A new PBS documentary exposes the tasing and
beating death of a Mexican immigrant by U.S. border agents in
California, and has renewed scrutiny of what critics call a culture of
impunity. In May 2010, 32-year-old Anastasio Hernández Rojas was caught
trying to enter the United States from Mexico near San Diego. He had
previously lived in the United States for 25 years and was the father of
five U.S.-born children. But instead of deportation, Hernández Rojas’
detention ended in his death. A number of border officers were seen
beating him, before one tasered him at least five times. He died shortly
afterward. The agents say they confronted Hernández Rojas because he
became hostile and resisted arrest. But previously undisclosed videos
recorded by eyewitnesses on their cell phones show a different story.
“All eyewitnesses that we spoke to basically tell the same story of a
man hogtied and handcuffed behind his back, not resisting, being beaten
repeatedly — by batons, by kicks, by punches, by the use of a taser —
for almost 30 minutes until he died,” says reporter John Carlos Frey,
whose exposé aired in a national television special last Friday night,
as part of a joint investigation by the PBS
broadcast, "Need to Know," and the Investigative Fund of the Nation
Institute. We also speak with Hernández Rojas’ widow, María Puga. “My
husband was tortured; he was severely beaten, and they’ve destroyed an
entire family,” says Puga, speaking through a Spanish-English
translator. “All we want is justice, and we need your help to get that
justice.”
Video
Source: Democracy Now!
Author: --
Video
Source: Democracy Now!
Author: --
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