Source: Orange County Register (CA) Contact: Thu, 26 Feb 1998 Author: Jim O'Connel-Scrips Howard News Service NO CIVIL-RIGHTS CHARGES LIKELY IN BORDER SHOOTING A Marine on an anti-drug patrol killed an American teen who was herding goats in Texas. WASHINGTON-A Marine on anti-drug patrol who fatally shot an American teen-ager along the Texas-Mexico border will not face criminal civil-rights charges, a federal grand jury has decided. The Justice Department is expected to announce as early as Friday that the civil-rights probe of the tragedy has cleared Cpl. Clemente Banuelos of criminal wrongdoing. Banuelos and three other Marines were in camouflage on an anti-drug patrol near Redford, Texas, on May 20, 1997, when he killed Esequiel Hernandez Jr., 18, a high school sophomore, who was herding goats. Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, said the federal grand jury that was considering the case-ended deliberations Jan. 8 without indicting Banuelos. Smith, who serves on the House Judiciary Committee, said he is still seeking more information and might hold a congressional hearing on the matter. "The shooting is still troubling to me," Smith said. "Not all the questions have been answered, and no one has been held accountable." A Marine spokesman said the service has not been formally informed of the decision. "We understand the Department of Justice intends to close its civil rights investigation into the shooting incident," said Lt. Col. Scott Campbell. "If the Department of Justice does close the investigation, we are pleased that after a thorough review it found no violation of Mr. Hernandez's civil rights." Bill Weinacht,who represents the teen's family, is pursuing a negligence claim. The Defense Department temporarily ended armed military patrols along the border after the fatal shooting. Pentagon sources have said the department plans to announce soon that it will permanently end such patrols. A study soon to be released on the military's role along the 2,000-mile border will advocate that support services including road building and intelligence gathering continue, while ground reconnaissance missions should end, sources said.