Pubdate: Tue, 26 Jan 2010 Source: El Paso Times (TX) Copyright: 2010 El Paso Times Contact: http://www.elpasotimes.com/formnewsroom Website: http://www.elpasotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/829 Author: Ramon Bracamontes Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) MANNY BARRAZA TRIAL: KEY WITNESS SAYS JUDGE ASKED HER FOR MONEY EL PASO -- Diana Rivas Valencia, the government's key witness in state judge Manuel Barraza's trial, testified Monday that he visited her in jail and asked her for money and women as payment for intervening in her cocaine case. But under cross-examination, Rivas Valencia said she did not remember how much money Barraza wanted. She also said he never told her he would dismiss the charges against her. "There was no guarantee," Rivas Valencia, 23, said while being questioned by Barraza's lead attorney, Mervyn Mosbacker. Rivas Valencia is scheduled to be back on the stand today, as Mosbacker did not finish questioning her. She is the fourth government witness to testify as federal prosecutors continue to try to prove that Barraza was "collaborating" with several women to receive sex and money for judicial favors. The scheme, according to the government witnesses, was to begin on Jan. 4, 2009, three days after Barraza took the oath of office as a state district court judge. "He asked for money and he asked for some girls," Rivas Valencia said of Barraza. "He was going to change my case. Change it to his court, and he was going to get rid of the charges. He asked me to wait until January 4." Rivas Valencia testified that Barraza got involved in her drug case because she sought him out. In 2006, he had represented her when she said she was arrested and charged with possessing 198 pounds of marijuana. She said Barraza, 54, got the state to drop the charges against her. "I don't know how he got them dropped, but he did," she said. When she was arrested again in September 2008, she wanted Barraza to represent her, but her mother hired another attorney, Ruben Ortiz. When Ortiz recommended that Rivas Valencia take a plea agreement that meant she would spend two years in prison and then be deported, she refused. She asked her sister, Sarai Valencia, to go find Barraza. Her sister asked Barraza to go visit Rivas Valencia in jail. He went two times in December 2008, after he was elected but weeks before he took office as a judge. "When I saw him I started crying," Rivas Valencia said. "I was crying because I was happy, because I knew that by showing up he was going to help me." Rivas Valencia said they talked about getting Ortiz off the case so that Barraza could assign an associate of his instead. "He told me to tell Ortiz that he wanted too much money," Rivas Valencia said. "And to tell Ortiz that Manny didn't want money, that Manny wanted (women). When I told Ortiz this, he just laughed." During that Dec. 4, 2008, conversation, Rivas Valencia said Barraza asked her to find women to have sex with him. "When he came back in late December, he was upset because he had not received the phone numbers of any of the girls I had told him about. These were girls that he could have sexual relations with, so that he could help me," she said. Rivas Valencia said that while she was in jail throughout December 2008 and January 2009, she did not know the FBI was investigating Barraza. She found out about the investigation sometime around Feb. 22, 2009, when the FBI helped lower her state bond from $150,000 to $1,500. She posted it and is free on bond. She also said the FBI asked her testify against Barraza and in exchange they would try to make sure she did not get deported to Mexico if convicted of possession of two kilos of cocaine, the crime she was arrested for in 2008. That case is pending in state court. While being questioned by Mosbacker, Rivas Valencia also acknowledged that she still owes Barraza $2,800 from when he represented her in 2006. Other than sending her one invoice, she said, Barraza did not try to collect from her. Before Rivas Valencia took the stand, FBI agent Rita Fragoso testified for about two hours. Fragoso, an undercover agent in El Paso, twice went with Sarai Valencia to Barraza's office. During both meetings, Valencia was wearing a wire and carrying a hidden video recorder. Fragoso said the FBI sent her along to protect Valencia. Fragoso also testified that in those meetings she was posing as one of the women Rivas Valencia and Valencia had lined up to have sex with Barraza. The sex acts never occurred. Under cross-examination, Fragoso said she did not know Barraza beforehand and that she did not know much about the case or why Barraza was being investigated. She also said that Valencia trusted Barraza and did not need protection from him. - --- MAP posted-by: Doug Snead