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No Pot, No
Priors, Just One Grandpapa Shot Dead
by Preston Peet with Dean
Latimer - Special to HT News
http://www.hightimes.com
FILED 09/17/99
''We didn't have information of the Paz
family being involved in narcotics. . . .To our knowledge they were not.'
El Monte PD Spokesman
"We throw flash-bang grenades. We bust
open the doors. You've seen it on TV," the assistant police chief in El
Monte, CA, Bill Ankeny, was still saying tiredly last month, presenting the
Mario Paz police homicide as a routine, by-the-book operation of the
paramilitary El Monte narcotics squad. In the middle of a California summer
night they had shotgunned the locks off all the doors of a family's house in
Compton, set off a flash-bang grenade, tossed an incendiary "diversionary
device" into the livingroom, and then bashed in and killed the head of the
household: all by the book. Now the FBI, ironically for some, is investigating
this lethal episode.
Mario Paz, 64, was shot twice in the back as he cringed half-naked on the floor
of his bedroom, offering $10,0000 in cash to the masked men who had burst into
his home moments before on the night of August 9. Paz' wife, Maria Luisa, told
Anne-Marie O'Connor of the L.A. Times that she and her husband believed
they were being robbed of their life savings, which they'd withdrawn shortly
before from a bank out of concern for the forthcoming Y2K glitch. When these
obvious midnight robbers burst in and awakened them, loudly demanding that they
kneel on the floor with their hands in sight, Mario scrabbled his life savings
from beneath the mattress and piled them on the bed. Maria Luisa says she
grabbed one intruder's camouflage pantsleg to plead for their lives, whereupon
two bullets were fired into her husband's back, and he died.
Help! It's the Police!
The intruders were narcs, outfitted with masks
and full jungle-style paramilitary regalia, from the El Monte "Narcotics
Policing Division," which carries out raids like this all the time, all
over Southern California. "We go all over," brags Policing Division
chief Steve Krigbaum, explaining how their trigger-happy SWAT jackbooters wound
up at the Paz home, a little stucco bungalow in suburban Compton. "Anything
related to our town we go out and get." His El Monte SWAT-team commander,
Lt. Craig Sperry, led the midnight incursion into the Paz home: "We always
announce," he claims: "'El Monte police! Open the door!'"
The routine announcement may well have been lost in the shotgun blasts and
explosions going off all around the little home, which awed neighbors described
as sounding like "a war." Immediately after the homicide in the
bedroom, the El Monte Drug Warriors hustled Maria Luisa Paz out of the house in
her underwear, along with six other relatives, and hauled them off to the
Compton jail while they comprehensively searched the premises for all the
marijuana, "paraphernalia," guns and money the warrant called for.
They turned up a .22 rifle and three well-hidden pistols--not untypical for a
large family in a very bad neighborhood--but not a twig or seed of pot.
Mirandas? For What? They Were Innocent!
Nevertheless, the surviving Paz family were
held until long after sunrise the next morning--in handcuffs, being grilled over
and over by El Monte and Los Angeles County detectives desperate to get them to
say something to justify this spectacular police activity. None of the Paz
family were advised that they could have a lawyer present for this questioning,
since none of them was ever arrested for anything. "Witnesses do not get
read their Miranda rights," an L.A. County police mouthpiece explained much
later. As for the hours spent in handcuffs, "People can be detained in
handcuffs for safekeeping."
Mario Paz, they finally learned on their release, had been declared dead on
navival at a Los Angeles hospital. After his entirely legal emigration to the US
in the 1950s, Paz had raised six children, who presented him with 16
grandchildren; he'd never been arrested for anything, nor had anyone in his
family ever even been suspected of any sort of narcotics offenses, as the cops
of the three jurisdictions involved--El Monte, Compton, and L.A. County--have
despairingly determined, after an exhaustive month-long search of their records
for the tiniest shred of exculpation for the Aug 9 police homicide at the Paz
home.
Guilt By 20-Year-Old Association
How the El Monte police wound up raiding that
particular house in Compton, lived in for over 20 years by this highly
law-abiding American family, has been trickling out very slowly. Nearly two
decades ago, their next-door neighbor for a little while had been one Marcos
Beltran Liznavaga, who this year fell under investigation by the El Monte narcs
for involvement in marijuana trafficking. In the course of this investigation in
El Monte, they say, they turned up around 400 pounds of pot, $75,000 in cash,
three "high-powered" rifles, and some documents with the Paz family's
faraway Compton address scribbled on them. Beltran Liznavaga had been busted
shortly before August 9, and when he was released on bail that very morning, the
El Monte narcs had applied for a warrant to search the Paz house. Somehow, based
on this flimsy paper trail, they managed to obtain it from a magistrate, and
went in with flashbangs and combat boots.
"We didn't have information of the Paz family being involved in
narcotics," El Monte assistant police chief Bill Ankeny acknowledged
immediately after the raid. "To my knowledge right now, we don't have any
information that the Paz family was dealing in narcotics. To our knowledge they
were not."
How the El Monte narcs possibly managed, then, to get a search warrant for this
Compton location out of a magistrate, is a question for L.A. attorney Brian
Dunn, who has been hired by Maria Luisa Paz and her family to investigate the
killing. "When the police conduct a raid and find an address that they are
unfamiliar with during the course of that raid," Dunn tells HT, "then
they will usually go get a warrant to raid that address as well, no matter what,
even if it is in another city. When the police state, 'Your affiants believe. .
.,' most magistrates will issue a warrant, especially when it is drugs
involved."
A Procession of Police Alibis
The El Monte narcs, in fact, didn't even know
whether anyone was living at the Paz home when they raided it that night.
Immediately after the killing, El Monte cop mouthpieces said the officer who
pulled the trigger on Mario Paz was concerned that he might be armed, somehow,
half naked, on his knees with his hands in plain view. A little later on they
revised this, saying the cop thought Mario was reaching for a gun when he pulled
the trigger. Then, after it turned out that all the guns in the house had been
stashed safely away in bureau drawers, the El Monte police actually said their
trigger-puller was afraid Mario was reaching to open a drawer to get a gun out
of it--even though the cop could hardly have know what was inside a closed
drawer door, even if his victim had indeed been reaching for one.
By the time HT contacted El Monte assistant chief Ankeny, his line was, "We
are not going to release any more statements on this case on the advice of our
attorney." And L.A. sheriff's lieutenant Marilyn Baker, supposedly
investigating this police homicide, was actually telling reporters, "I
personally think that four weapons are a lot for one person to have next to the
bed. If you had one, would you keep it next to your bed? Probably. But
four?"
"A message needs to be sent to the police over this," says attorney
Dunn, who works with Johnny Cochran's law firm. "The police were rude,
violent, abusive, and created a homicidal atmosphere. They would have shot Mario
had he sneezed, after they went in the way they did."
FBI Civil-Rights Probe?
Attempts by the Paz family to determine the
true circumstances around their grandfather's murder have so far been hampered
by the sequestering of that $10,000 which Mario had desperately placed onto his
bed in an attempt to placate those masked intruders. At first the El Monte
police were determined to forfeit Mario Paz' life savings, as another routine
part of all their narcotics investigations. After a good deal of shocked
questioning by local reporters--which caused assistant chief Arkeny to complain,
"I don't like the way this is being painted"--they appeared to back
down on that intention. However, when contacted just days ago by HT, L.A.
Sheriff's Dep. Cruz Solis remarked, "I can't give any particulars on that,
as the Sheriff's Department is not handling that case, but the money is being
held onto by the El Monte police."
The intervention of the FBI into this sordid local police scandal was delayed
nearly a month but is finally getting under way. Assistant US Attorney Mike
Gennaco, chief civil-rights investigator for the Southern California US
Attorney's Office, tells HT that while he mainly knows only what the papers have
printed on the case, he has received a little other information that he is not
at liberty to divulge: "After looking into this incident, I decided that an
investigation is warranted."
Cheryl Mimura of the L.A. FBI office confirms that an investigation has been
initiated, the results of which will be sent to the Justice Department, advising
on whether or not any charges should be filed against any of the police for
violating the civil rights of the now deceased Mario Paz and his family.
As an independent check on the FBI's activities in this respect, the Cato
Institute in Washington, DC has undertaken an independent
inquiry into the para-militarization of America's police departments, under
the cynical rubric of the "War on Drugs."
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