Tag Archives: Leonard Morales

Texas murder case has ICE at odds with local prosecutors

A highly unusual murder trial where the defendant and victim were both federal informants drew six government attorneys to the courtroom of a Texas judge who admits he isn’t sure how to handle the case.

Defendant Ruben Dorado Rodriguez who, like the victim, was a member of a Mexican drug cartel, claims he confessed to local cops after being promised help the feds now deny offering. His handler at Immigration and Customs Enforcement initially refused to testify, then later admitted knowing prior to the 2009 murder of Jose Daniel Gonzalez Galeana that a hit had been ordered.

Dorado’s attorneys want the confession thrown out because they say it came after his handler at Immigration and Customs Enforcement promised to intervene. A frustrated District Court Judge Gonzalo Garcia, who had already expressed frustration with ICE for not complying with subpoenas, warned that Dorado’s relationship with ICE could result in a test case for potential transfer to federal court.

“As a judge in the state of Texas I have to follow Texas law which may pose a problem with what the agent has permission to testify to,” Garcia said Thursday at a pretrial hearing.

In addition to Dorado’s defense team, two attorneys from ICE, a pair of Assistant U.S. Attorneys and two local prosecutors were all on hand at the proceeding

Defense attorney Leonard Morales wants the confession tossed because his client’s ICE handler, Pete Loera, initially resisted to testify to what he may have known about the killing and what he may have promised Dorado after his arrest.

Loera was the handler for both men at the time of Galeana’s assassination, and recently testified that he knew the hit had been ordered. The triggerman has already been convicted, but Rodriguez faces charges for helping to carry it out.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Eduardo Castillo said Loera had wide latitude as to what he could discuss. Although the federal agency initially resisted the subpoena, Castillo said it complied because of the magnitude of the case.

“The position of the agency was to protect disclosures but given the severity of the charges, the agent was given permission to testify, we’re not interested in jeopardizing a fair trial without putting further lives or investigations at risk,” Castillo said.

Still, both Morales and Garcia voiced concern about heavily redacted ICE documents submitted into evidence. Castillo assured the court the process has begun to remove as much as possible.

Loera said Galeana, also known by the cartel name of “Picus” came into the fold as an informant in the summer of 2007 after being implicated in an investigation. He was given “protections” that Loera said he could not disclose.

Dorado, known in the cartel as “Meyer,” was brought in at a later date as an informant following an illegal immigrant investigation, but was not provided the same privileges as Galeana and was classified as a cooperating defendant.

Loera said neither Galeana nor Dorado knew the other was an informant. Galeana allegedly saved Dorado from a cartel hit in the past by vouching for him.

The relationships turned sticky in the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

El Paso murder case could put ICE on trial

A murder-for-hire trial starring two alleged members of a Mexican drug cartel turned messy for the federal government when word emerged that both were informants for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Ruben Rodriguez-Dorado, 34, is charged with capital murder for his role in the 2009 shooting of Jose Daniel Gonzalez-Galeana. Both have not only been identified as members of the Juárez Cartel, but also as ICE informants who reportedly had the same handler.

Now, amid speculation ICE agents may have known about the hit in advance, the agency is refusing to cooperate with attorneys – possibly putting the prosecution of Rodriguez-Dorado, who allegedly hired two men for the killing, in jeopardy.

“We’ve been trying unsuccessfully to obtain testimony and document evidence from ICE in regards to their involvement in this case,” said Leonard Morales, Rodriguez-Dorado’s defense attorney.

ICE has repeatedly refused to comply with subpoenas filed by Morales. What little documentation he has received from ICE was heavily redacted and provided scant information, he said.

“Without ICE‘s support in state court there’s certainly going to be a difficult time prosecuting this case,” Morales said.

Perhaps most troubling is speculation that ICE officials in El Paso may have been aware of the hit on Gonzalez-Galeana before it happened and did not intervene. Authorities believe the hit was ordered after cartel bosses learned he was working with ICE. The murder occurred at his El Paso home just yards from the residence of the city’s chief of police.

“There’s violence that occurs on the border but this is one of the few cases that you can point a finger and say this was part and parcel of the Drug War,” said Leonard Morales, Rodriguez-Dorado’s defense attorney.

Gonzalez-Galeana was in so tight with ICE that he was in the country on a special visa as being contracted and protected by ICE. According to the El Paso Times, word of Gonzalez-Galeana’s shooting got out so fast to local ICE agents that they arrived at the scene almost simultaneously with El Paso police.

Morales, who said he must honor the gag order imposed by one of the earlier district court judges who handled the case that included three other defendants, said the court has received virtually no assistance from ICE and that is impeding the progress of the case and, according to a judge, is violating his constitutional rights.

The El Paso Times reported March 1 that during a motion hearing the previous day, a furious Judge Gonzalo Garcia chastised ICE for not complying with the subpoenas and said there is a risk of the charges being dropped against Rodriguez-Dorado.

But ICE officials say they are cooperating.

“U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement‘s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) supports and works closely with its state and local law enforcement partners on many levels, and is attentive to their requests for disclosure of information,” said Leticia Zamarripa, the agency’s spokesperson for the El Paso Office. “HSI is currently working with its state and local law enforcement partners to resolve this issue and ensure justice is served.”

Rodriguez-Dorado was in the country legally …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News