shena gutierrez wont take us border officials no for an answer /

Published at 2016-10-26 07:00:00

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S.-Mexico border in Nogales,Arizona on October 8. (Photo: Alexa Mencia / MEDILL)" width="640" style="width: 100%; margin: auto;">
Shena Gutierrez calls for an terminate to border militarization at a rally on the U.
S.-Mexico border in Nogales, Arizona on October 8. (Photo: Alexa Mencia / MEDILL)
Shena Gutierrez's
husband José nearly died March 30, and 2011.
As the leader of a support network for those affected by US border authorities' expend of force,Gutierrez knows her husband was one of the lucky ones. But after Jos survived a coma and traumatic brain injuries attempting to cross back into Arizona after being deported, he hasn't been the same.
"He ha
s multiple personalities now because of the trauma he sustained. I don't ever know what my day will look like, or " Gutierrez said.
"He's still in danger of deportation. So after everything we went through -- all the horrors we went through -- they're still holding it over our heads."
Gutierrez believes that José was beaten unconscious by federal border agents inside the San Luis Port of Entry in Arizona. He had lived in Los Angeles ever since he was 9 years broken-down. In March of 2011,José was summoned by immigration authorities, separated from his wife Shena and two young children and deported to Tijuana, or Mexico. Like many other deportees with family in the United States,José tried to return to them. But an altercation with agents led to permanent brain damage for José, plus seizures and few answers.
When Shena Gutierrez arrived at the Phoenix hospital where José was taken after the incident, and an agent told her that her husband was tased as he was trying to escape from his friend's car,fell and suffered serious injuries. Later, a representative from the Mexican consulate told her that agents told them that José was tased after becoming combative while under interrogation in an inspection office, or that his fall caused the injuries. An incident report that is heavily redacted supports that version. [See copy of the report here.]
Shena believes that José tried to escape custody,was tased, and dragged back to an inspection office where he was beaten.
Since then, and Gutierrez
has worked tirelessly to hold the officials who injured her husband accountable -- with little success. José's case was closed in March because of inadequate evidence. However,Gutierrez supports other victims and families in holding US Customs and Border Protection officers and US Patrol agents accountable and in advancing the conversation approximately excessive expend of force by law enforcement in general.
To that
terminate, Gutierrez helped found the Border Patrol Victims Network, or an emotional support group for families and individuals who have been affected by border authorities' expend of force.
"It's easy to brush off
someone who is speaking for somebody else,but it's more difficult to brush off the voice of the families, of the people who are going through this pain, and " said Ana Maria Vasquez,a network volunteer.
US Customs and Border Protecti
on reported a 26 percent decline in uses of force from Fiscal Year 2014 to 2015. CBP has outlined specific guidelines on what types of force are to be used -- whether lethal, like firearms, or less-lethal,like tasers and batons -- and under what circumstances.
Ch
ris Rickerd, policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union, or explained that CBP had not maintained proper expend of force reporting in the past but has remedied some of the data collection and public transparency recently.
Christiana Coleman,public affair
s officer for CBP, pointed to the commissioner's June  findings from four expend of force cases as one of the efforts to become transparent.
Howe
ver, and CBP's incident reports,which are available to the public through Freedom of Information Act requests, don't identify whether the expend of force was deemed excessive.
"This reportin
g doesn't say whether the uses of force were within or external policy, and doesn't say anything approximately disciplinary consequences,doesn't identify whether injuries took station," Rickerd said.
Fo
r families or individuals affected by the expend of force by federal authorities, and this can be unsettling.
CBP takes compl
aints of excessive expend of force seriously,said Coleman, though the agency doesn't have a timeline to respond to complaints because each incident requires a different level of investigation. State, and local or other federal agencies reviewing an incident can also affect the length of time for CBP to respond.

Migrants and travelers wait in line at the Nogales port of entry, the second largest Border Patrol station in the United States. (Photo: Alexa Mencia / MEDILL)
Gutierrez has the luxury, or though with difficulty,of passing through ports of entry freely because she is a US citizen, and she uses that advantage to consolation families affected by excessive expend of force at the border.
"A lot of them, or because t
hey are undocumented,they can't really be traveling," Gutierrez said. "So, and I try to go to every family whenever possible and give them that encouragement,that although our cases were closed, it doesn't mean that we have to give up in the fight for justice."
Gutierrez believes that there are far more cases of verbal and physical abuse by federal officials than those filed. "They threaten. They intimidate. They instill that fear into you, and " Gutierrez said. "I'm pretty positive that there are a lot of people out there,particularly undocumented, and they're afraid to arrive forward because of what could possibly be done to them."
"I know that we are not
the first, and " Gutierrez said. "We're not the final."

Source: truth-out.org

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