The Case
Witnesses,
even former police, testified of the police hatred of Alvaro and
of Alvaro's expressed fears of someday being killed by the police
and police covering up their crime. Alvaro was no stranger to the
police. He had previously won civil rights suits against the Sheriff's
Department and the county for a brutal beating he had received at
the hands of the police, years prior to the confrontation. Two deputy
sheriffs had been convicted in Pecos, TX federal court for the criminal
civil rights violations stemming from the beating. The police received
five years probation and never spent a day in jail.
At Alvaro's
trial, police witnesses described Alvaro as a "troublemaker." They
knew that Alvaro could mobilize the barrio and mount serious opposition
to the history of police crimes, and that Alvaro would shake the
racist foundation of the white power structure in Alpine.
When the Sheriff
went to arrest Alvaro at his home on July 18, 1996, it was on a
trumped-up charge of aggravated robbery (and one which would later
be dismissed). Sheriff McDaniel had no legal warrant of arrest, and
when the unarmed Alvaro questioned the sheriff's abuse of power,
the "redneck" cop became violently angry and drew his weapon. Before
he could raise it and shoot, Alvaro disarmed him and fled to a nearby
mountain.
What followed
next was the most massive police manhunt in recent West Texas history.
In fear for his life, Alvaro eluded police helicopters, bloodhound
tracking dogs from the nearby state prison in Ft. Stockton, armed
vigilante groups searching for him, and other state and federal
police agencies. Alvaro sought refuge in the mountainous country
he knew well as a youth. Days later, Alvaro returned to his mother's
house to eat and change clothes. The police found out and a heavily
armed law enforcement contingent converged on the home. Without
identifying themselves, police began shooting indiscrimantely at
the house, cars parked in front and at the public street lights.
At trial, witnesses described the police shooting as a "war zone."
The police wanted Alvaro dead and were refusing to allow him to
surrender.
To back them
off their murderous intent, Alvaro returned fire in self-defense
but never shot nor injured anyone. He then dialed 911 (emergency)
and alerted other officials that the police were shooting at him
and would not allow him to surrender. The City Manager pulled the
army of troopers back, and the "shoot first-ask questions later"
plot to kill Alvaro was aborted. During the police barrage, Sgt.
Curtis Hines was shot in the left hand by a ricocheting police bullet.
Alvaro surrendered
and was charged with two counts of aggravated assault ã one count
for disarming the sheriff and one count for Sgt. Hines' wound. His
elderly mother was charged with "hindering apprehension" and jailed.
At his arraignment,
Alvaro condemned the illegal occupation of the Southwest, the false
charges, institutionalized racism, and reasserted his people's inalieable
rights to self-defense and to self-determination of oppressed nations.
He invoked international law and demanded to be treated as a prisoner
of warunder Geneva Convention principles and other human rights
accords. Since his jailing, Alvaro has filed several civil rights
suits against county jail conditions, police abuse, and has helped
other prisoners assert their legal and human rights.
The initial
charge which led to the July 18 confrontation with the police was
later dismissed. Rejecting court-appointed attorneys as sellouts,
Alvaro represented himself in court. He proved his innocence and
exposed the police conspiracy to frame him by suppressing evidence
of his innocence and testimony of material witnesses.
At the Odessa
trial, Alvaro was convicted of "threatening" the sheriff, but acquitted
on the charge of shooting Sgt. Hines in the hand. The web of police
lises was obvious to all. Even the physical evidence was inconsistent
with any theory advanced by the prosecution.
The predominantly
white jury did not have the courage to acquit Alvaro on both counts
as the evidence required. It would have "disgraced" the police and
sent the "wrong message" to others that it is justified under law
to defend oneself against the armed violence of the state. Police
have ruled Raza barrios with an iron fist, particularly in Texas.
They are notorious for being anti-Mexicano, especially in west Texas.
In the state alone, 20,000 Mexicanos have been killed by "Los Rinches"
ã the infamous Texas Rangers ã since the 1830s. Settler policies
of "Manifest Destiny" have supported colonization.
Support And
Resistance to Injustice
After Alvaro's
arrest, numerous individuals responded in support. Spray paintings
reading "Free Alvaro! Convict the Pigs!" appeared throughout the
small community, including at the First National Bank's walls. Everywhere
the police transferred Alvaro, from Alpine to Odessa to Pecos to
El Paso, people and groups came to his support.
Protests demanding
Alvaro's release, spearheaded by the Barrio Defense Committee-San
Jose, were staged outside the courthouse in Odessa during the trial.
Barrio Defense Committees are springing up throughout Texas, under
Alvaro's leadership, as a result of the outrage. Even from the confines
of his isolation cell, Alvaro refuses to back down, calling for
barrio self-rule and political revolution in the occupied territories
of Aztl·n.
The police/migra/military
murders of 16-year-old Ervay Ramos (Alpine), Larry Lozano (Odessa),
Danny Valdez (El Paso), 12-year-old Santos Rodriguez (Dallas), Ricardo
Morales (Castroville), Jose Campos Torres (Houston) and Esquivel
Hernandez (Redford) is a continuation of the brutal legacy of Texas
Ranger-style lynchings of Mexicanos in Texas today. Raza have a
rich history of resistance to the occupation of their indigenous
homeland and to the colonial war of genocide against them. Legends
like Gregorio Cortes, Juan Cortina, Melchor Ocampo and many other
have defended their rights with their pistols in their hands. Aware
of his people's history of resistance, Alvaro has publicly state
"My actions in Alpine were in self-defense in the spirit of Gregorio
Cortes."*
* Gregorio
Cortes killed two Texas sheriffs in self-defense in 1901. He was
sentenced to death, but Mexicanos rallied to his support and he
was pardoned in 1913 by Gov. O. B. Colquitt. Corridos (ballad songs),
books and a movie have been produced about Corrtes, including With
His Pistol In His Hand (University of Texas-Austin Press), "El Corrido
de Gregorio Cortes" by Los Alegres de Teran and The Ballad of Gregorio
Cortes with director-actor Edward James Olmos. For a court case
history, see Court of Criminal Appeals #2270, 2397, 2696 and Pardon
#28220, Southwestern Reporter, Vol. 74, page 907.
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