Mexico’s Drug War Bloodies Areas Thought Safe

The New York Times

By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD
January 18, 2012

 

 

A man with a relative’s body found last year in Acapulco, now Mexico’s second most violent city.

Pedro Pardo/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

MEXICO CITY —

The Mexican drug war that has largely been defined by violence along the border is intensifying in interior and southern areas once thought clear of the carnage, broadening a conflict that has already overwhelmed the authorities and dispirited the public, according to analysts and new government data.

A forensic worker photographed bodies found last week in a vehicle in Mexico City. Carpeting, in foreground, covered two heads.  Victor Rubio/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Last week, two headless bodies were found in a smoldering minivan near the entrance to one of the largest and most expensive malls in Mexico City, generally considered a refuge from the grisly atrocities that have gripped other cities throughout the drug war.

Two other cities considered safe just six months ago — Guadalajara and Veracruz — have experienced their own episodes of brutality: 26 bodies were left in the heart of Guadalajara late last year, on the eve of Latin America’s most prestigious book fair, and last month the entire police force in Veracruz was dismissed after state officials determined that it was too corrupt to patrol a city where 35 bodies were dumped on a road in September.

The spreading violence, believed to largely reflect a widening turf war between two of the biggest criminal organizations in the country, has implications on both sides of the border, putting added pressure on political and law enforcement leaders who are already struggling to show that their strategies are working.

“It is a situation ever more complicated and complex,” said Ricardo Ravelo, a Mexican journalist who has written several books on criminal organizations. “Resources are and will be stretched to deal with this.”

American officials here acknowledge that the mayhem is unpredictable but contend that they have a way to help tackle it, spreading word that the $1.6 billion Merida Initiative, Washington’s signature antidrug program, will step up training and advising for the Mexican state and local police and judicial institutions this year, rather than emphasizing the delivery of helicopters and other equipment.

In a year in which President Felipe Calderón’s party, in power since 2000, may struggle to hang on to the presidency in July elections, the expanding violence is giving political rivals, all promising a more peaceful country, much to run on.

Discerning patterns of violence in the drug war can be perilous; it is often like a tornado skipping across terrain, devastating one area while leaving another untouched.

But government statistics released last week showed a surge in deaths presumed to be related to drug or organized crime in Mexico State, which surrounds the capital and is the nation’s most populous state, in the first nine months of last year. The government data also show that violence has now afflicted 831 communities nationwide, an increase of 7 percent.

Although questions have emerged about the government’s tally, many analysts agree that the violence is widening.

“There has been a definite shift of violence away from the border and back to the interior states,” said David A. Shirk, director of the Trans-Border Institute at the University of San Diego, who closely tracks drug crime.

In a way, he said, the shift is a stark reversal of the trend of six years ago, when violence exploded in more southerly states and migrated north along drug-trafficking routes, accelerating a drug war that has now left more than 47,000 people dead, according to the government.

In response, the Mexican government deployed its military and the federal police, arresting and killing more than two dozen cartel leaders and splintering or dismantling several groups. Their push has been backed by American aid in the form of helicopters, remotely piloted drones and the deepening involvement of American drug agents in investigations and raids.

The violence slackened in many areas along the border, including Ciudad Juárez, the bloodiest city, where homicides have been declining. Mexican officials say the decrease is proof that they are making headway, but analysts say it may have more to do with one rival group’s defeat of another, reducing competition and the bloodshed that comes with it.

As for the violence in other areas — Acapulco, in the south, is now the second most violent city — that, too, may reflect the shifting contours of the fights between criminal organizations.

The drug war, Mr. Shirk and other analysts say, is increasingly coming down to a fight to the death between the Sinaloa cartel, a more traditional drug-trafficking organization widely considered the most powerful, and Los Zetas, founded by former soldiers and considered the most violent as it expands into extortion, kidnapping and other rackets in regions far off the drug route map. A third, the Gulf Cartel, remains well armed and rises to attack from time to time.

Many of the clashes have been in central or more southern areas where the two main rivals have not previously fought each other so violently, analysts say. George W. Grayson, a longtime researcher of Mexican violence and co-author of a coming book on Los Zetas, said the group had spread to 17 states from 14 a year ago.

Though experts have said that Mexico City’s size, complexity and police force, considered better trained than many others, make it unlikely to fall into the mayhem of other locales, there have been alarming signs that violence is encroaching on the capital.

 

Police officers filing past Mexican Marines after the Veracruz police were disbanded.
Felix Marquez/Associated Press

Related

 

At the mall where the bodies were found, a banner proclaiming it was the work of the Sinaloa cartel appeared nearby, though experts say the killings could have been carried out by any number of offshoots operating in the region.

The murders were not the first in or near the capital to bear the signature of a cartel; in October two human heads were found on a busy road near the Defense Ministry headquarters.

But as the government, buttressed by United States drug agents and military advisers, deploys its armed forces and the federal police to dismantle criminal organizations and causes them to splinter, it has grown difficult to determine which criminal group is doing exactly what.

The conflict has undergone “Zetanification,” as all manner of criminal outfits copy the cartel’s brutal tactics and claim its name, said Mr. Grayson, a professor at the College of William and Mary.

Mexican officials continue to assert that they are getting the upper hand. In Washington last week, Mexico’s public safety secretary, Genaro García Luna, warned that violence would probably not decrease significantly for five more years. But he insisted that progress was being made, saying the rate of increase in homicides believed related to organized crime was showing signs of slowing. “You have to give the process more time to measure its efficiency,” he said.

At the mall in Mexico City, in the high-end Santa Fe district, known for its financial buildings and apartment towers, shoppers said they were worried but growing accustomed to gruesome violence in the country.

“We are living in a terrible situation,” said Jasia Grinberg, 65, who runs a hair salon at the mall, Centro Santa Fe, “and meanwhile, we are getting used to it.”

 

Suspect in OC Homeless Slayings is Iraq War Vet

About 100 people gathered Saturday to honor the most recent victim.

KTLA News

Dave Mecham

January 16, 2012

VIDEO: Watch Dave Mecham’s Report

Orange County homeless men killedPolice say James MacGillivray, 53, Paulus Smit, 57, and Lloyd Middaugh, 42, were Orange County homeless men killed by a serial murderer. (KTLA-TV)

ANAHEIM, Calif. (KTLA) —

A man arrested in connection with a series of killings of homeless men in the Orange County area is an Iraq war veteran whose father was homeless, according to reports.

Police held a news conference Saturday saying they are certain Itzcoatl Ocampo, 23, is the man responsible for recent stabbing deaths of Orange County homeless men since Dec. 20.

“We are extremely confident we have the person responsible for all four murders in Orange County,” Anaheim Police Chief John Welter said Saturday.


Ocampo, of Yorba Linda, was arrested in connection with Friday night’s stabbing death behind the fast food restaurant near the intersection of La Palma and the Imperial Highway.

Officers found the unidentified homeless man’s body riddled with stab wounds lying near a dumpster.

Bystanders at the Carl’s Jr. who witnessed the stabbing chased Ocampo on foot for about a quarter-mile.

He was later arrested by police.

Ocampo is now being held at the Orange County Jail Facility without bail.

He is set to be charged on Tuesday with four counts of murder, Welter said. If convicted on all the charges, Ocampo could face the death penalty.

Ocampo’s father, a 49-year-old homeless man who lives in Fullerton, told the Associated Press that is son came to him with a picture of one of the victims in December.

His uncle told the L.A. Times that Ocampo came to him on New Year’s Eve saying he had done something wrong, but didn’t elaborate further.

The 23-year-old lived in a rented house with his family members in Yorba Linda.

His father moved the family to the United States in the late 1980s, and Ocampo attended Esperanza High School in Anaheim before joining the Marines.

After serving in the Iraq War, he was discharged four years later and began drinking, his father said. He also developed a condition that caused his hands to shake.

The victim of the most recent killing was a homeless man named John Berry.

A crowd of more than 100 people gathered Saturday night at the spot where Berry’s body was found to pay respect to the man.

Many people at the gathering remembered Berry as a kind man who was often reluctant to accept handouts.

One young resident who spoke with KTLA said Berry was a regular in the neighborhood, and was well-known and liked by neighbors.

“I saw him at least three to four times a day,” said an Anaheim woman. “He was the sweetest man. He never asked for money. He never asked for anything.”

The three other confirmed victims of the serial killer were also stabbed to death, and each crime scene was extremely gruesome, authorities said.

The first murder happened on Dec. 21 in Placentia.

Officers found James McGillivray, 53, dead from multiple stab wounds outside a shopping center in the 100 block of North Bradford Avenue.

Police found 42-year-old Lloyd Middaugh dead on Dec. 28.

He was stabbed to death on the riverbed trail near Tustin Avenue in Anaheim.

The body of 57-year-old Paulus Cornelius Smit was found Dec. 30 in the 18100 block of Imperial Highway in Yorba Linda, near the Yorba Linda Library.

Police have surveillance video from the murder scene in Placentia.

The video depicts the last moments of McGillivray’s life.

In the part of the video released to the media, the killer approaches McGillivray as he sleeps on the sidewalk.

Authorities say the suspect then brutally stabbed McGillivray until he stopped moving, and the surveillance camera caught the entire vicious attack.

When asked if Ocampo resembled the man shown in the surveillance footage, police officials told the Times that he did in a “general sense.”

Shortly after the attack, the surveillance footage shows a 2000 to 2003 white Toyota Corolla

 

VIDEO

 

Direct Link:  http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-oc-homeless-murders,0,435109,full.story

 

Former CHP officer accused in husband’s death reenacts struggle for gun

Tomiekia Johnson testifies that the shooting occurred during an argument at the side of the road on the way home from a restaurant.

Los Angeles Times
By Rosanna Xia
January 14, 2012

Former California Highway Patrol Officer Tomiekia Johnson, charged with killing her husband more than two years ago, tearfully testified Friday that she and Marcus Lemons were struggling over her gun when it accidentally went off.

“I was not trying to kill Marcus. I would never try to hurt him,” she said, weeping. “He always hit me.”

Johnson took the stand on the fourth day of her trial. She is accused of fatally shooting her husband in the head on the night of Feb. 21, 2009, as they argued on the side of a road in Compton.

The couple were having drinks at a restaurant when they got into an argument, Johnson told the jury. She testified that she took the keys and started driving home, “blocking him out” as Lemons continued to yell at her in the car.

“When I continued to ignore him, he reached over and grabbed my neck,” she said.

She pulled off the 91 Freeway and told him to walk home. He “snatched” the keys out of the ignition, she said, and a struggle over her purse ensued. “I think he wanted my purse for the gun in the purse,” she said.

Prosecutors have argued that the shooting was far from an accident. Forensic evidence and testimony from crime scene experts show that Johnson fired an intentional contact shot, prosecutors said.

Earlier in the trial, witnesses portrayed Johnson as a wife with an aggressive personality and a tendency to drink excessively. Her husband was described as a peaceful man, a popular barber and a well-known amateur bowler.

Friends of Lemons shook their heads, rolled their eyes and whispered to one another as Johnson answered questions about the couple’s tumultuous relationship. Lemons’ family members, sitting in one corner of the courtroom, observed stoically.

Johnson’s family, sitting in the front row, held one another’s hands and listened quietly.

During Johnson’s testimony, her attorney, Darryl A. Stallworth, asked her to step down from the witness stand and reenact the scene. Stallworth sat in a chair, playing the role of Lemons in the passenger seat. Johnson positioned herself where she was standing that night, fighting for the gun on the ground.

Both hands gripping tightly to the edges of her gray suit blazer while Stallworth explained the scene, Johnson told the jury: “I just got down, picked up the gun, came up really fast — holding it tight because I thought he was going to take it from me.

“And it just fired,” she said through tears.

She said she didn’t feel the gun go off, that she didn’t even know she had shot him at first.

“I saw his body, just like he was having a seizure, and then he threw up,” she said, sobbing. “I couldn’t believe it. I just stood there frozen for a second. I couldn’t think.”

At the end of the court day, prosecutors began to cross-examine Johnson. She calmly answered questions about her personality and her relationships with her family.

She began to cry when Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Natalie Adomian started reading back journal entries Johnson had written after her husband’s death, entries that were shared with a post-traumatic stress therapist Johnson was seeing. Prosecutors noted inconsistencies in what Johnson wrote and her testimony.

Adomian asked Johnson to recall nights that she was abused by Lemons. Johnson described the fighting, and Adomian questioned why she did not hit back, considering that she had been trained at work to counter assaults by suspects.

“Ma’am, my husband wasn’t a suspect,” Johnson said, her voice breaking. “He was my husband. I wasn’t thinking about tactics from work. I was scared.”

Prosecutors plan to continue cross-examination when the trial resumes Tuesday.

 

Direct Link:  http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-1114-chp-officer-20120114,0,7050169.story?track=rss

 

CHP officer testifies in trial: ‘I was not trying to kill Marcus’

Los Angeles Times
Rosanna Xia at Los Angeles County Superior Court
January 13, 2012
Photo: Tomiekia Johnson and Marcus Lemons. Credit: Family photo provided by KTLA

Photo: Tomiekia Johnson and Marcus Lemons.

Credit: Family photo provided by KTLA


California Highway Patrol officer Tomiekia Johnson, charged with murdering her husband more than two years ago, tearfully testified Friday that she and Marcus Lemons were struggling over her gun when it accidentally went off.

“I was not trying to kill Marcus. I would never try to hurt him,” she said in court, weeping. “He always hit me.”

Johnson and her husband were having drinks at a T.G.I. Friday’s in Compton before they got into an argument, Johnson told the jury. She took the keys and started driving home, she said, “blocking him out” as Lemons continued to yell at her in the car.

“When I continued to ignore him, he reached over and grabbed my neck,” she told the jury.

She pulled off the 91 Freeway and told him to walk home. He “snatched” the keys out of the ignition, she said, and a struggle over her purse ensued.“I think he wanted my purse for the gun in the purse,” she said, trembling.

Prosecutors have argued in court that this was far from an accident. In the first three days of trial, witness testimonies portrayed Johnson as a wife with an aggressive personality and a tendency to drink excessively.

Her husband was described as a peaceful man, a popular barber and a renowned amateur bowler.

Forensic evidence and testimonies from crime-scene experts show that Johnson fired an intentional contact shot, prosecutors said. Lemons’ family members, sitting in one corner of the courtroom, looked on stoically.

Friends of Lemons shook their head, rolled their eyes and whispered to each other as Johnson answered questions about her tumultuous relationship with her husband.

Johnson’s family, sitting in the front row, held each other’s hands and listened quietly. Her testimony was to continue Friday afternoon.
Direct Link:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/01/chp-officer-testifies-in-her-murder-trial-i-was-not-trying-to-kill-marcus.html

 

Convicted murderer gets new trial after computer virus destroys data

Naked Security News
by Graham Cluley
January 4, 2012

 

 

 

Randy Chaviano

 

It seems like the plot twist in a bad TV show – but it’s true. A computer virus infection has helped a convicted killer get a new trial.

In July 2009, a Miami jury convicted Randy Chaviano, of Hialeah, Florida, of second degree murder.

Many might have thought it was the end of story when, after an eight day trial, Chaviano was given a life sentence for the shooting of Carlos Acosta.

But when the courts recently investigated whether Chaviano had grounds to appeal his conviction, it was discovered that no legal record of the trial could be found – giving the Third District Court of Appeal no choice but to throw out the conviction and grant Chaviano a new trial.

StenographStenographers at trials normally record proceedings on both paper and an internal disk. You’ve probably seen them busy at work, tapping wildly in the corner of the shot if you’ve ever seen a courtroom melodrama.

But Terlesa Cowart, the stenographer at Chaviano’s 2009 trial, had not brought enough rolls of paper for her machine, forcing her to record details of the trial only on the device’s internal disk. Subsequently, she transferred the data onto her PC, and erased it from the stenograph.

You can see where this is leading can’t you?

An infection on Ms Cowart’s PC by an unnamed virus is said to resulted in the loss of the legal records.

As a result, the trial has to be reheard, costing time and money, and witnesses and police officers will need to give evidence once again. And, of course, the relatives of the deceased man will have to go through the heartache of another trial.

It seems very sloppy to allow the only record of a trial’s proceedings to be held on an individual’s PC – it’s like asking for trouble if it isn’t at the very least held securely as a backup elsewhere.

It’s claimed that stenographers in Florida have been resisting moves to replace them with digital recorders. Goofs like the one made by Terlesa Cowart are not going to do anything to help their argument.

 

Direct Link:  http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2012/01/04/convicted-murderer-trial-virus/

 

Police: Corrections officer ‘snapped’ before shooting wife
KPHO 5 News
By Elizabeth Erwin
Posted by Steve Stout
Dec 15, 2011

Amanda Blaies-Rinaldi photographed with her brother Amanda Blaies-Rinaldi photographed with her brother

PHOENIX (KPHO) -

A former soldier says he “snapped” and his military training kicked in before he shot his wife to death in Ahwatukee Tuesday night, according to Phoenix police.

The death of Amanda Blaies Rinaldi also left two children without their mother, and her husband behind bars.

Segment Video

Anthony Rinaldi worked as a detention officer at the Perryville prison.
    RELATED: Children hear fatal shooting of mother

Ironically, he now sits on the other side of the bars accused of second-degree murder.

“We’re devastated. Devastated,” said Pamela Blaies, Amanda’s mother.

Pamela Blaies is having to adjust to hearing the news her daughter had been murdered, and that her son-in-law admitted to pulling the trigger multiple times, shooting her in the chest and head.

Police said the 26-year-old Rinaldi admitted to killing his wife in the garage of their home while their two young children were upstairs.

CBS 5 News was told the older boy is the one who called 911 while hiding with his 18-month-old brother as their parents fought.

“They’re in a very frail situation since the grandson, who’s 7, is a very bright, intelligent person who is the one who called 911,” said Pamela Blaies. “He had to hear the shots fired while he was on the phone calling about the fight.”

Pamela Blaies says her daughter’s husband has a violent history. “He’s been violent ever since she’s known him,” Pamela said, adding that he had military training.

“He was a sniper. He knew exactly how to fire a gun,” she said.

Police said Rinaldi told them he snapped and that his military training kicked in.

Pamela Blaies said Rinaldi was in the U.S. Army for about five years and that he was stationed in Germany.

Court documents suggest PTSD might have played a part in Tuesday night’s shooting.

But Pamela Blaies disagreed.

“He had issues from his childhood,” she said.

Pamela Blaies said Rinaldi has always been an angry person.

Amanda’s two children are with their grandmother.

She says they’re coping pretty well, and that the 7-year-old said he’ll see his mom soon – in heaven.

Direct Link: http://www.kpho.com/story/16329742/police-corrections-officer-snapped-before-shooting-wife?Call=Email&Format=HTML

 

Felons Finding It Easy to Regain Gun Rights
By MICHAEL LUO
November 13, 2011

In February 2005, Erik Zettergren came home from a party after midnight with his girlfriend and another couple. They had all been drinking heavily, and soon the other man and Mr. Zettergren’s girlfriend passed out on his bed. When Mr. Zettergren went to check on them later, he found his girlfriend naked from the waist down and the other man, Jason Robinson, with his pants around his ankles.

Enraged, Mr. Zettergren ordered Mr. Robinson to leave. After a brief confrontation, Mr. Zettergren shot him in the temple at point-blank range with a Glock-17 semiautomatic handgun. He then forced Mr. Robinson’s hysterical fiancée, at gunpoint, to help him dispose of the body in a nearby river.

It was the first homicide in more than 30 years in the small town of Endicott, in eastern Washington. But for a judge’s ruling two months before, it would probably never have happened.

For years, Mr. Zettergren had been barred from possessing firearms because of two felony convictions. He had a history of mental health problems and friends said he was dangerous. Yet Mr. Zettergren’s gun rights were restored without even a hearing, under a state law that gave the judge no leeway to deny the application as long as certain basic requirements had been met. Mr. Zettergren, then 36, wasted no time retrieving several guns he had given to a friend for safekeeping.

“If he hadn’t had his rights restored, in this particular instance, it probably would have saved the life of the other person,” said Denis Tracy, the prosecutor in Whitman County, who handled the murder case.

Under federal law, people with felony convictions forfeit their right to bear arms. Yet every year, thousands of felons across the country have those rights reinstated, often with little or no review. In several states, they include people convicted of violent crimes, including first-degree murder and manslaughter, an examination by The New York Times has found.

While previously a small number of felons were able to reclaim their gun rights, the process became commonplace in many states in the late 1980s, after Congress started allowing state laws to dictate these reinstatements — part of an overhaul of federal gun laws orchestrated by the National Rifle Association. The restoration movement has gathered force in recent years, as gun rights advocates have sought to capitalize on the 2008 Supreme Court ruling that the Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to bear arms.

This gradual pulling back of what many Americans have unquestioningly assumed was a blanket prohibition has drawn relatively little public notice. Indeed, state law enforcement agencies have scant information, if any, on which felons are getting their gun rights back, let alone how many have gone on to commit new crimes.

While many states continue to make it very difficult for felons to get their gun rights back — and federal felons are out of luck without a presidential pardon — many other jurisdictions are far more lenient, The Times found. In some, restoration is automatic for nonviolent felons as soon as they complete their sentences. In others, the decision is left up to judges, but the standards are generally vague, the process often perfunctory. In some states, even violent felons face a relatively low bar, with no waiting period before they can apply.  

The Times examined hundreds of restoration cases in several states, among them Minnesota, where William James Holisky II, who had a history of stalking and terrorizing women, got his gun rights back last year, just six months after completing a three-year prison sentence for firing a shotgun into the house of a woman who had broken up with him after a handful of dates. She and her son were inside at the time of the shooting.

“My whole family’s convinced that at some point he’ll blow a gasket and that he’ll come and shoot someone,” said Vicky Holisky-Crets, Mr. Holisky’s sister.

Also last year, a judge in Cleveland restored gun rights to Charles C. Hairston, who had been convicted of first-degree murder in North Carolina in 1971 for shooting a grocery store owner in the head with a shotgun. He also had another felony conviction, in 1995, for corruption of a minor.

Margaret C. Love, a pardon lawyer based in Washington, D.C., who has researched gun rights restoration laws, estimated that, depending on the type of crime, in more than half the states felons have a reasonable chance of getting back their gun rights.

That universe could well expand, as pro-gun groups shed a historical reluctance to advocate publicly for gun rights for felons. Lawyers litigating Second Amendment issues are also starting to challenge the more restrictive restoration laws. Pro-gun groups have pressed the issue in the last few years in states as diverse as Alaska, Ohio, Oregon and Tennessee.

Ohio’s Legislature confronted the matter when it passed a law this year fixing a technicality that threatened to invalidate the state’s restorations.

Ken Hanson, legislative chairman of the Buckeye Firearms Coalition, argued that felons should be able to reclaim their gun rights just as they can other civil rights.

“If it’s a constitutional right, you treat it with equal dignity with other rights,” he said.

But Toby Hoover, executive director of the Ohio Coalition Against Gun Violence, contended that the public was safer without guns in the hands of people who have committed serious crimes.

“It seems that Ohio legislators have plenty of problems to solve that should be a much higher priority than making sure criminals have guns,” Ms. Hoover said in written testimony.

That question — whether the restorations pose a risk to public safety — has received little study, in part because data can be hard to come by.

The Times analyzed data from Washington State, where Mr. Zettergren had his gun rights restored. The most serious felons are barred, but otherwise judges have no discretion to reject the petitions, as long as the applicant fulfills certain criteria. (In 2003, a state appeals court panel stated that a petitioner “had no burden to show that he is safe to own or possess guns.”)


Whitman County Sheriff’s Office
A few months after Erik Zettergren of Washington got back his gun rights, he fatally shot a man and threw his body in a river.

Since 1995, more than 3,300 felons and people convicted of domestic violence misdemeanors have regained their gun rights in the state — 430 in 2010 alone — according to the analysis of data provided by the state police and the court system. Of that number, more than 400 — about 13 percent — have subsequently committed new crimes, the analysis found. More than 200 committed felonies, including murder, assault in the first and second degree, child rape and drive-by shooting.

Even some felons who have regained their firearms rights say the process needs to be more rigorous.

“It’s kind of spooky, isn’t it?” said Beau Krueger, who has two assaults on his record and got his gun rights back last year in Minnesota after only a brief hearing, in which local prosecutors did not even participate. “We could have all kinds of crazy hoodlums out here with guns that shouldn’t have guns.”

Powerful Lobby Prevails

The federal firearms prohibition for felons dates to the late 1960s, when the assassinations of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Senator Robert F. Kennedy, along with rioting across the country, set off a clamor for stricter gun control laws. Congress enacted sweeping legislation that included a provision extending the firearms ban for convicted criminals beyond those who had committed “crimes of violence,” a standard adopted in the 1930s.

“All of our people who are deeply concerned about law and order should hail this day,” President Lyndon B. Johnson said upon signing the Gun Control Act in October 1968.

Even the N.R.A. backed the bill. But by the late 1970s, a more hard-line faction, committed to an expansive view of the Second Amendment, had taken control of the group. A crowning achievement was the Firearm Owners Protection Act of 1986, which significantly loosened federal gun laws.

When it came to felons’ gun rights, the legislation essentially left the matter up to states. The federal gun restrictions would no longer apply if a state had restored a felon’s civil rights — to vote, sit on a jury and hold public office — and the individual faced no other firearms prohibitions.

The restoration issue drew relatively little notice in the Congressional battle over the bill. But officials of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms identified the provision in an internal memo as among their serious concerns. Some state law enforcement officials also sounded the alarm.

When Senator David F. Durenberger, a Minnesota Republican, realized after the law passed that thousands of felons, including those convicted of violent crimes, in his state would suddenly be getting their gun rights back, he sought the N.R.A.’s help in rolling back the provision. Doug Kelley, his chief of staff at the time, thought the group would “surely want to close this loophole.”

But the senator, Mr. Kelley recalled, “ran into a stone wall,” as the N.R.A. threatened to pull its support for him if he did not drop the matter, which he eventually did.

“The N.R.A. slammed the door on us,” Mr. Kelley said. “That absolutely baffled me.”

Until then, the avenues for restoration had been narrow and few: a direct appeal to the federal firearms agency, which conducted detailed background investigations; a state pardon expressly authorizing gun possession, or a presidential pardon. Felons convicted of crimes involving guns or other weapons, as well as those convicted of violating federal gun laws, were expressly barred from applying to the federal firearms agency.

By contrast, the restoration of civil rights, which is now central to regaining gun rights, is relatively routine, automatic in many states upon completion of a sentence. In some states, felons must also petition for a judicial order specifically restoring firearms rights. Other potential paths include a pardon from the governor or state clemency board or a “set aside”— essentially, an annulment — of the conviction.

Today, in at least 11 states, including Kansas, Ohio, Minnesota and Rhode Island, restoration of firearms rights is automatic, without any review at all, for many nonviolent felons, usually once they finish their sentences, or after a certain amount of time crime-free. Even violent felons may petition to have their firearms rights restored in states like Ohio, Minnesota and Virginia. Some states, including Georgia and Nebraska, award scores of pardons every year that specifically confer gun privileges.

Felons face steep odds, though, in states like California, where the governor’s office gives out only a handful of pardons every year, if that.

“It’s a long, drawn-out process,” said Steve Lindley, chief of the State Department of Justice’s firearms bureau. “They were convicted of a felony crime. There are penalties for that.”

Studies on the impact of gun restrictions largely support barring felons from possessing firearms.

One study, published in the American Journal of Public Health in 1999, found that denying handgun purchases to felons cut their risk of committing new gun or violent crimes by 20 to 30 percent. A year earlier, a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that handgun purchasers with at least one prior misdemeanor — not even a felony — were more than seven times as likely as those with no criminal history to be charged with new offenses over a 15-year period.

Criminologists studying recidivism have found that felons usually have to stay out of trouble for about a decade before their risk of committing a crime equals that of people with no records. According to Alfred Blumstein, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University, for violent offenders, that period is 11 to 15 years; for drug offenders, 10 to 14 years; and for those who have committed property crimes, 8 to 11 years. An important caveat: Professor Blumstein did not look at what happens when felons are given guns.

The history of the federal firearms agency’s own restoration program, though, offers reason for caution. The program came under attack in the early 1990s, when the Violence Policy Center, a gun control group, discovered that dozens of felons granted restorations over a five-year period had been arrested again, including some on charges of attempted murder and sexual assault. (The center also found that many of those granted gun rights were felons convicted of violent or drug-related crimes.) In the resulting uproar and over the objections of the N.R.A., Congress killed the program.

A Superficial Process

In 2001, three police officers in the Columbia Heights suburb of Minneapolis were shot and wounded by a convicted murderer whose firearms rights had been restored automatically in 1987, 10 years after he completed a six-and-a-half year prison sentence and then probation for killing his estranged wife and a family friend with a shotgun. (The State Legislature had imposed the 10-year waiting period for violent felons after it discovered what Senator Durenberger had feared: that felons’ gun rights would be restored immediately under the Firearm Owners Protection Act.)

What happened in the wake of the shooting is emblematic of how the issue has played out in many states, particularly where the gun lobby is powerful.

Two Democratic legislators sought to impose a lifetime firearms ban on violent felons, although they concluded that for their bills to have any chance of passing, they would also have to set up a process that held out a hope of eventual restoration. They were unable, however, to get their bills through the Legislature.

The issue was taken up the following year by Republican lawmakers, but it became wrapped up in legislation to relax concealed-weapons laws. Initially, a moderate Republican introduced a bill with a 5- to 10-year waiting period for regaining gun rights, but the waiting period was scrapped entirely in the law, written by gun-rights advocates, that was finally enacted in 2003. That law, which does not even mandate that prosecutors be notified of the hearings, requires judges to grant the requests merely if the petitioners show “good cause.”

“The decision was, we have good judges and we trust them,” said Joseph Olson, who helped write the statute as president of the advocacy group Concealed Carry Reform Now.

One man who has benefited from a Minnesota judge’s gun rights ruling is William Holisky.

Mr. Holisky, an accountant who has struggled with bipolar disorder and alcoholism, had gone out only a few times with Karen Roman, a nurse he had met online, before she broke up with him.

In August 2006, Ms. Roman was getting ready to work a night shift, putting on makeup in the bathroom of her home in Duluth, when she heard a truck pulling up and a loud boom. Moments later, she heard another boom and glass breaking. She hit the floor, calling out to her teenage son in the other room to do the same as she crawled to the phone to dial 911.

The police arrested Mr. Holisky later that night for drunken driving. Several months later, they charged him in the shooting as well. He pleaded guilty to second-degree assault with a dangerous weapon.

Around the same time, he also pleaded guilty to a felony charge of making terroristic threats against an elderly neighbor. The woman had reported to the police that someone — she suspected Mr. Holisky — had left her a threatening and obscene note. She had also reported a series of escalating incidents that included harassing telephone calls, his entering her apartment and someone’s smashing her bedroom window. Mr. Holisky also had a misdemeanor burglary conviction from 2003, for breaking into an ex-girlfriend’s house, as well as another misdemeanor conviction for violating an order of protection.

In Mr. Holisky’s gun rights hearing in October 2010 in Two Harbors, a small town on the north shore of Lake Superior, Russell Conrow, the prosecutor in Lake County, argued that Mr. Holisky had not yet proved that he could stay clean, given that he had just gotten out of prison. Mr. Conrow also pointed out that there were two active orders of protection against Mr. Holisky.

“There were people still scared of him,” Mr. Conrow said recently.

For his part, Mr. Holisky took documents from the plea agreement in his assault case, in which the prosecutor in neighboring St. Louis County agreed not to oppose the restoration of his firearms rights.

 Mr. Holisky, who is 59, did not specify in his often-rambling petition exactly why he wanted a gun. He described his behavior in 2006 as an “aberration.”

The county judge, Kenneth Sandvik, was set to retire in a few months. He knew Mr. Holisky’s family from growing up in the community. Several weeks later, he ruled that Mr. Holisky had met the basic requirements of the law.

In an interview, Judge Sandvik said he had given considerable weight to the St. Louis County prosecutor’s agreement not to oppose the restoration of gun rights for Mr. Holisky. But Gary Bjorklund, an assistant St. Louis County attorney, said in an interview that he had been focused on extracting a guilty plea that would send Mr. Holisky to prison and had thought no judge would take a firearms request from Mr. Holisky seriously.

Judge Sandvik acknowledged that he had not looked into the details of Mr. Holisky’s assault case, arguing that his job had been only to review what the prosecutor had presented to him.

“We’re not investigators,” he said.

The ease with which Mr. Holisky regained his gun rights does not appear to be an anomaly. Using partial data from Minnesota’s Judicial Branch, The Times identified more than 70 cases since 2004 of people convicted of “crimes of violence” who have gotten their gun rights back. A closer look at a number of them found a superficial process. The cases included those of Mr. Krueger, who criticized the system as insufficiently rigorous after winning back his gun rights in a perfunctory hearing, and of another man whose petition was approved without even a hearing, even though his felony involved pulling a gun on a man.

The ruling in Mr. Holisky’s case prompted members of his family to write a series of frantic e-mails to Judge Sandvik and Mr. Conrow, warning of dire consequences.

It is not entirely clear whether Mr. Holisky, who did not respond to several requests for comment, is legally able to buy a gun at this point, because at least one of the outstanding orders of protection, which expires next year, appears to trip another federal prohibition. But Mr. Holisky has been writing letters to relatives in Texas, threatening legal action if they do not turn over his gun collection.

So far, they have refused.

A Killer’s Successful Petition

Just as in Minnesota, violent felons in Ohio are allowed to apply for restoration of firearms rights after completing their sentences. The statute is similarly vague, requiring only that a judge find that the petitioner has “led a law-abiding life since discharge or release, and appears likely to do so.”

Only a handful of county clerks in Ohio said they could track these cases, producing records on several dozen restorations. They included people who had been convicted of first-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, felonious assault and sexual battery.

The case of Charles Hairston in Cuyahoga County stands out.

Mr. Hairston was 17 in January 1971, when he shot a man to death in Winston-Salem, N.C. Mr. Hairston and a group of neighborhood toughs had been preparing to rob a local grocery store when the owner, Charles Minor, 55, closed up and headed for his car.

“I am fixing to get him,” Mr. Hairston told one of his friends, according to witness statements to the police, before he pulled the trigger on a 20-gauge shotgun.

Mr. Hairston spent 18 years in prison before being released on parole in 1989. He moved to Cleveland and started working in heating and cooling, a trade he had learned behind bars.

In 1995, he pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge for allegedly grabbing and pushing his wife.

More seriously, later that year he was indicted on 60 counts of rape, felonious sexual penetration and gross sexual imposition; prosecutors charged that he had forced sex upon his stepdaughter, starting when she was 12. He was acquitted of the most serious charges and convicted only of corruption of a minor for one encounter at a motel for which prosecutors were able to provide corroborating evidence beyond the girl’s detailed testimony.

Mr. Hairston, who denies the charges and is still fighting the conviction, filed his first gun rights restoration application in 2006 in Cuyahoga County but was summarily denied.

When he filed a new petition two years later, a judge thought he was ineligible and denied him again, though she wrote in her decision that she did not believe Mr. Hairston was likely to break the law again. But an appeals court ruled that the judge had misread the statute, and sent the case back for another hearing late last year.

The county prosecutor’s office had vigorously opposed the restoration from the beginning. But Mr. Hairston, who took in several friends as character witnesses, told the judge he had grown up in prison.

“Nearly 40 years ago, you know, I was a dumb kid,” Mr. Hairston said at his first hearing. He added, “I am in a situation now where if, God forbid, if someone was to come into my home and attack me, my wife, there isn’t a lot I could say about it, there isn’t a lot I could do.”

In the end, the judge, Hollie L. Gallagher, granted his petition without comment.

Soon after the judge’s ruling, Mr. Hairston obtained a concealed weapons permit from a neighboring county and bought a 9-millimeter semiautomatic handgun.

Returning to Crime

Erik Zettergren originally lost his gun rights in 1987 because of a felony conviction for dealing marijuana. A decade later, the police went to his house after being called by his ex-wife and discovered a cache of guns. He was convicted of another felony, unlawful possession of a firearm.

He relinquished his weapons to friends but eventually got them back, sometimes hiding them in an old car in his backyard, according to friends. Sometime after that, though, he became worried that the police might come after him again and turned over the guns — two long guns and a Glock pistol — to a friend, Tom Williams.

“I kept them under my bed,” Mr. Williams said.

In December 2004, Mr. Zettergren successfully petitioned in Kittitas County — a three-hour drive from his home — to have his gun rights restored. (Like Minnesota’s, Washington’s law allows petitioners to apply anywhere.) Court records show he did not even have a hearing. Instead, his lawyer, Paul T. Ferris, who specializes in these cases, took care of the matter.

Right away, Mr. Zettergren retrieved his guns from Mr. Williams and soon obtained a concealed pistol license. He made something of a sport of showing off his Glock to friends. “He was so proud of that thing,” said Larry Persons, a friend. “He was flashing it in front of everybody.”

Not long after, he would use it in the killing.

Washington’s gun rights restoration statute dates to a 1995 statewide initiative, the Hard Times for Armed Crimes Act, that toughened penalties for crimes involving firearms. The initiative was spearheaded, in part, by pro-gun activists, including leaders of the Second Amendment Foundation, an advocacy group, and the N.R.A.

Although it drew little notice at the time, the legislation also included an expansion of what had been very limited eligibility for restoration of firearms rights.

“There were a lot of people who we felt should be able to get their gun rights restored who could not,” said Alan M. Gottlieb, founder of the Second Amendment Foundation, who was active in the effort.

Under the legislation, “Class A” felons — who have committed the most serious crimes, like murder and manslaughter — are ineligible, as are sex offenders. Otherwise, judges are required to grant the petitions as long as, essentially, felons have not been convicted of any new crimes in the five years after completing their sentences. Judges have no discretion to deny the requests based upon character, mental health or any other factors. Mr. Gottlieb said they explicitly wrote the statute this way.

“We were having problems with judges that weren’t going to restore rights no matter what,” he said.

The statute’s mix of strictness and leniency makes Washington a useful testing ground.

The Times’s analysis found that among the more than 400 people who committed crimes after winning back their gun rights under the new law, more than 70 committed Class A or B felonies. Over all, more than 80 were convicted of some sort of assault and more than 100 of drug offenses.

There were cases like that of Mitchell W. Reed, disqualified from possessing firearms after a 1984 felony cocaine conviction. He also has seven misdemeanor convictions on his record from the 1980s, including for assault. In 2003, he successfully petitioned for his gun rights in Snohomish County Superior Court.

His wife, Debi Reed, went with him to the hearing and said in an interview that she had been shocked at how easily his rights were restored. He immediately bought a 9-millimeter semiautomatic handgun.

The following year, she said, he beat her up for the first time. In 2008 he became more angry and violent, she said, in one instance putting a gun in her hand during an argument, pointing it at his head and saying he was going to frame her for murder. During another fight that year, he struck her with a gun, giving her a black eye, and held a loaded gun to her head.

Mr. Reed was ultimately arrested in 2009 and charged with harassing and threatening to kill his wife’s ex-husband. While those charges were pending, he was arrested on second-degree assault charges after he beat up and tried to strangle his wife. The charging documents also mentioned the 2008 gun episode. He eventually pleaded guilty to third-degree assault and intimidating a witness, as well as fourth-degree assault and harassment.

Jason C. Keller, disqualified because of a 1997 burglary conviction, had his rights restored after a brief hearing in 2006. He waited a few years before buying a Hi-Point .40-caliber semiautomatic pistol, according to his girlfriend at the time, Shawna Braylock. But she did not trust him with the gun because of his temper, making him keep it at his parents’ house.

In 2010, Mr. Keller left a Fourth of July party in the late evening, picked up his gun and drove to the house of a woman he knew. He fired several shots as she stood out front with her 9-year-old son; her 6-year-old daughter was sleeping inside. Mr. Keller pleaded guilty to drive-by shooting, a felony.

In Mr. Zettergren’s case, his friends said they were shocked that a judge had restored his gun rights, because they knew he was receiving disability payments, in part because of mental health problems.

“Most of the people around here that knew him, knew that he could be dangerous,” said Darrell Reinhardt, one of Mr. Zettergren’s friends.

Mr. Zettergren’s mental health issues, in fact, have been at the heart of his efforts to appeal his convictions for second-degree murder, second-degree assault and unlawful imprisonment. He had been in counseling since 2000, and several mental health experts had found he had post-traumatic stress disorder and major depression, saying he had a “very high degree of psychological disturbance” and suffered frequent “flashbacks and disturbing images,” according to a declaration from a forensic psychologist in one of Mr. Zettergren’s appeal briefs. The post-traumatic stress, according to the psychologist, resulted from scenes he had witnessed years before, including his mother’s death by electrocution and the shooting death of a friend.

None of this was reviewed by the judge who heard Mr. Zettergren’s gun rights petition.

Donna Bly, the mother of Jason Robinson, Mr. Zettergren’s shooting victim, considered suing the county for negligence over the decision but could not find a lawyer to take the case. She also tried bringing the issue up with a state legislator but got nowhere.

“This man did not deserve to have his gun rights back,” she said.

Toby Lyles and Lisa Schwartz contributed research. Tom Torok contributed reporting

Direct Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/14/us/felons-finding-it-easy-to-regain-gun-rights.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1

 

Copter Crash Kills a Leader in Mexico’s Drug Fight
By DAMIEN CAVE
NY Times
November 11, 2011


MEXICO CITY — A helicopter crash killed Mexico’s second-most-powerful official and seven others on Friday, dealing yet another blow to the country’s battle against a drug-and-crime scourge and leaving a battered nation in shock.
Officials confirmed that the helicopter carrying Francisco Blake Mora crashed south of Mexico City, on its way to Morelos State, where he had a meeting scheduled with prosecutors.
Pic by: Sashenka Gutierrez/European Pressphoto Agency


Francisco Blake Mora, Mexico’s interior minister, in October.
Pic by: Carlos Jasso/Reuters

The official, Francisco Blake Mora, 45, was the secretary of the interior and often the public face of the antidrug campaign. He was the second interior secretary to die in an air crash in three years.

There was no immediate word on the cause of the crash. President Felipe Calderón said it was probably an accident caused by bad weather, but his words did little to assuage the anxiety of a nation that has been pummeled by violence and pushed to trusting rumors by an opaque justice system that rarely provides evidence of innocence or guilt.

Stupefied and worried, many Mexicans could only imagine the worst. Offices came to a standstill as people tried to digest the news. Twitter and Facebook exploded with commentary, much of it presuming that some criminal group had brought the helicopter down.

“It sounds to me like a hit from narcos to scare Calderón,” said Engel Fonseca, 31, who was debating the issue with friends over sushi at a Mexico City restaurant. “It’s too much coincidence.”

At a brief news conference, Mr. Calderón said that the helicopter had been flying in fog and had probably crashed accidentally, but that “all possible hypotheses” would be thoroughly investigated. He said that there was no evidence of foul play, and that the helicopter had been well maintained and protected.

Sipping water between emotional points, he described Mr. Blake Mora as a brilliant young lawyer, a man of “absolute integrity” and a friend. “Mexico,” he said, “has lost a patriot.”

President Obama called Mr. Calderón from Air Force One in the afternoon to offer his condolences. “The United States worked closely with those who were lost in this crash and considered them to be close partners,” said Ben Rhodes, a White House spokesman.

Mexican officials said the helicopter crashed in an area of low clouds and poor visibility on its way from Mexico City to Cuernavaca, where Mr. Blake Mora had a meeting scheduled with prosecutors. It was last seen in the air just before 9 a.m. and found, damaged, at 11:12 a.m. Mexican television showed the crash site, just south of the capital, where small pieces of debris covered a woodsy, mountainous field.

The bodies of the victims — Mr. Blake Mora, a ministry spokesman, three other ministry employees and three members of the Mexican Air Force — were not visible.

Mexican officials mainly ignored the questions of cause and lamented the loss of a longtime public figure. In Congress, representatives observed a moment of silence before the floor opened for comments, delivered in voices hushed by grief.

“Today we lost a great Mexican,” said Sergio Tolento Hernández, a representative from Baja California, Mr. Blake Mora’s home state.

Mr. Blake Mora served in Congress and the Baja California State government before President Calderón appointed him to the cabinet post in July 2010.

Prof. Mario G. Herrera Zárate, director of the law school Mr. Blake Mora attended in Tijuana, said he stood out as a student because of his calm demeanor and his ability to search for consensus and agreement.

To most Mexicans, he was best known as the loyal point man for the president’s campaign against drug traffickers. Dark-haired but graying at the temples, serious and discreet, Mr. Blake Mora was one of the main managers for an approach that focused on tough rhetoric, and a frontal, military-style assault on organized crime.

Despite a rising death toll of around 45,000 people in drug violence since 2006, Mr. Blake Mora was as quick as his boss, the president, to insist on the need to stay tough and keep fighting the cartels rather than backing down.

He frequently traveled to the worst areas of Mexico, and died en route to the city that gave birth to a protest movement demanding a new security strategy after the son of a famous poet, Javier Sicilia, was killed in March.

Mr. Blake Mora was less of a firebrand than Genaro García Luna, the secretary of public security, and some experts said that if the drug cartels had their pick, Mr. García Luna would have been their top target.

While the crash was not expected to alter the government’s crime strategy, inside and outside the halls of power, fears of nefarious intentions seemed to dominate.

Fueling suspicions in a country where conspiracy theories are often given more credence than news reports, officials at the national meteorological agency said they had been ordered by the president not to talk about the weather conditions to reporters, directing all inquiries to transportation officials.

Concerns deepened after some Mexican news outlets reported that the helicopter had been scheduled to carry Mr. Calderón to the airport later that day.

Mr. Calderón’s office denied the reports, and some of those reports were later retracted. “This was not a helicopter he was going to use today,” said an administration official, citing conversations with the presidential protection service. “It’s absolutely impossible.”

Regardless, experts said the impact of Mr. Blake Mora’s death was a psychological blow that was bound to be significant for Mexico, where the Interior Ministry has changed hands four times in five years.

“It’s a tragedy,” said Eric Olson, a security expert with the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars. “There has been a revolving door for the ministry, and its role has to do with police reform, migration, intelligence, all key issues in the battle against organized crime. The fact that they haven’t had continuity in that position is a major factor.”

Gabriel Guerra, a political analyst, said that while he was concerned “about the conspiracy theories that come so naturally to Mexicans,” such fears might still shape public opinion.

“It is a tragic coincidence that President Calderón should lose two of his most trusted political operatives in aviation incidents,” Mr. Guerra said. “Whether or not there is any substance, it will remain a cloud for the rest of his administration.”

For many, the timing was especially haunting. Mr. Blake Mora’s death came exactly a week after he attended a memorial ceremony for Juan Camilo Mouriño, the predecessor who had died in the plane crash three years earlier.

Investigators of that crash had found that the pilot of the minister’s small government jet lost control after flying too close to the wake of a jumbo jet.

After the memorial last week, Mr. Blake Mora sent a message on Twitter, which read: “Today we remember Juan Camilo Mouriño, three years on from his death, a human being who worked on building a better Mexico.”

On Friday, that message was passed around like a dark omen. It was the last one Mr. Blake Mora sent.

Direct Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/12/world/americas/top-mexican-official-among-8-dead-in-helicopter-crash.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha22

Karla Zabludovsky and Yadira Solano contributed reporting from Mexico City, and Ginger Thompson from Washington.

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