David Sipe case
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Author Topic: David Sipe case  (Read 3255 times)
CARLHAYDEN
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« on: February 21, 2007, 01:26:54 AM »

Compean and Ramos are not the only victims of the federal persecutors in Texas.

The federal persecutors in Texas love illegal aliens and hate law enforcement officers.  Their love for illegals and hatred for law enforcement is so extreme that they have consistently used tax dollars to suborn perjury!

As I previously noted in another thread, Sutton and his fellow scumbags are worse than Nifong.

Here's some details on the David Sipe case:

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The 'get out of jail' card
TODAY'S EDITORIAL
February 21, 2007

The case of Border Patrol Agent David Sipe is an alarming example of misplaced priorities. On duty in April 2000 near Panitas, Texas, Mr. Sipe, his partner and two other agents responded to a disrupted motion sensor to find between 12 and 15 illegal aliens crossing the border. Most of the illegals followed the agents' instructions and surrendered, but several attempted to flee, running into a patch of tall dense reeds. What happened after Mr. Sipe pursued three men into the reeds is, as court documents note, disputed.

    In the course of making the arrest, Mr. Sipe struck one of the border crossers, a Mexican national named Jose Guevara, in the head with his flashlight. He said it was necessary, but the U.S. Attorney's office said it wasn't. In 2001, Mr. Sipe, who had no previous complaints against him, was convicted for using excessive force, and dismissed from the Border Patrol. The story doesn't end there, and when the conduct of the prosecuting attorney's office came to light Mr. Sipe was tried again and acquitted.

    It turns out that three illegal aliens who testified against Mr. Sipe -- that is, Mr. Guevara along with two others who had fled into the reeds -- received a very nice gift package. The Washington Times reported Monday that the three illegals got Social Security cards, witness fees, travel expenses, living expenses and the use of government telephones to call relatives in Mexico, and were allowed to travel to and from Mexico and to North Carolina. The government offered everything to the three who had broken the law, all to obtain testimony against an agent who had enforced the law.

    The U.S. Attorney's office, moreover, covered up the generous benefits it had handed out. It failed to disclose the fact that all three illegal aliens had been living together in the months preceding the trial. Nor did prosecutors reveal that when Border Patrol agents stopped Mr. Guevara, again traveling with illegal aliens, they let him go when he flashed the "get out of jail card" he got from the prosecutors. "His arrest with illegal aliens was evidence that he was a transporter," wrote the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in ordering a new trial, "as well as evidence of the extent of the government's support accorded him in order to obtain his testimony."

    Mr. Sipe's felony conviction has been overturned, and despite the way he was treated he is working to rejoin the Border Patrol. But the repercussions of such zealous and aggressive prosecution go well beyond his case. The message to Border Patrol agents, who are assigned to the difficult and dangerous job of protecting our borders, is to worry less about the execution of their duties and more about how things could be made to look in court. Agents, like the rest of us, are not above the law, but government prosecutors must not lose sight of who the criminals are.
   

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David S
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« Reply #1 on: February 21, 2007, 11:46:19 AM »

Maybe someone needs to investigate the prosecutors.
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CARLHAYDEN
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« Reply #2 on: February 21, 2007, 11:52:07 AM »

Senator Feinstein, to her credit, is scheduled to begin a limited investigation soon.
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David S
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« Reply #3 on: February 21, 2007, 12:05:21 PM »

Sen Feinstein is not one of my favorite senators because of her anti-gun stance, but I applaud her effort on this issue.

With millions of illegals streaming over the border you really have to wonder about the motives behind prosecuting border patrol agents who are just trying to do their job by stopping the illegals. Either there are some real goofs in the prosecutors office or maybe someone is profiting from it.
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CARLHAYDEN
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« Reply #4 on: February 21, 2007, 02:24:45 PM »

Sen Feinstein is not one of my favorite senators because of her anti-gun stance, but I applaud her effort on this issue.

With millions of illegals streaming over the border you really have to wonder about the motives behind prosecuting border patrol agents who are just trying to do their job by stopping the illegals. Either there are some real goofs in the prosecutors office or maybe someone is profiting from it.

Unfortunately I cannot cite my sources, or some of the things they have reported.

However, let me suggest a couple of things to you.

First, if this were merely a case of one federal prosecutor going nuts, why hasn't Bush rid himself of the problem by issuing a pardon?

Two, its not really (primarily) a matter money (at least for Bush).

Third, Sutton has long and extensive ties to the top in the Bush administration.
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