Did Homeland Security Special Agent have Connection??
World Net Daily claims it has official documents in its possession that indicate a Department of Homeland Security agent played a major role in managing the drug smuggler. World Net Daily also claims that the agent conducted the field investigation in the incident that landed Border Patrol officers Ignacio Ramos and Jose Compean in federal prison for more than a decade.
World Net Daily claims that in a heavily redacted 77-page DHS report submitted to Congress Wednesday there is no explicit discussion of the role that the DHS Special Agent played in the case.
If this is true, there should be an investigation into DHS and the conduct of the agent and his supervisors.
For additional details regarding this very confusing case, please read the following at World Net Daily: Border-agent investigator had tie to smuggler?????
OTHER STORIES AND INFORMATION POSTED ABOUT THIS CASE:
- Report: Agents in Border Shooting Lied
- Nacho Ramos assaulted in prison... Compean Family Statement
- How you can help the Compean family
- Johnny Sutton puts out more lies against Compean & Ramos.... See below to read FBP's Rebuttal
- Continuing news coverage of the Compean & Ramos Case - including America's Most Wanted Special
- Ramirez Statement stated on Hannity & Colmes
2 Comments:
Please check this out.
http://www.narconews.com/Issue38/article1374.html
uly 5, 2005
A recently retired, high-ranking DEA official is calling on Congress to investigate the role played by a U.S. Attorney in the cover-up of an informant’s participation in mass murder in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico.
The DEA official, Sandalio Gonzalez, is pointing the finger squarely at Johnny Sutton, the U.S. Attorney in San Antonio, Texas. He claims that had Sutton taken action sooner in the case, more than a dozen people might still be alive today. As a result, Gonzalez says Congress must act now to get to the bottom of what Sutton knew, and when he knew it.
According to Gonzalez, who, until January of this year, served as special agent in charge of the DEA’s El Paso field office, Sutton was clearly aware of the informant’s participation in the murders by at least Feb. 24, 2004. That’s when Gonzalez fired off a letter to Sutton blowing the whistle on the informant’s role in the murders.
Thank you for the heads-up. I know this 'man' Sutton is dirty. I just wish there were a way to prove it so we could get our border patrol guys out of prison before someone kills them...
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