By TECHDIRT
Border Patrol agents
kill a lot of people, most of them citizens of another country. For years,
agents have been able to open fire on people in moving vehicles and [checks
Congressional report] people throwing rocks at them. New guidelines were handed
down by the agency in 2014 following an outside investigation of the Border
Patrol’s use of force. The investigation contained many recommendations that
could have resulted in fewer killings, but the Border Patrol rejected the
conclusions and the suggested fixes.
So, the killings
continue. And not much is being done to stop them. The Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals stripped qualified immunity from a Border Patrol agent who fired at
leaast 16 bullets across the border at a 16-year-old resident who was allegedly
throwing rocks at him. Ten of them hit the teen, killing him. The court ruled
this was basically murder, something clearly not covered by qualified immunity.
The Fourth Amendment governs what US government employees do. It makes no
difference that the victim was not a US citizen.
That finding is likely
to be struck down if it makes its way to the Supreme Court. A similar case
involving the killing of Mexican resident by a Border Patrol agent standing on
US soil has just received the Supreme Court stamp of approval.
Fifteen-year-old Sergio
Adrian Hernandez Guereca was shot and killed by Border Patrol agent Jesus Mesa,
Jr. as he played with friends in a culvert along the US-Mexico border.
According to Hernandez’s survivors, he and his friends were running back and
forth across the culvert to touch the US border fence before running back to
the Mexican side of the culvert. Agent Mesa claimed the teen was “involved in
an illegal border crossing attempt” and “pelting” him with rocks.
The shooting resulted in
an international incident. The Mexican government wanted the agent extradited
to face murder charges in Mexico, the country where the murder occurred, even
if the bullets originated on the US side of the border. The US government, on
the other hand, decided Agent Mesa had done nothing wrong – that his deadly
actions were clearly justified by the presence of rocks and/or border-crossing
attempts.
Hernandez’s parents
sued. The Fifth Circuit took two swings at the case (once at the Supreme
Court’s request) and both times refused to extend the scope of Bivens to cover
an incident where a government agent on the US side of the border shot and killed
someone on the other side.
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