Pubdate: Mon, 2 Dec 2002 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2002 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: James Pinkerton TOWN TAINTED BY LEGACY OF CORRUPTION Arrest of police chief latest Donna scandal DONNA -- In this small city that calls itself "The Heart of the Valley," some stout hearts will be needed to overcome the stigma of recent history. Two weeks ago -- and for the second time in five years -- Donna's chief of police was arrested on federal corruption charges. Chief Marco Abel Partida, nephew of a presiding state district judge, was arrested by FBI agents who contend he took bribes from a drug trafficker. A different police chief was arrested on drug conspiracy charges in 1997. Partida's dramatic arrest Nov. 12 at the tiny police station came as Donna residents were still on edge from the execution-style slayings of four young Mexican barmaids, gunned down after leaving work at a local tavern. The homicides, committed in September just outside the city, remain unsolved. The events followed what seems like an unending series of gaffes and missteps in Donna, including the televised spectacle of a city council meeting that featured the previous mayor head-butting a council member who questioned his sobriety. Today, Donna's only municipal swimming pool is sealed up, the many gangs that plague the town have tagged vacant homes and buildings with satanic imagery, and the political infighting has become legendary. Industrial recruitment is lagging, as the city's Chamber of Commerce was recently closed after it failed to pay federal taxes on employees' income. Rick Vasquez / Special to the Chronicle Today, a single playset for children stands where Donna's only municipal swimming was. Officials sealed the pool because of a lack of funds for upkeep. "To the people around the community, the city of Donna is just a big joke the way politics go down there," said farmer Jimmy Steidinger, who lives just north of town. Abel Ramirez, who with his wife owns Ramirez Tile in downtown Donna, said the police chief's recent arrest "is wild." "Come on. Two of them (police chiefs arrested) already? There's got to be something going on -- maybe everyone is corrupt," said Ramirez. Many residents say the grinding poverty that pervades the Rio Grande Valley is at the crux of Donna's problems. There is ample evidence of the extreme need on the narrow city streets and weedy barrios, where dilapidated homes and abandoned buildings abound. Donna, a town of 12,652 residents dependent largely on agricultural employment, is in Hidalgo County, which grew an astounding 48 percent between 1990 and 2000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. But a full 36 percent of the county's 590,000 residents live below the poverty line, and the per capita income is $9,899 -- compared with a $19,617 state average. While other cities in the county, including McAllen, Edinburg and Weslaco, have managed to attract new businesses, Donna has seen only a restaurant or two open up, residents say. And since Donna has relatively few private employers, most work is found among the 90 city jobs or the 1,865 positions at the school district. As a result, local school board and city hall races are often bitterly contested, with supporters of one candidate or the other expecting to be rewarded with public jobs. "One of the biggest problems we have is we really don't have any industry in the community, so the public relies on the school district to provide jobs," said businessman Albert Sandoval, who stepped down from the Donna school board earlier this year after nine years as a trustee. "And the providing of jobs is where you get the political instability." Sandoval said studies by the state's education agency, the school board association and the comptroller's office have all shown the Donna school district has more employees than it needs. "That was the one thing I was tired of the most -- the state agencies saying we were heavy on personnel but still the political pressure remained" to parcel out jobs as a reward for support, Sandoval said. In August, Texas Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander completed an exhaustive study of the Donna school district, and concluded it was "considerably overstaffed in auxiliary personnel, which includes custodial, maintenance, transportation, food service and clerical staff." Despite all the extra help, the percentage of Donna students passing the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills tests has risen only 3 percent, from 57.7 percent in 1996-97 to the current 61 percent. The figure is lower than other South Texas schools of comparable size, and below the average for all schools in the region. Donna schools are spending $72.6 million this school year to educate 10,451 schoolchildren, 90 percent of whom are economically disadvantaged. The district is among the poorest 2 percent of Texas school districts, with $44,789 in property value per student, a fraction of the $236,543 per student average in the state, the study noted. The comptroller's study found the district did not have curriculum guides, or work plans, for 308 of the courses it offered, perhaps helping to explain why the average SAT score of Donna students is 110 points below the state average. "It seems we always were regressing and lost focus on education," said Sandoval, owner of All-Valley Pools in Donna. "It was who's going to hire who, and how many, and that goes in line with the poverty level down here." Despite years of unflattering publicity, many retain their optimism. "There are so many good people in this town. It's just unfortunate the 10 percent who are bad are really, really bad," observed Ernie Galvan, who sells property and casualty insurance at his Donna agency. Mario Rivas, a longtime Donna resident who owns Rivas Supermarket, believes Donna's problems are a reflection of the erosion of the family. And Rivas said the vast sums of money associated with the drug trade are a continual lure. "Some children have said, `I want to be a drug dealer because I'll have money.' That's the idol," the grocer said. Neither Donna's mayor nor city manager returned calls, but City Attorney Javier Villalobos acknowledged the chief's arrest "is a setback." However, Villalobos said, Partida is well-respected by his officers and led efforts to restore integrity in the department. He said Partida resigned his position effective Nov. 30. "He's a good man, but if he did something wrong, he's going to have to face the music," Villalobos said. "Let me tell you, he was doing a very good job, an exemplary job. That's why this surprised everyone." In September 1997, a federal grand jury indicted a former Donna police chief and six other officers on charges they took money to escort loads of marijuana through town. The latest charges are nearly identical. Partida and former Donna police officer Gerardo Vigil are each charged with accepting $3,200 last year to assist a drug trafficker. Both have pleaded not guilty. Villalobos said the alleged trafficker is a former Hidalgo County lawman and Partida's friend. A source close to the Donna Police Department, who asked not to be identified, speculated that Partida may have become unknowingly involved by doing a favor for the alleged trafficker, who once worked with the chief. "They suckered him somehow. Maybe someone took advantage of a friendship," the source said. Meanwhile, Villalobos said Donna officials will continue working at city improvements, including a street-paving project and sprucing up of parks. And a bit of good news came with the results of the mandatory drug testing of 90 city employees, conducted a week after the chief was arrested. Only three employees tested positive, and one of those claimed a prescription drug triggered a false positive, Villalobos said. "I myself was praying, `Please don't make it a high number,' " the city attorney said. "I was expecting more, so I was very pleasantly surprised." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh