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TOTAL WINE & MORE WINE TEAM MEMBERS, CASHIER & STOCK MEMEBERS General GROUNDS CONTROL LANDCAPE FOREMAN & LABORERS Dental Apache Dental Porcelain Techs Technical Yavapai College Analyst Banner Programmer Health Care Freedom Manor Caregivers Health Care Carondelet Foothills Surgery Pre-Op Nurse Health Care SOUTHERN ARIZONA ENDODONTICS I NSURANCE PROCESSOR Hourly UpdateBorder Patrol agent who shot illegal entrant charged with murderArizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 04.23.2007
BISBEE — A U.S. Border Patrol agent who fatally shot a Mexican illegal
entrant in January has been charged with murder by the Cochise County
Attorney who said Monday that the shooting was not justified.
On Monday, Cochise County Attorney Ed Rheinheimer filed a complaint against
agent Nicholas Corbett charging him with four counts of homicide:
first-degree and second-degree murder, manslaughter and negligent homicide.
Monday's filing comes more than three months after Corbett, 39, shot and
killed Francisco Javier Domínguez Rivera, 22, of Puebla, Mexico, on Jan. 12
about 150 yards north of the border between Bisbee and Douglas. The shooting
occurred while Corbett was trying to apprehend Domínguez Rivera and three
others who were trying to enter the country illegally.
"Based on the extensive investigation presented to this office by the
Cochise County Sheriff's Department, as well as the physical evidence
itself, we must come to the unfortunate but inescapable conclusion that this
shooting was not legally justified," said Rheinheimer in a written statement
released Monday.
"The evidence shows that at the time he was shot, Mr. Dominguez Rivera
presented no threat to agent Corbett and agent Corbett did not act in
reasonable apprehension of imminent death or serious physical injury," the
statement says.
A judge will schedule an initial appearance for Corbett likely by the end of
the week where conditions of release, including whether bond will be set,
will be determined, Rheinheimer said. Then, a preliminary hearing will be
scheduled within 20 days, where a judge will decide if there is enough
evidence for a trial, and if so, on what charges.
From his home in Cuautla, Morelos, the father of Francisco Dominguez Rivera,
Renato Dominguez celebrated the news as the start of a formal process
against the Border Patrol agent.
While he had earlier complained at the lack of progress in the
investigation, Dominguez Rivera's father said Monday he is pleased at the
news the agent has been charged.
"God willing there will be some justice. I am very pleased by this news and
I hope that in truth it is a reality and that something good lies ahead. At
least it is a good indication tha something has begun," said Dominguez, by
telephone in Cuautla, Morelos.
The decision to charge the agent also pleased immigrants' rights advocates,
but the Border Patrol union, which has championed Corbett's innocence, was
disappointed.
The decision is a part of a nationwide pattern of politically motivated
prosecutions against Border Patrol agents, said Brandon Judd, vice
president of Local 2544, the Arizona Chapter of the National Border Patrol
Council.
The matching testimony from three witnesses has more to do with their blood
ties and influence from the Mexican Consulate than what actually happened,
Judd says. He also disagrees with Rheinheimer's assertion that the physical
evidence contradicts Corbett's statements.
"I've looked over the reports and I have a hard time seeing how they could
do it unless of course this was politically motivated," Judd said Monday.
Charging the agent is a positive step that will lead to justice being served
in court, said Mark Adams, the coordinator of Douglas-based Frontera de
Cristo, a Presbyterian ministry. He was worried that the case would
disappear like many past investigations into shootings by agents.
"It serves as notice to all Border Patrol that they need to respect dignity
of human life and of those they are arresting," said Adams, a longtime
immigrant-rights activist. "It will serve as notice that there is not a
blank check, you can't just do anything you want."
A preliminary hearing would be the first chance for Corbett to take the
stand and explain why his report of the incident to co-workers, conflicts
with witness testimony and forensic evidence, facts revealed in more than
300 pages of documents released March 26 by the Cochise County Attorney's
Office.
Corbett, who never spoke with investigators, told colleagues the night after
the shooting that he shot at a man at the back of his vehicle who looked
like he was going to throw a rock. Three witnesses who were being
apprehended along with Domínguez Rivera - his two brothers and a
sister-in-law - told investigators that Corbett fired while pushing
Domínguez Rivera to the ground.
The bullet that killed Domínguez Rivera entered the left side of his chest,
passed downward through his heart and liver, and settled in the right lower
abdomen, according to an autopsy report by the Cochise County Medical
Examiner's Office. He was shot from between 3 inches and 2 1/2 feet,
according to Arizona Department of Public Safety lab information included in
the report.
A video taken by a Border Patrol surveillance camera shows from a distance
the moments of the fatal shooting. The blurry digital video shows Corbett
getting out of the driver's side of his vehicle and moving around the back
before engaging a group of people, Cochise County sheriff's Sgt. Mark Genz
wrote in a report given to the county attorney.
"You can see that he is very close to several subjects. It appears that one
of the subjects he is near goes down partly, possibly to his knees and then
goes down to the ground all the way and you lose sight of him," he wrote.
The County Attorney's office sent the video to the FBI for enhancement but
haven't received it back.
In his statement, Rheinheimer said the decision to charge was not an easy
one. He wrote that he's always been impressed by the dedication and
professionalism of Border Patrol agents, who do "nearly impossible jobs
under nearly impossible circumstances."
"Prosecutors understand that we are not in a position to second guess law
enforcement officers and the split-second decisions they must sometimes make
in deciding whether or not to use deadly force. But, we must go where the
evidence takes us and where Arizona law dictates."
Domínguez Rivera, who had been a construction worker in Mexico, was trying
to cross into the United States illegally with a group that included his two
brothers, René Domínguez Rivera, 21, and Jorge Domínguez Rivera, 24; and his
sister-in-law, Sandra Vidal Guzmán, 20.
The three remain in Tucson under the custody of the Mexican Consulate, said
Alejandro Ramos Cardoso, spokesman for the Mexican Consulate in Tucson.
Contact reporter Brady McCombs at bmccombs@azstarnet.com or 520-573-4213.
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