April 26, 2003
Americans
Sacrificed To Illegal Alien Agenda
By
Joe Guzzardi
Saul Zavala, father of Jessica and uncle of
Olivia Munguia and Teri March, widow of Los
Angeles County Deputy Sheriff David March have a
common goal: justice.
Zavala wants Juan Manuel Casillas—currently
in jail in Mexico—back in the U.S. to stand trial for
the 1999 murder of Zavala’s 15-year old daughter and
17-year-old niece. “He did it here; I want him here,”
Zavala told me when I
met him at the April 5th Victims’ Rights
Vigil. “Mexico is
totally corrupt. I don’t trust anything that goes on
there.”
March wants Armando Garcia—hiding out in Mexico
-extradited to California for the 2002 gangland style
slaying of her husband. “Dave was just the best
person. He was my whole life,” Teri said. “And
Garcia is nothing but a drug dealing punk who should
never have been here in the first place.”
Saul Zavala and Teri March share a common goal—and
have experienced the same frustration. Although three
years have passed since his daughter was senselessly and
brutally murdered, an intense Zavala talks about
“justice for Jessica” as passionately as if she had
been shot yesterday.
On the wall of the Dolores Mission School where the
April 5th Vigil was held were many young
victims’ portraits. Zavala showed me pictures of Jessica
that her classmates signed in tribute. And Jessica’s
formal portrait adorned the wall, too.
As Zavala tells the story, Casillas, a legal immigrant
gang member from a wealthy Mexican family, hunted Olivia
down because she had just broken up with him. Casillas
shot Olivia as she and Jessica were walking to high
school. Then, as Jessica bent over to help her cousin,
Casillas fired again and killed her.
Casillas
took off for Mexico.
Zavala’s long nightmare began.
Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney Jan Maurizi,
talking about the
complexity and headaches presented when dealing with
a completely uncooperative Mexico, said:
“Our office put so much
pressure on Mexico to extradite Casillas and after 3
years of trying, and after we waived the death penalty,
Mexico agreed. Casillas was arrested in Mexico on
September 5, 2001. Then, on October 2nd, 2001
the Mexican Supreme Court decision saying the country
would not extradite in life imprisonment cases was handed
down. Now with the rules changed, Mexico again refused to
extradite. Although our office demanded that, if they
weren't going to extradite, we didn't want an Article IV
prosecution and would wait for Casillas return so that he
could be prosecuted and punished here, Mexico kept him
and tried him there anyway.”
Casillas was sentenced to 70 years of which, according
to Maurizi, only 60 maximum will be served. And Maurizi
remains deeply skeptical about that.
Said Maurizi:
“Typically sentences in
Mexico are cut in half or more. I know of one case where
a murderer was allowed to serve his sentence on weekends.
He was picked up back in LA and we had to dismiss the
warrant because he had been ‘convicted’ in Mexico.”
Saul Zavala, who traveled to Mexico two years ago to
hunt for Casillas with a gun, doesn’t believe that
Casillas is in jail. Right now, Zavala is in Mexico again
to find out for himself. “I don’t believe a thing
Mexico says,” he told me before leaving.
Zavala points to the indifference shown by Los Angeles
Mexican Consul General
Martha I. Lara Alatorre as an example of Mexico’s
complete disregard for his plight. “I went to see
Lara. She made promises but didn’t do anything,” said
Zavala.
Like Zavala, Teri March has heard promises, too. At a
January 31st dinner for the Association of Los
Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, Governor Gray Davis took Teri’s
hand. “I promise you, you have my word that I will do
everything I can for you,” March recalls him saying.
But now, with a Candlelight Memorial Service scheduled
for April 29th to
honor the memory of Deputy March, Davis does not
return Teri’s phone calls.
“I just can’t tell you the
frustration,” said March. “One year has passed and
I’m no closer to justice than the day Dave was murdered.”
“Where are all of these
high-powered people who say they have such a good
relationship with Mexico—-Bush, Ashcroft, Powell, Ridge,
Davis? Where are they for Dave, that’s what I want to
know? In 2001, we gave Mexico $425 million in
appropriations but we can’t convince Mexico to do the
right thing? What’s that about?”
“Dave loved America. And
everybody who knew Dave loved him. And this is what he
worked all those Christmases for? And this is what I
stayed home for on Christmas—to end up sitting by and
watching politicians read poll numbers instead of
acting?”
“I sent President
Vicente Fox a registered letter on April 9th
asking him to do the right thing. We’ll see what
happens. I’m not holding my breath but I like to have it
on record what I have done and what they have not done.”
“These are hard days for
me. The District Attorney’s Office and Sheriff Baca have
done so much. But Mexico won’t budge. And the people like
Bush who could make it happen won’t do it.”
“Now I read that the U.S.
and Mexico are going to meet on border issues? Are we
crazy?”
The meeting that Teri March mentioned took place on
April 23, between Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge
and Mexican Interior Minister Santiago Creel. Its stated
purpose was to highlight areas of “improved cooperation”
on border issues between the U.S. and Mexico. Check the
audacity [“U.S., Mexico pursue common homeland
security goals,” by Jerry Kammer, San Diego
Union-Tribune, April 15, 2003 -
pay archive] of
Washington-based Mexican Embassy official Carlos Rico:
"We have a very intense relationship that is mutually
beneficial, and we want to protect it.”
(If it is so intense, why
won’t Mexico extradite Casillas or Garcia?)
At a press conference in Tijuana, Creel
stated that “his country would be willing to help
with U.S. border security issues if the United States
affords better treatment for Mexican migrants.”
He also said that "It is much safer if Mexican
migrants are allowed to enter with documents and work at
legally recognized jobs."
The price for his
aid in protecting the US from
Al Qaeda seems to be - that the US should stop
protecting itself from
Mexico. But in the long run, the illegal Mexicans
invasion may be
more dangerous.
During our
conversation, I told Teri that some people have been
working for two decades to get Washington to address the
inequities in the U.S.-Mexico relationship.
She asked,
“What’s wrong with them in Washington? They need to wake
up— and soon.”
Teri [Send her e-mail at
tlmarch@attbi.com] is beginning to recognize that she
is in the oddest place.
In the U.S. - whether the issue is bogus
consular identification cards,
driver’s licenses for illegal aliens (would Garcia
have had one?),
in-state tuition fees for alien students, free health
care for anyone who can crawl across the U.S./Mexico
border or extradition of
violent felons back to the U.S. - Mexico calls all
the shots.
The hopes and
dreams of decent Americans are subordinate to the
illegal alien agenda. And the aspirations of craven
politicians who court
Hispanic votes.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English at the Lodi
Adult School, has been writing a weekly newspaper column
since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM.