Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jun 2000 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2000 The Dallas Morning News Contact: P.O. Box 655237, Dallas, Texas 75265 Fax: (972) 263-0456 Feedback: http://dmnweb.dallasnews.com/letters/ Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Forum: http://forums.dallasnews.com:81/webx Author: David McLemore, The Dallas Morning News BORDER DAS JUST SAY NO Citing cost and lack of respect, counties stop prosecuting U.S. drug cases LAREDO A boycott by district attorneys for five Texas border counties of federal referrals of low-level drug busts is about more than money, says Webb County District Attorney Joe Rubio. It's about respect. Mr. Rubio should know. Nearly three years ago, after several years of asking the U.S. Justice Department to help defray the $1 million annual costs of prosecuting drug smugglers arrested by federal agents along the border, Mr. Rubio just said no. He would no longer prosecute cases the that federal government found too small for the U.S. courts. Now, his colleagues along the border with Mexico, their added costs ranging in the millions, are saying the same. "I'm glad the other DAs made the decision. Everyone, both federal and state officials, know what a financial burden these referrals are to the local jurisdictions," Mr. Rubio said. "It's not just the money though. Now, they see they can't take us for granted anymore. If we're to be partners in the war on drugs, then they need to treat us as such." On June 8, district attorneys serving Cameron, Hidalgo, Starr, Hudspeth and El Paso counties declared a boycott on the federal referrals, saying they would stop prosecuting the small drug cases beginning Saturday. The number of criminal cases ranged from 130 in Cameron County to about 550 in El Paso and Hudspeth counties. According to an informal Justice Department study, total costs for the past five years to the state prosecutors from Brownsville to San Diego, Calif., averaged about $96 million. In Texas, annual costs to border prosecutors ranged from about $1 million to $5 million, according to El Paso County District Attorney Jaime Esparza. "The 500-plus federal referrals we receive each year constitute about 10 percent of our criminal case load. That will tie up one judge for half a year," Mr. Esparza said. "That costs us $5 million in cost of trials, public defenders, incarceration prior and during trial and other costs. It's not something we can continue to absorb for free." Both sides of the controversy, who are continuing negotiations to resolve the dispute, acknowledge that the sheer volume of the joint state-federal effort at combating drug smuggling along the border strains the limits of the entire justice system, regardless of jurisdiction. "I don't agree that it's totally a federal problem, but the district attorney's have a point about the referrals," said Bill Blagg, U.S. attorney for the Western District of Texas in San Antonio, which stretches from Del Rio to El Paso along the Rio Grande. "It's a tremendous expense to the state courts and DAs, particularly for counties along the border that are some of the poorest in the nation. "If their boycott is an effort to leverage Congress for more funds for more federal judgeships, more courts, more prosecutors, I hope it works," Mr. Blagg said. Money to do the job The boycott is also a way to get the federal government to face reality, said Yolanda De Leon, district attorney in Cameron County. "The federal government has made its presence along the border a major issue in the war on drugs, with us as partners. For it to work, the federal government must cover the costs for local prosecutors to do the job they've imposed on us," Ms. De Leon said. "Congress must fund the Justice Department and the courts to bring in more judges, more prosecutors, more probation officers. If not, then maybe Congress has some explaining to do." The "referrals" in question are the hundreds of drug cases, usually low-grade marijuana smuggling cases, many involving less than 100 pounds, made by federal agents at border checkpoints and ports of entry, routinely passed on to state jurisdictions for prosecution. In El Paso County last year, for example, the average case involved a low-grade smuggler - known as a mule - caught driving across the international bridge with 45 to 65 pounds of marijuana. About 60 percent of the defendants are from Mexico. About 10 percent have a prior criminal record. "Depending on the case, we get a number who get some real prison time," said Rene Railey, assistant to Mr. Esparza. "The average sentence, however, is six to seven years probation. If they're from Mexico, they get immediately deported after the sentencing. If they didn't have a felony record, they get one." Congress is aware of the problems confronting state and federal prosecutors along the border. U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas has argued for increased funding for federal courts and prosecutors along the border. Earlier this month, Gov. George W. Bush, the presumed Republican nominee for president, vowed that if elected, he would provide $50 million a year to reimburse border counties for their work. It's unclear whether that would meet all the costs of a legal system whose operations have grown geometrically amid a rising volume of marijuana, cocaine and heroin across the border. Border workload In 1998, the 14,517 criminal cases filed in the five federal court districts making up the "Border Courts" - the Southern District of California, the Western and Southern districts of Texas and in Arizona and New Mexico - made up 26 percent of all federal criminal filings in the United States. About 80 percent were drug cases. Drug prosecutions in the "border courts" nearly doubled since 1994, while immigration prosecutions increased more than fivefold, according to Justice Department reports. As a result, the average caseload per federal judge in the border courts is more than four times that of the national average. Meanwhile, there has been a 155 percent increase in the number of Drug Enforcement Administration agents assigned to the southwest border since 1995. The Border Patrol numbers have grown 97 percent, while the FBI's border presence increased 37 percent in the same time period. As a result, federal court dockets along the border have become jammed with drug cases. In four years since 1995, the Western District saw a 238 percent increase in criminal filings. Last year, the district recorded 3,850 criminal filings - about four times the felony case load of the U.S. Northern District of Texas based in Dallas. It was a distinction that earned gave the Western District the dubious honor of having the busiest federal criminal docket in the nation. As the Saturday boycott deadline draws closer, Mr. Blagg is keenly aware that things will only get busier. He's already looking at how his office can reallocate resources and juggle existing cases to make prosecutors available to handle the increased case load. "We're not just going to let drug smugglers go. We'll be making choices which will be handled as felonies and which we'll plea down to misdemeanors. But they'll all stay criminal cases," he said. "Even if we have to take probation on some of these cases, that will still be a felony conviction." The sheer volume of drug cases is creating a severe stress on the entire criminal justice system, state and federal, along the border, Mr. Blagg said. "We already have assistant U.S. attorneys working case loads of 200 or more," Mr. Blagg said. "Now, I've got to tell the federal judges already working crowded dockets that we'll be sending them hundreds of more cases each year. That's a pretty hard sell." Growth elsewhere Although not as active as the Western District, the Houston-based U.S. Southern District of Texas, which prosecutes cases in Brownsville, McAllen and Laredo, mirrors the growth of federal prosecutions along the border. Last year, there were about 2,700 criminal cases filed in the Southern District. As of April, there were 1,283 criminal cases filed, a 14 percent increase over the same time the previous year. "We can't overstate the financial burden referrals have meant to the border counties," said Mr. Esparza, the El Paso district attorney. "The border counties have been forced to pay the cost of administering justice in the federal cases brought to our systems." "They may be lower level cases, simply possession. But they still must be prosecuted," Mr. Esparza said. "We have to lock them up before trial and they go on our probation roles later. We can't continue to absorb 500 cases a year. We can't do it for free." Down river in McAllen, Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra sees the increase in federal referrals without fair compensation eventually resulting in diminished prosecutions standards. "My big concern as the number of federal referrals increased, the standard of prosecutions dropped," he said. "Increasingly, those referred to the state are getting tried for lesser crimes with less jail time or getting probation. That waters down the prosecution of drug dealers and their mules all along the border. It's not a message we want to send." In Laredo, Mr. Rubio, the Webb County district attorney, offers insight into lessons learned from his refusal nearly three years earlier to accept federal referrals. "It wasn't something we took lightly. We had talked for two years with the feds and nothing happened. We felt if we didn't act, we'd never get anywhere," Mr. Rubio said. "My operating budget was about $1 million a year. The cost on 700 referrals a year was about $1 million dollars. We just couldn't afford to do it anymore." Overnight, when Webb County stopped taking federal criminal cases, the caseload for the federal courts in Laredo nearly doubled. "For us, it meant we were able to free up prosecutors and personnel to open up our civil department, as well as increase our prosecutions on domestic violence and child abuse," Mr. Rubio said. FBI investigation His David-vs.-Goliath stance came with a cost, Mr. Rubio said. Seven months later, FBI agents poured into district attorney's office at the Webb County Courthouse, seizing more than 5,000 criminal case files as part of an investigation into an alleged case-fixing scheme. Mr. Rubio was named as the focus of a massive federal investigation into how prosecutors in his office, along with judges, court officials and others handled criminal cases dating back to January 1989, when Mr. Rubio first took office. Mr. Rubio has never been charged. Later indictments, however, named three members of the district attorney's staff; his brother, Carlos, and their father, a prominent political figure in Laredo, with conspiring to take bribes to fix cases. Former District Judge Ruben Garcia and the brother later pleaded guilty and are serving prison terms. "If they think there's criminal activity, they should investigate. I have no problem with that," Mr. Rubio said. "But I question the timing. The FBI sensationalized the situation and made a big show of the investigation. That part, I think, was an effort to embarrass me because of my stand on referrals." For Mr. Rubio, the attention the border prosecutors' boycott creates only validates his decision. "I was glad to see the other border prosecutors take this action," Mr. Rubio said. "'For a long while, I really felt like Gary Cooper in High Noon . It wasn't an easy decision but it was a necessary one. "Now, the federal government realizes they can't take us for granted anymore. I see this spreading all up and down the border, once the district attorneys in other states look at the Texas experience." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck