It was bound to happen; the chickens will come home to roost. Recently three National Guardsmen shoot up a family carne asada (barbeque) while on a “beer-fueled” joy ride near Eagle Pass, TX.
The last time the US stationed troops along the Rio Grande, a Marine shot and killed a Texas teenager tending to his goats at his home. Back in 1997 when a US military unit called Joint Task Force Six or JTF 6 was asked to assist the Border Patrol in patrolling the borders for drug traffickers, a Marine shot and killed a Texas teenager within sight of his home. Two things resulted from that day – Esequiel Hernandez Jr. became the first civilian killed by US troops since the student massacre at Kent State University in 1970 and Cpl. Clemente Manuel Banuelos became the first US Marine to kill a fellow citizen on US soil.
On May 20, 1997, Esequiel Hernandez Jr. became the first civilian killed by U.S. troops since the student massacre at Kent State University in 1970. His death led to a temporary suspension of military patrols near the U.S.-Mexican border. And in August, the government paid his family $1.9 million to settle a wrongful death claim.
Cpl. Clemente Manuel Banuelos became the first U.S. Marine to kill a fellow citizen on U.S. soil. Four investigations and three grand juries probed the May 1997 shooting. Each concluded that because Banuelos followed orders, he was innocent of criminal wrongdoing. Those who issued the orders were never tried.
Back in July when Narco News reported on this story based on new information from Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) documents provided to Narco News by professor Keith Yearman, Narco News forewarned:
Marines are taught to hunt down the enemy and eliminate him. That’s what you get when you put soldiers on the border. They are trained to kill.
That fact is something to keep in mind as President Bush’s directive of dispatching [some 6,000] National Guard troops to the border is carried out over the next several months.
…If you want to destroy the border, then send in the Marines.
It looks like the chickens are half way home and about to roost. Recently, the Houston Chronicle reported that three National Guardsmen were arrested on Sept 6 on felony deadly-conduct charges for shooting up a family carne asada.
Apparently the three men were bored and used their off-duty time joyriding drunk and shooting up an innocent family outdoor gathering.
… the two-year military mission known as “Operation Jump Start” wasn’t supposed to be such a tedious assignment that highly trained troops would bide their off-duty time with beer-fueled joyriding and reckless gunfire.
Three soldiers from North Texas, at least one of whom had served in Iraq, were arrested the evening of Sept. 6 on felony deadly-conduct charges after several shots were fired from their private vehicle as it passed a family cookout in a modest Maverick County subdivision, officials said.
“Apparently the family was having a carne asada outside and they saw this vehicle drive by, stop in front of the residence and shoot several times. Then they took off and made a U-turn and came back and did the same thing,” Herrera said.
The young men were later found at a convenience store with “two cases of beer — minus three brews” in the car. The Chronicle reports, according Maverick County Sheriff Tomas S. Herrera, “no one was targeted or injured by the gunshots and no property damage was reported” and that “none of the soldiers appeared intoxicated upon arrest.” If the soldiers were not drunk, then they must have known what they were doing.
As the sheriff’s department completes their investigation, the three men have been reassigned to Camp Mabry and the beat goes on. The incident is being called an “isolated incident” and a case of the “boredoms.”
Although County Judge Jose A. Aranda Jr. does agree it was an “isolated incident”, he does question incident as to why they would do it considering that the “community” had “welcomed the troops” with open arms. Considering Herrera said that the young men were not “intoxicated upon arrest,” Aranda’s has the right to be puzzled. However, Aranda provides one possible explanation for this behavior. Life as a National Guardsmen holed up in a small border town is not all what is cracked up to be.
Aranda … sympathizes with soldiers assigned here because entertainment options are limited to restaurants, bars, the Kickapoo casino and the Mexican border town of Piedras Negras, he said.
“You send in a group of people who are actually trained to do something else, you put them behind a desk, you’ve got them stashed away in a hotel. They’re bored and they were out having fun,” Aranda said.
Renewing his claim that troops wouldn’t fully appreciate border culture, Aranda said the soldiers’ random gunfire in the Deer Run subdivision showed insensitivity.
“They don’t understand how our neighborhoods are, and you’re not supposed to be out there shooting on the roads. That can lead to something,” Aranda said.
I guess these three men decided to make an additional option to their entertainment repertoire but this time they were caught. Just like the case of Esequiel Hernandez Jr., the military will investigate, reassign, and hope everything is forgotten. Militarizing the border was wrong back then and it is wrong now. How long can we let this continue? Until innocent people and children are killed, like in Iraq.
x-posted on ¡Para Justicia y Libertad!