A Plea to the President


More than two years after they were sentenced, former Border Patrol Agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Compean still sit in federal prison for their actions in attempting to apprehend a drug runner who was smuggling 743 pounds of marijuana valued at $1.2 million from Mexico into the United States.

To protect them from prison gangs eager to attack law enforcement officers, the Bureau of Prisons keeps the two agents separate from the general prison population. Today, Ramos and Compean sit in solitary cells in Phoenix, and Elkton, Ohio, respectively, hundreds of miles from their homes and families in Texas.

Because of the excesses of the prosecution against them, they will continue to sit alone in those cells for another decade. That is unless President Bush commutes their unjust sentences. In his remaining days as President, I ask President Bush to show mercy and use his clemency power to give back Agents Ramos and Compean the next 10 years of their lives.

Along with U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, I have written two letters to the President urging commutation—and have spoken publicly many more times on this injustice.

Law enforcement officers hold a special place in our society. Those with authority to investigate and incarcerate others possess enormous power. But, like their fellow citizens, law enforcement officers must be held accountable when they act outside the law—and must be treated no better and no worse if prosecuted for a crime. While a jury of their peers found that Ramos and Compean exceeded the authority entrusted to them, I have reached the conclusion as a Senator, a former judge, and a citizen, that the loss of their jobs and the prison time they have already served has been more than enough punishment.

This is a case of prosecutorial overreaching.

For starters, prosecutors hid from the jury the full criminal character of the drug smuggler, Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila, who was also the government’s key witness. The jury was kept from hearing one of the most critical pieces of information regarding the case—that Aldrete-Davila was running drugs at the time of his altercation with the border agents. Nor did the jury hear that after he was granted immunity to testify against the agents, Aldrete-Davila breached his agreement and continued to smuggle drugs into this country. Finally, the jury was told neither that Aldrete-Davila’s friends had organized a “hunting party” to shoot border agents in revenge for his injuries, nor that Aldrete-Davila had refused to help law enforcement identify and stop these vigilantes. Instead of hearing this evidence, the jury was told by the prosecutor in closing statements that Aldrete-Davila had run from the border agents simply because he wanted to go home. Several jurors have since come forward to state that if they had been told about the excluded evidence, they would have changed their verdict.

What’s more, long before their trial, Ramos and Compean suffered unfair treatment by federal prosecutors, who made an unprecedented move to charge Ramos and Compean with a federal gun crime that was never intended to be used against law enforcement officers. As a result, the penalty levied on these men was grossly excessive.

Ramos and Compean were the first, and so far are the only, law enforcement agents to be charged under 18 U.S.C. 924(c) for actions taken in the regular course of their duties. That statute provides a mandatory minimum of 10 years in jail for anyone who fires a gun while “during and in relation to any crime of violence.”

The dangerous result of prosecutors reading this statute liberally to prosecute law enforcement officers is obvious. Our law enforcement officers—whose chief responsibility is to protect and serve—carry guns and are sometimes required to use them as part of their job. The statute used to prosecute Ramos and Compean was originally intended as a punishment enhancement to deter individuals from dealing drugs and engaging in violent crimes. Until the Ramos and Compean case, prosecutors understood this distinction—practicing their discretion accordingly and not charging it against law enforcement acting in the regular course of their duties.

If Ramos and Compean had been prosecuted, convicted, and sentenced for every charge against them except for the 10-year mandatory minimum gun charge, they would both be free men by the end of this year. Because of prosecutors’ use of this unprecedented and unjust charge, that day of freedom is still a decade away.

Even U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton, who supervised the prosecution, has now conceded that concerns about the fairness of the sentence are legitimate. Let us hope that President Bush will hear these concerns and right the wrongs against Ramos and Compean.

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24 Comments Leave a comment

May The President Hear the Plea

Bourbeau Tuesday, January 13th at 2:01PM EST (link)

But having said that, there’s so much that has been written about this, including that which has been delinieated by Senator Cornyn, it still puzzles me why these two men were targeted for prosecution with such ferocity. Furthermore, with all the publicity regarding the case, I also wonder why there isn’t a ‘review panel’, within the Justice Department, to monitor the handling of these types of case to ensure defendants aren’t being unfairly prosecuted. I hope President Bush pardons both of these men. But more importantly, I wish there was evidence of there being a lessons learned here at Justice, and that to me is not very evident.

Sorry Bourbeau and AHALgal, but for the sake of clarity..commutation not pardon....nt

Attack Mode Tuesday, January 13th at 2:49PM EST (link)

“Land of the Free and Home of da Whopper” Peter Griffin…Family Guy

conform and celebrate diversity….or else!!!

Steel-Belted Radial Right Winger

“I’ll create 5 million jobs from out of unicorn farts and pixie dust” Justatron paraphrasing Obamessiah…yes I love it that much.

 
 

GWB - Please! Please!

AHALgal Tuesday, January 13th at 2:11PM EST (link)
 

Compassion for our warriors

Caleb Howe Tuesday, January 13th at 2:17PM EST (link)

I agree completely.

Caleb Howe (formerly known as absentee)
Support Activist Blogging! | twitter.com/CalebHowe

 

Sen. Cornyn, thank you for writing this...

Attack Mode Tuesday, January 13th at 2:30PM EST (link)

I hope that President Bush hears your request and acts on it. Thank you for being clear that you are requesting clemency for these two and not a full pardon. I know to some this may seem trivial but there is a clear distinction between the two. We are a nation of laws and Ramos and Compean did break the law, with that in mind I could not in good conscience support a full pardon. Clemency, though is fully justified and needed considering the extreme overreach of the prosecution.

Once again, thank you for your efforts in this matter.

“Land of the Free and Home of da Whopper” Peter Griffin…Family Guy

conform and celebrate diversity….or else!!!

Steel-Belted Radial Right Winger

“I’ll create 5 million jobs from out of unicorn farts and pixie dust” Justatron paraphrasing Obamessiah…yes I love it that much.

Seconded.........

Kenny Solomon Tuesday, January 13th at 7:38PM EST (link)

Senator Cornyn:

Thank you for picking up the ball that’s been dropped by way too many on our side of the (border) fence……….. pun totally intended.

We are praying that Agent Compean and Agent Ramos have their release granted immediately.

Cheers from South Florida !

Kenny Solomon
Senior Expediter
The 72 Virgins Club Travel Agency
Offices throughout America (all 57 states).

Of course you can have my guns……. Bullets first.
I didn’t say rounds, shells or magazines…… I said bullets first.

 
 

As a fellow Texan, I agree!

izoneguy Tuesday, January 13th at 2:37PM EST (link)

n/t

“When the government fears the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny.”
Thomas Jefferson

 

a thousand amens on Ramos and Campeon

E Pluribus Unum Tuesday, January 13th at 3:09PM EST (link)

And that’s right, Cornyn is MY Senator, just for the record.

I would go so far as lobbying for a full pardon, though. A commutation speaks only to mercy on the two officers. A pardon speaks to the argument that they were the victims of prosecutorial and/or judicial excess or misbehavior - which IS the argument Cornyn makes.

Carthago delenda est
Do your conservative t-shirt Christmas shopping at EPU Gear. Save the conservative muse, save the world.

EPU...sorry I think I have to disagree....

Attack Mode Tuesday, January 13th at 3:16PM EST (link)

Ramos and Compean did break some laws and have paid for those infractions, I don’t believe a full pardon is what needs to be given, and apparently neither does Sen Cornyn. WRT, 18 U.S.C. 924(c), they should not have been charged under this statute, but I don’t know if you can pardon on just that count.

Either way I think commutation is the correct answer on this one and Sen. Cornyn did well to explain it that way.

“Land of the Free and Home of da Whopper” Peter Griffin…Family Guy

conform and celebrate diversity….or else!!!

Steel-Belted Radial Right Winger

“I’ll create 5 million jobs from out of unicorn farts and pixie dust” Justatron paraphrasing Obamessiah…yes I love it that much.

then we will just agree to disagree

E Pluribus Unum Tuesday, January 13th at 3:35PM EST (link)

because I do not concede that they broke laws. I.e., clean shoot.

Carthago delenda est
Do your conservative t-shirt Christmas shopping at EPU Gear. Save the conservative muse, save the world.

I agree the shoot was clean.....but what occured after is the problem...

Attack Mode Tuesday, January 13th at 3:40PM EST (link)

the cover up in this case was the crime from what I know. Outside of the shoot, which was prosecuted under the statute mentioned above, they have served their sentence, the time remaining is all due to the overreach of prosecuting them under the statute mentioned above, can they be pardoned for just that part of their conviction? If so then I am in favor of that, if not then commutation is the right way to go. Please correct me if I am wrong.

“Land of the Free and Home of da Whopper” Peter Griffin…Family Guy

conform and celebrate diversity….or else!!!

Steel-Belted Radial Right Winger

“I’ll create 5 million jobs from out of unicorn farts and pixie dust” Justatron paraphrasing Obamessiah…yes I love it that much.

What triggered the 10-yr minumum

E Pluribus Unum Tuesday, January 13th at 3:58PM EST (link)

was the actual shooting itself - using a gun in a crime involving drugs, or some such.

Carthago delenda est
Do your conservative t-shirt Christmas shopping at EPU Gear. Save the conservative muse, save the world.

I totally acknowledge that EPU...

Attack Mode Tuesday, January 13th at 4:14PM EST (link)

My question is can they be pardoned for just for just that offense, which was certainly an overreach, or would they have to be pardoned on all of it?

“Land of the Free and Home of da Whopper” Peter Griffin…Family Guy

conform and celebrate diversity….or else!!!

Steel-Belted Radial Right Winger

“I’ll create 5 million jobs from out of unicorn farts and pixie dust” Justatron paraphrasing Obamessiah…yes I love it that much.

I think the answer is yes

E Pluribus Unum Tuesday, January 13th at 7:42PM EST (link)

I think they can be pardoned for the separate things. I think the convictions were on multiple counts, therefore multiple “crimes” with multiple sentences.

Carthago delenda est
Do your conservative t-shirt Christmas shopping at EPU Gear. Save the conservative muse, save the world.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thank you Senator

SgtKirk Tuesday, January 13th at 3:10PM EST (link)

Happy to see it is a fellow Texas leading the charge to get these officers out of prison and back to their families.

 

Thank you for posting that here Sen. Cornyn and I ask the President to do the same!

JadedByPolitics Tuesday, January 13th at 3:12PM EST (link)

If he wants to do anything for his party at the end of his Presidency as WE have done so much for him THIS would be IT!

Whoever has his enemy at his mercy &
does not destroy him is his own enemy

hey, nice sig Jaded

E Pluribus Unum Tuesday, January 13th at 3:36PM EST (link)

very nice!

Carthago delenda est
Do your conservative t-shirt Christmas shopping at EPU Gear. Save the conservative muse, save the world.

Why thank you EPU it is my favorite saying! and...

JadedByPolitics Tuesday, January 13th at 3:42PM EST (link)

It is TRUE!

Whoever has his enemy at his mercy &
does not destroy him is his own enemy

 
 
 

Yes, overreach, overreach, overreach. Pardon them.

streetwise Tuesday, January 13th at 3:44PM EST (link)
 

"Pardon" Ramos and Compean

Scope Tuesday, January 13th at 6:26PM EST (link)

Pardon v Commutation-
“Commuting is the act of reducing a sentence. A President has the ability to commute a sentence before it’s even begun. A full pardon can do the same thing; it can also reduce a sentence. But more commonly a pardon is granted after a person serves his prison sentence. And unlike a commutation, a pardon can absolve the person of his status as a convicted criminal and restore his civil abilities.”

For whatever reason the Department of Justice has not released all of the trial transcripts. What has been released can be found here-

http://www.friendsoftheborderpatrol.com/US_vs_Ramos_Compean.htm

There is also some great info on the case here-

http://hecubus.wordpress.com/2007/01/26/ramos-compean-convicted-under-wrong-law-to-johnny-sutton-well-duh/

The 10 year minimum sentence was applied by using a law that had never been intended to use against Law Enforcement/Border Agents or anyone else who is authorized to use weapons in the commission of their jobs.

There are many conflicting reports on exactly what happened. In the above links, there is testimony that someone other than Compean or Ramos picked up the shell casings, and threw them over the hill/ditch. Also, the links and other reports I’ve read prove that once Compean called in reinforcements, 7 other Boarder Agents responded, including at least one supervisor. Both related exactly what happened verbally to at least one supervisor, and the supervisor failed to file the necessay incident report.

There are alot of speculations about the case up to and including a tie to Bush and Sutton, which Bush claims does not exist, though Sutton was on the Bush transition team according to reports.

I have been following this case for a long time, and with several of the jurors stating that they never would have convicted if they had all of the information, as well as Sutton himself doing some backtracking in interviews, as well as the conflicting testimony (that has been released), these men should be honored in the White House as heros, not left to rot in solitary confinement.

THEY DESERVE TO BE FULLY PARDONED!

 

Another Take (0 for 14, really??)

WallySobchak Tuesday, January 13th at 6:35PM EST (link)

Wally- You believe Andrew McCarthy?

Scope Tuesday, January 13th at 7:16PM EST (link)

And you believe this opion article that states no facts, and actually brings still another theory to light, to be true. Apparently he has not done alot of research into the entire case which so many many others have. He just wants to slam Ramos and Compean. There are many more credible people who have done their homework that would laugh at Mr. McCarthy, if for no other reason than the fact that others have taken the time to look into the details.

In addition

Scope Tuesday, January 13th at 7:32PM EST (link)

this part of the report is Mr. McCarthy’s speculation-

Compean and Ramos are bad guys. Once Aldrete-Davila was down from Ramos’s shot to the backside, they decided, for a second time, not to grab him so he could face justice for his crimes. As they well knew, an arrest at that point — after 15 shots at a fleeing, unarmed man who had tried to surrender — would have shone a spotlight on their performance. So instead, they exacerbated the already shameful display.

So, they decided to leave him and run and hide their evidence?

With conflicting reports, why would Mr. McCarthy decide to err on the side of the prosecution, especially when so much evidence was withheld from the jury. McCarthy even knocks the jury for God’s sake.

Conflicting reports say that the drug smuggler was shot 150 feet away by Ramos, and that he just kept on running. He got back to Mexico. Doubt he could limp his way there if so terribly wounded. And, since he escaped, there is no one but Davila to prove if he had a weapon or not.

PARDON RAMOS AND COMPEAN.

 
 
 

What is right is right and wrong is wrong - this is the right thing to do

Elizabeth Christian Wednesday, January 14th at 12:36AM EST (link)

I hope President Bush sees this and acts, this is the right thing to do.

thanks,
Elizabeth

Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.
~Benjamin Franklin

 

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