek
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Does this idiot really believe the courts are going to allow his attorney to enter into evidence Aldrete's record of smuggling drugs into this country?
I hate to tell "Coach Nacho" this, but the jury will be tasked with ascertaining what happened that day those two numbnuts decided to play games. the jury will be told about Ramos and Compean cleaning up their brass, falsifying records, and lying to their superiors.
This dumbass may just find himself back in prison.
What part of "you screwed up, a jury found you guilty, an appeals court upheld the conviction, and the sitting President of the United States refused to pardon your ass" doesn't he understand?
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RevPMC
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tony,
Aldrete could have been smuggling a load on the day he testified, detouring to the court to offer his testimony and that would not have detracted from the fact the evidence in question was the bullet pulled from his ass, that was matched to Ramos gun.
Doesn't matter if he smuggled one or a hundred loads. He was there to testify that Yes, he was the man on the vega, that YES, he did run from the officers, and YES, he was shot in the ass, and NO, he did not have a weapon in his hands or on his person.
His occupation has nothing to do with his credibility when it is backed up by physical evidence.
Oops. Wait a minute. I seem to recall BP Agent Nicholas Corbett murdering in cold blood, a detainee who was on his knees before Corbett, and despite witness testimony (dirty lying ileegal wetbacks) and forensic and ballistic evidence proving the prosecutions case, the murdering bastard walked. Not once, but twice.
Might be a problem here, since nacho is a true blue American Patriot and Hero.
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tony_cheek
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Sad part Porter is those two idiots might have gotten away with it if they'd just 'fessed up and left the shooting area alone. Aldrete could have complained all day about these two using him for target practice, and it would have been a "he said/he said" situation.
However, Ramos and Compean lied about the incident, destroyed evidence, then lied under oath.
Besides, if Aldrete did have a gun, why in the hell didn't Compean blow him away with the shotgun?
And if Aldrete had a gun, how is it that Compean the Clown is alive today?
Those two should leave well enough alone.
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RevPMC
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Who knows! Maybe "Nacho" misses his daddy, "Big Bubba Boo Boo".
But the whackos are already opening their wallets for his defense.
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tony_cheek
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I have to wonder what they really think is going to happen with this re-opening. I understand Ramos wants his name cleared, but after all, he did shoot a man while he was running away (Major Mistake #1,) tampered with evidence at a shooting scene (Major Mistake #2,) conspired to cover up a shooting while on duty (Major Mistake #3,) and lied about it when the incident was investigated (Major MAJOR Mistake.)
There's a reason a jury convicted him the first time, there's a reason the conviction was upheld, and there's a reason Bush didn't straight out pardon him and Compean.
Give up while your ahead, Ramos. You've got a decent job (pipe fitting isn't exactly a minimum-wage job,) you got out of prison before your wife started looking elsewhere for a breadwinner, and you're walking around without the aid of a colostomy bag, which is more than you can say about Aldrete.
Count your blessings and sac up like a man. Liddy's been doing it for over thirty years, so can you.
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