Pubdate: Sun, 16 Feb 2003 Source: San Antonio Express-News (TX) Copyright: 2003 San Antonio Express-News Contact: http://www.mysanantonio.com/expressnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/384 Author: Rick Casey Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ashley+Villarreal http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) IF DEA AGENT MADE MISTAKE, AGENCY MUST ACKNOWLEDGE IT Finally a law enforcement official said the most important thing that needs to be said about the death of 14-year-old Ashley Villarreal at the hands of a Drug Enforcement Administration agent. "This should not have happened," District Attorney Susan Reed said Friday. "I can tell you that. A 14-year-old girl should not have gotten shot." That's the premise from which everyone - including the DEA - should be starting. On one side you have an unarmed girl walking out of her house to move her mother's car around to the back. Though her father is a suspected drug dealer, no one suggests she was in on his enterprise. On the other side you have a group of adults, armed and, we hope, highly trained. One of the agents shoots the girl in the head. The obvious presumption is that the highly trained and armed adults bear considerably more responsibility than the unarmed 14-year-old girl who was, apparently, guilty of only two things: Attempted driving without a license for a few hundred yards with her lights off. Panicking in her response to the situation set up by the highly trained men. Police officers say they should not be judged harshly when they have to make split-second responses to threatening situations. But these were officers staking out the girl's house. How did her coming out to move the car become a situation that required a split-second decision? Two investigations are under way to answer this and other questions. Unfortunately, neither is likely to result in public confidence. One is by the San Antonio Police Department's "shooting team." A hand-picked squad of homicide detectives, its job is to investigate whether any officer involved in a death committed a crime. The squad was created in the mid-1980s by now-Police Chief Albert Ortiz, who promises a thorough, independent investigation. "The DEA agent-in-charge, Javier PeA a, actually requested at the beginning that we do the investigation," Ortiz said. "They've cooperated 100 percent." Ortiz added, however, that some DEA policies have affected the way the investigation is done. Asked for an example, he said DEA policy is that an agent involved in a shooting is not allowed to answer questions in the immediate aftermath of the event. Ortiz said he prefers that the officer be questioned as soon as possible, partly because "the perception in the community might be that he needed time to concoct a story, even if that isn't what happened." SAPD policy is that officers involved in a shooting have an opportunity to consult with a psychologist, who might say he or she is so pumped up on adrenaline or otherwise affected that his or her memory is impaired. The psychologist may recommend the officer be given time to wind down. "But usually, the officer gives a statement right away," Ortiz said. District Attorney Reed says she expects to get a thorough and independent account from the Police Department. And, she says, she will prosecute if the facts warrant it. "You know me," she said. "If something needs to be done, I'm going to do it." Reed's record gives her credibility, but the reality is that the facts are unlikely to support criminal prosecution. The law, appropriately, gives police officers the benefit of the doubt in such matters. Given the da ngerousness of their jobs, we don't want to subject law enforcement officials to easy criminal prosecution. But if no criminal charges are warranted, the details of the investigation are not usually made public, at least in a timely manner. So the SAPD investigation is not likely to address basic public concerns. The other probe is the DEA's own administrative investigation, conducted not for potential prosecution but to determine if its policies were followed. History does not offer hope that the DEA's investigation of itself is likely to improve public confidence. The venue in which we're most likely to learn much of the truth is in the inevitable lawsuit by the family. But in that adversarial proceeding, the DEA's lawyers will defend its actions and try to lay blame on the deceased girl. My prediction: The girl's family will win a substantial amount of money, and those of us who pay it will have no reason to believe the DEA learned from the mistakes it didn't admit making. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake