Pubdate: Sat, 16 Aug 1997 Source: Houston Chronicle, page 1 Contact: Lawyer details defense in border shooting case By RONNIE CROCKER and THADDEUS HERRICK Copyright 1997 Houston Chronicle Even as federal authorities were set to begin a civil rights investigation of his client, attorney Jack Zimmermann poured forth many of the details he believes contributed to the sofar successful defense of the Marine corporal who shot and killed a border teenager during an antidrug patrol May 20. A day after Cpl. Clemente Banuelos, 22, was cleared by a grand jury in Marfa, Zimmermann described for reporters the series of polygraph tests the Marine passed two months after the fatal shooting. He touted the consensus of five experts debunking the widely reported conclusions of Texas Rangers that an autopsy report conflicted with the Marines' version of what happened. "That's why it was so irritating to me to have the Texas Rangers say, ... `The evidence doesn't add up,' " said Zimmermann, who had been adamant before the grand jury's nobill that he could not comment on many aspects of the case. At his Galleriaarea office in Houston, he said he was baffled the Rangers didn't do the same. The news conference Friday began on a bizarre note when Banuelos was led before reporters but not allowed to answer their questions. The artillery scout observer stood expressionless as camera flashes went off and TV crews zoomed in on him. Banuelos was then led to another room where, Zimmermann said, he and the Marine's military lawyer would discuss what might happen next. Zimmermann said he does not expect another grand jury investigation, despite calls for one from protesters, and he does not expect an upcoming federal civil rights investigation to have a different outcome. That investigation has been on hold pending the outcome of the state action, but federal officials said Friday that they were set to get under way. The FBI took custody of the guns fired by Banuelos and the victim, 18yearold Esequiel Hernandez Jr., along with all other physical evidence in the case. Zimmermann also said he doubts that he would represent Banuelos in an expected multimilliondollar civil lawsuit. An attorney for Hernandez's family said he is pursuing a negligence claim against the federal government. But the highlight of Friday's news conference was Zimmermann's recounting, in richer detail than previously, a scene near the El Polvo crossing of the Rio Grande that very much resembled the typical drugtrafficking scenario the Marines were prepared for. When the antidrug unit, Joint Task Force6, was sent to Presidio County to patrol, the Marines were briefed on what to expect. Zimmermann said they were told that drug traffickers often could be seen riding up on horseback with bags of narcotics, accompanied by a scout on foot. About 6 p.m. on May 20, the final day of a fourday patrol for Banuelos' team of four Marines, Zimmermann said, the team spotted a man on horseback across the Rio Grande. When the Marines noticed the horseman had cloth bags in his lap, they dropped to one knee to watch him. About that time, the lawyer said, they heard goats to their right. That was not unusual, Zimmermann said, because the team had noticed the goats every evening, as had the team Banuelos' group relieved. That was reflected in their reports and in interviews with defense investigators. But this time was different, Zimmermann said. There was a man with a gun behind the herd. "The man looked at them; he stared at them," the lawyer said. "They knew they had been compromised." When the man later determined to be Hernandez, who by all accounts had no ties to any drug dealers fired his .22caliber rifle at them, the Marines fell to their bellies and radioed to their military commanders that they were under fire. Zimmermann said U.S. Border Patrol agents were monitoring the radio traffic. He said Banuelos radioed that the man appeared to know the Marines were present and was looking for them as he maneuvered in and out of sight. Banuelos, as team leader, ordered his men to remain parallel with Hernandez. "If he points the weapon down range (toward us) again, we're going to take him," Zimmermann said, paraphrasing from a transcript of Banuelos' communication with his superiors. "And the response was, `Roger, fire back.' " Some 18 minutes later, after the Marines had closed the gap between themselves and Hernandez from about 220 yards to less than 140 yards, Banuelos sent Lance Cpl. James Blood to a high point to his right. After Hernandez raised his rifle toward Blood, Zimmermann said, Banuelos squeezed off a single shot with his M16. The attorney said Hernandez most likely died within minutes. Margarito Hernandez, Esequiel's older brother, said Friday that the grand jury's decision made it look like his brother was at fault. But District Attorney Albert Valadez, in brief remarks in Marfa late Thursday, said that while the grand jury had declined to charge Banuelos, it did not believe Hernandez knew he was shooting at Marines or anybody. "The grand jury believes he might have seen movement," Valadez said. "But the jurors do not believe Zeke was trying to injure Marines or anyone else at that location." The lawyer said Banuelos not only gave statements to civilian and military investigators at the scene over the next two days, but he also successfully completed three lie detector tests on July 19. Throughout, he said, Banuelos insisted that he fired only to save Blood's life. He also said that after Texas Rangers began expressing their concerns that the autopsy showed the angle of the bullet wound to be inconsistent with the Marines' version of what happened, he interviewed the Bexar County examiner who conducted the autopsy. He then consulted another longtime pathologist, two expert criminologists and the former chief investigator for the Harris County Medical Examiner's Office. Their consensus, Zimmermann said, was that nothing in the autopsy was inconsistent with Banuelos' and the other Marines' stories. Redford townsfolk, most of whom decried the grand jury's decision, are trying to convene a court of inquiry to examine the matter. Their central concern is that the grand jury included a local Border Patrol assistant chief and three others with ties to the federal government. Courts of inquiry can be used in Texas to review grand jury proceedings. Assembled outside Zimmermann's office on Friday was a group of 13 protesters, repeating that call. Maria Jimenez, director of the American Friends Service Committee, said the investigation should have included more Redford residents and those grand jurors with Border Patrol connections should have been excluded.