Posts Tagged ‘San Antonio’

Man accused of attempting to smuggle suspected illegal immigrants by charter plane

Friday, July 20th, 2012

A Mexican man has been accused of trying to smuggle five suspected illegal immigrants to San Antonio via charter airplane.

Prosecutors in South Texas say 39-year-old Jorge Luis Gallegos-Avila remains in custody without bond on charges of harboring and transporting illegal immigrants. He appeared Wednesday before a federal judge in McAllen.

Gallegos-Avila, who also faces a conspiracy charge, was arrested June 20 near McAllen-Miller International Airport. Investigators say he was spotted dropping off five immigrants. The individuals were detained while trying to board the charter plane.

Prosecutors say Gallegos-Avila allegedly picked up the immigrants from along the Rio Grande and took them to stash houses.

Gallegos-Avila faces trial in September. His hometown in Mexico was not immediately released.

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Court Martial Begins In Texas Air Force Sex Scandal

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012

Military officials say the initial flirtations that Staff Sgt. Luis Walker directed at the women he trained at a Texas Air Force base grew into something more sinister: threats and intimidation that eventually led to rape.

Walker is among 12 instructors at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio who are being investigated in a widening sex scandal that has rocked one of the nation’s busiest military training centers.

Walker’s court-martial is scheduled to begin Monday.

He faces the most serious charges in the case – 28 counts, including rape, aggravated sexual contact and multiple counts of aggravated sexual assault. He could get up to life in prison and a dishonorable discharge if convicted.

The 10 female recruits Walker is accused of either sexually assaulting or engaging in inappropriate sexual conduct with are expected to testify during the court-martial at Lackland. A seven-member jury made up of military personnel will decide the case.

At least 31 female trainees have been identified as victims in the sex scandal.

Officials at Lackland are calling Walker’s court-martial the “cornerstone case” in the ongoing investigation.

“We haven’t had a case of this magnitude, certainly in recent memory,” said Brent Boller, a spokesman for Joint Base San Antonio, which operates Lackland.

Walker’s civilian attorney, Joseph Esparza, declined to comment.

The start of the court-martial Monday is expected to mostly deal with procedural matters. Testimony in the case is not likely to begin until Tuesday.

The sexual misconduct at the base apparently began in 2009, but the first woman didn’t come forward until last year. The first allegations were levied against Walker, who is accused of crimes that allegedly took place between October 2010 and January 2011.

According to the Air Force charge sheet, Walker had sexual intercourse with 4 of the 10 female recruits. He also is accused of making flirtatious or sexually suggestive comments, sending inappropriate text messages and sometimes groping his recruits.

Walker also is accused of telling one recruit to “get naked” and that she “turned him on,” forcing five recruits to engage in sexual acts by threatening their military careers and intimidating two of the women into lying about his alleged misconduct, according to the charge sheet.

Walker was a trainer for about 18 months, until he was removed from his position in June 2011. He joined the Air Force in 2004 and previously was stationed at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware and at facilities in Montana and Korea. The Air Force is withholding his age and hometown.

Lackland is where every American airman reports for basic training – about 35,000 a year. About one in five is female, pushed through eight weeks of basic training by a flight of instructors that are about 90 percent male.

Six of the 12 instructors under investigation for misconduct face charges ranging from rape to adultery. Officials say nine of those instructors were in the same squadron.

The first court-martial in the case resulted in a plea agreement in June, when Staff Sgt. Peter Vega-Maldonado admitted to having sex with a female trainee. He struck a plea deal for 90 days confinement. He later acknowledged being involved with a total of 10 trainees – a number previously unknown to investigators.

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Agents foil alleged smuggler’s immigrant flight at McAllen airport

Friday, June 22nd, 2012

Most human smugglers transport illegal immigrants through the roughmonte of the South Texas ranchlands.

But on Wednesday, Border Patrol agents say they caught a man trying to use a private plane to fly a group of illegal immigrants to San Antonio.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement alongside Border Patrol performed a routine check of a private aircraft pilot and five passengers Wednesday afternoon at the McAllen-Miller International Airport, a criminal complaint states.

Five illegal immigrants told agents they are from Mexico and had been delivered to the airport by Luis Gallegos Avila, who helped pick up the immigrants when they illegally crossed the Rio Grande, the complaint states.

The five Mexican citizens said they had been staying at several area stash houses until about 8 a.m. Wednesday, when Gallegos drove one of the immigrants to the McAllen airport and bought a private charter flight to San Antonio.

The immigrants told agents Gallegos told them to say “yes” if agents asked if they were U.S. citizens upon boarding the private flight at the airport.

“Gallegos assured the undocumented immigrants that everything would be fine, and there would be no problems at the airport,” the complaint states.

Agents say Gallegos was seen dropping off the immigrants at the airport about 2 p.m. Wednesday, shortly before they detained the group and arrested him on human smuggling charges.

Gallegos remained in federal custody Thursday, court records state

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Aryan Brotherhood member sentenced for slaying

Thursday, May 3rd, 2012

A member of the white supremacist Aryan Brotherhood of Texas prison gang has been sentenced to life imprisonment after pleading guilty to helping to torture and kill a Pleasanton man.

A Justice Department statement says a federal judge in San Antonio sentenced Michael Dewayne “Bucky” Smith of Vidor (VYE’-dur) on Wednesday. He pleaded guilty to murder and conspiracy in the racketeering-related death of Mark Davis Byrd Sr. A fellow gang member, Jim Flint “Q-Ball” McIntyre of Houston, is serving a life sentence after pleading guilty to the same charges.

 

Gang captain Frank Lavelle “Thumper” Urbish Jr. of Beaumont awaits sentencing after pleading guilty to the same charges. He, too, could get life.

 

Court documents show Byrd was killed for stealing drugs he was to deliver for the gang.


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‘USA’ chant reflects deep social woes

Saturday, March 10th, 2012

When do chants of USA! USA! become a racist rant? It sounds, at first hearing, like an Orwellian proposition. But take that proposition to one of the most American of venues, the high school basketball gym, and that seeming double-speak becomes an ethnic affront; it’s all in the intent.

That’s exactly what happened last week during an important regional basketball match between San Antonio’s Alamo Heights and Edison High Schools. The Alamo Heights Mules defeated the Edison Golden Bears, and with that defeat the Mules advanced in regional tournament competition. But in their post-victory celebration a group of Mules partisans chanted USA! USA! This is the nuance that turned a patriotic chant into a perceived ethnic/cultural slur: both the Mules and the Golden Bears are American High School teams. The USA! chant was entirely out of place, it was not an international competition — unless you dig further into preconceptions.

Alamo Heights is a mostly nonminority, affluent high school. Edison is predominantly Latino, lower- to working-class campus. Within that context the chant has a different implication. It is, at best, demeaning. At worst, it’s insulting. The implied intent is that the victors are American, and defeated are not. The implication goes further still: if the members of the Golden Bears squad are not American, as the chant implies, then what are they?

See, this incident illustrates why U.S. Latinos, in general, have been compelled to raise the importance of the national immigration issue — it affects all Latinos. It matters that a group of American high school athletes will be regarded as being foreign simply because of their ethnicity and culture. The recent and irresponsible anti-immigrant rhetoric is to blame. So is the fact that we, the American public, have let it happen, unchecked and thought to be unimportant.

Take into account that this happened in San Antonio, a city that boasts inter-cultural getting-along; a city with deep and historic Latino roots. This is more than a mere chamber of commerce “ahem!” moment. It points to an undercurrent that we’d rather not acknowledge.

The official reaction in the wake of the incident was swift. The appropriate apologies were made; the chanting partisans (and there were Latinos among them) were banned from the subsequent Mules’ regional competition. And we’re all hoping that we’ve heard the last of it. But you have to wonder if resentments will linger, on both sides.

This is about more than just ethnicity and perceived citizenship. It’s also about class differences, about how one social class thinks of the other. It’s also about a conversation we’d rather not have: about debutants and carnival-goers, workforce and business leaders, power brokers and everyone else. But there you go, I’ve said it.

But pointing out a problem doesn’t make it go away. There are lessons here, hard ones that need to be taught. It’s an opportunity for Alamo Heights ISD and San Antonio ISD leaders to come together to build bridges of understanding. These were, after all, children who were involved. The lesson requires adults, to act.

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