On February 7, authorities released the autopsy report of 16-year-old Nogales, Sonora resident José Antonio Elena Rodriguez. A U.S. Border Patrol agent, firing from the United States last October 10, killed Jose Antonio. The findings of the autopsy paint a troubling picture of that evening’s tragic events.
The U.S. side, from where the Border Patrol agent shot Jose Antonio, is up that hill. (photo by Murphy Woodhouse)
According to a report on the autopsy, Border Patrol shot the young man between eight and 11 times. All but one of those bullets struck him in the back. Most of the wounds were found to have an upward trajectory, a strange finding given that the Border Patrol agent was firing down into Mexico from the top of a roughly 15-foot cliff. Medical examiners conducted the autopsy the morning after the shooting with the Nogales, Sonora State Attorney General’s office.
If true, the autopsy’s findings are difficult to reconcile with the statement the Border Patrol released shortly after the shooting. According to the terse account, agents responding to a report of suspected drug smuggling near the international boundary came under attack by youths throwing rocks from the Mexican side. “After verbal commands from agents to cease were ignored,” asserts the Border Patrol, “one agent then discharged his service firearm. One of the subjects appeared to have been hit.”
A detailed report filed shortly after the incident by two Nogales Police Department officers who were on scene throughout corroborates portions of the Border Patrol’s story, but calls other parts into question. Officers John Zuniga and Quinardo Garcia both report seeing rocks thrown, but neither officer reports hearing any Border Patrol agent issue a warning before opening fire.
From where Border Patrol fired their shots. (photo by Murphy Woodhouse)
The Nogales International asked Pima County Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Gregory Hess to review the autopsy’s analysis for their report on its release. Hess said that a mistaken identification of exit wounds for entry wounds by the Sonoran Attorney General’s Office medical examiners could explain the strange upward trajectory of some of the bullet wounds found in the original autopsy. Or, Hess suggested, most of the bullets struck José Antonio in the back after his body was on the ground.
“There’s all kinds of different ways to look at it,” Hess said in an interview with the Nogales International. “But if the story’s correct and their trajectories are correct, then somehow the person that got shot would have had to have been off their feet.”
One possibility in this regard, suggested Hess, is that the first bullets might have knocked Jose Antonio down, with the rest of the bullets striking him after he was lying down, which would also explain the strange upward trajectories of some the wounds.
Luis Parra, one of the lawyers representing Jose Antonio’s family, said that the autopsy raises further questions about the action taken by the agent who killed the young man.
“I’m not saying it’s a clear case of excessive force, but it is a very strong case for excessive use of force,” Parra said in an interview with the Associated Press. “The Border Patrol agent who was firing could have easily taken cover.”
José Antonio Elena Rodriguez’s family is considering filing suit against the Border Patrol.
The altar and blood stain in the exact location where Jose Antonio was shot. (photo by Murphy Woodhouse)
Murphy Woodhouse is an MA student at the University of Arizona’s Center for Latin American Studies. His research interests include migration, deportation, U.S. immigration enforcement, and the Mexican drug war.