An
undocumented Mexican immigrant was shot and killed Sunday evening in an
apparent hunting accident on a Webb County ranch owned by the family of
former U.S. diplomat John G. Hurd.
"The illegals were crouching
out in the brush. They said they mistook this guy for a hog," said Webb
County Sheriff Juan Garza....
Juan Garza Mendoza, 34, an
employee of the ranch, was charged Monday with manslaughter, a
second-degree felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison....
Mendoza
had apparently hit Barrera Vasquez while shooting at a feral hog, and
immediately contacted authorities after the shooting, Hurd said.
Sheriff
Garza said interviews with three of the victim's Mexican traveling
companions and the others in the ranch hunting party led him to rule
out anything but an accidental shooting.
"They mistakenly shot a human being," he said. "It's reckless. It's inexcusable."
Mendoza was indicted for manslaughter
but the district attorney eventually dropped the charges in favor of a
civil suit. The court found the ranch owner was liable to the tune of $20 million in the case. No wonder Katharine Armstrong was so anxious to have the Texas Parks and Wildlive Division (of which she was the former Chairman)
come out and give Dick a pass on the whole thing, saying no alcohol or
drugs were involved in the incident -- although there is no indication
that they interviewed and/or tested Cheney or anyone else involved in
the matter in a timely fashion.
Update:
Dan Abrams is on MSNBC giving Cheney a pass, saying that "The Vice
President didn't do anything wrong" and finding nothing irregular about
the fact that he was not interviewed by law enforcement officials for
15 hours after the incident. Is Abrams the amazing Kreskin or
something? How would he, or anyone, know that "the Vice President
didn't do anything wrong" -- especially since Armstrong is now backtracking on her story:
"There may be a beer or two in there," she said, 'but remember not everyone in the party was shooting.'"
Update II: The beer quote seems to now be scrubbed from the MSNBC site, though you can still see it cached in the Google abstract.
Update III: Remember this isn't the first scrubbing we've found in this matter. To their credit CBS PublicEye addressed it here, though the reporter's explanation is something less than satisfactory.
posted by Jane Hamsher @ 2:40 PM