Source: Dallas Morning Subpoena served in shooting 
Official: Military plans to comply in border death 

By Douglas Holt / The Dallas Morning News 

EL PASO  Texas Rangers served the head of military antidrug missions 
with a subpoena Tuesday, seeking key documents related to the shooting 
death of an 18yearold goatherd, Ezequiel Hernandez.

Brig. Gen. James Lovelace, commanding officer of Joint Task Force6, was 
asked to provide a long list of documents, including military notes, 
reports, witness statements and communications logs related to the May 
20 shooting by Marine Corps Cpl. Clemente Banuelos.

With the delivery, investigators say they are closer to presenting a 
case to a grand jury.

Meanwhile, the shooting has set off discussion of whether the case would 
be removed to federal court if one or more Marines are indicted because 
of the shooting.

That could set up a conflict. On the one hand, the U.S. attorney's 
office is expected to begin a civil rights investigation into the 
incident. That would seemingly preclude the U.S. attorney from defending 
military personnel in a criminal case.

Already, the U.S. attorney's office in El Paso has taken steps to offer 
a potential solution. The office has passed the names of several defense 
lawyers to the Department of Justice should they be needed to defend the 
Marines, sources told The Dallas Morning News.

Sam Ponder, chief of the El Paso U.S. attorney's office, declined to 
comment on the report.

The subpoena delivery Tuesday capped more than two weeks of 
miscommunications, unreturned phone calls and bad blood between the 
Rangers and Joint Task Force6, which coordinates military support for 
law enforcement agencies involved in regional drug interdiction.

But on Tuesday, both sides expressed a desire to cooperate in an 
investigation that has raised questions in some quarters about the 
military's role in fighting drugs.

"I can say we're cautiously optimistic about the military's cooperation 
in the investigation," said Texas Rangers Sgt. David Duncan, who is 
directing the agency's investigation. "I think their degree of 
cooperation will be reflected to the degree information is provided that 
was requested in the subpoena."

A military lawyer on Tuesday told the Rangers that federal law may 
preclude the military from handing over everything that was requested, 
Sgt. Duncan said.

Maureen Bossch, task force spokeswoman, faulted the Rangers for failing 
to return telephone calls from the military, but she said task force 
officials intended to cooperate fully.

"The military is committed to assisting law enforcement in their 
investigation," she said. "We're not trying to avoid anything."

But, echoing the comments of military officials at the Marines' base in 
Camp Pendleton, Calif., Ms. Bossch said that military officials believe 
no laws were violated during the shooting.

"All the reports we have indicate they fired within the rules of 
engagement, and that's not criminal conduct," she said.

Mr. Hernandez, who authorities said was not involved in criminal 
activity, was shot in the tiny border town of Redford near Big Bend.

Military authorities have said Cpl. Banuelos shot in selfdefense after 
Mr. Hernandez fired his weapon. The Rangers have noted discrepancies in 
military's version of events, saying that evidence indicates the young 
man's rifle was pointed away from the Marine unit when he was shot.

The subpoena identified the three other Marines in the surveillance unit 
with Cpl. Banuelos as James Blood, Roy Torrez Jr. and Robert Wieler.

The Rangers have subpoenas for two other military officials, but they 
could not be served Tuesday because one was not there and the other is 
based in California.

Usually, serving a subpoena is a routine law enforcement task requiring 
a few minutes. In this case, setting an appointment took weeks and 
serving the subpoena took hours.

District Attorney Albert Valadez signed the subpoenas more than two 
weeks ago, on June 5.

Since then, Sgt. Duncan said he has attempted numerous times to make an 
appointment with the Provost Marshall's office in Fort Bliss near El 
Paso, where the joint task force is located.

Typically, the Provost Marshall sets an appointment for the server to 
meet the subpoena recipient. At the appointed time, the subpoena is read 
aloud and handed over.

On Friday, Sgt. Duncan called to announce he would be there at 10 a.m. 
Tuesday.

Accompanied by C.J. "Buster" Collins, a Rangers sergeant in El Paso, 
Sgt. Duncan entered the Provost Marshall's office at the appointed time, 
wearing cowboy boots and the tan uniforms of the Rangers.

The person they came to see, Staff Sgt. Juan Valadez Jr., wasn't there. 
A man in green camouflage, who declined to give his name, ordered a 
driver to take the Rangers to the base's Staff Judges Advocate's office, 
where the subpoena process "would be explained."

But there, clerks who said they had no idea the Rangers were coming, 
directed the Rangers to the Joint Task Force6 offices on the other side 
of Fort Bliss.

As the Rangers got back in their car, Staff Sgt. Valadez came up and 
apologized for the confusion. "We hit a wall in that loop over there," 
he said, apparently referring to the task force.

By this point, almost an hour had passed and the Rangers were clearly 
frustrated. "We wouldn't have to exert this type of effort if they 
would've just cooperated as we would expect from a governmental entity," 
Sgt. Duncan said.

A reporter was barred at the gate of the Joint Task Force6 facility. 
But the Rangers returned nearly two hours later, considerably more 
upbeat.

Even reading the subpoena to the commanding officer didn't go so badly, 
Sgt. Collins said. "He was very cordial, and very professional," Sgt. 
Collins said of Sgt. Duncan.