XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.society.liberalism, soc.culture.native   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: bidens.nazis@borderpatrol.gov   
      
   Scout wrote in   
   news:FbTjJ.50703$Ql5.36074@fx39.iad:   
      
   > Biden's Nazis are murdering Americans.   
      
   A relative of a Native American man who was killed by Border Patrol agents   
   near the Arizona-Mexico border two weeks ago said she was talking to him   
   moments before he was shot and he told her he had contacted the Border   
   Patrol earlier in the evening to ask for help.   
      
   But the relative said none of the law enforcement agencies investigating   
   the May 18 shooting death of Raymond Mattia has asked her or any other   
   family members for information, and Customs and Border Protection’s   
   official statement about the incident makes no mention of a call from   
   Mattia.   
      
   The relative said that she has been pressing law enforcement for   
   information about the shooting since it happened, without success — and   
   that the family was not even allowed to approach his body for hours. “I   
   asked that night: ‘We want to talk to someone. What happened to Ray? We   
   need answers,’” said the relative, who preferred to remain anonymous for   
   fear of retaliation by law enforcement.   
      
   Now she wants to know: “Why did the Border Patrol run into the yard   
   instead of assessing? Why were there so many gunshots? Why didn’t you try   
   talking to Ray?”   
      
   According to the relative, who lives close to Mattia’s house, Mattia   
   regularly called the Border Patrol to report migrants crossing his   
   property on Tohono O’odham Nation tribal land. The 4,000-square-mile   
   reservation in the desert west of Tucson shares a long border with Mexico.   
   The relative said the Border Patrol had frequent interactions with him.   
      
   The relative said that if she were contacted by the FBI or Customs and   
   Border Protection’s Office of Professional Responsibility, two federal   
   entities investigating the shooting, she would tell investigators that   
   around 6 p.m. on May 18, Mattia told her he had called the Border Patrol   
   to complain about three undocumented migrants who had entered his home and   
   asked to use his telephone and bathroom.   
      
   More than three hours later, she said, she and Mattia were talking on the   
   phone again when Border Patrol vehicles raced into his yard. He believed   
   they were responding to his call and told her he would go talk to them.   
      
   He hung up, she said, and then she heard gunshots.   
      
   A statement about the incident from CBP makes no mention of the alleged   
   earlier call from Mattia. Instead, it says the Border Patrol agents were   
   assisting Tohono O’odham tribal police to respond to a “shots fired call.”   
      
   The discrepancy may explain why Mattia went out of his house to meet the   
   agents, thinking they were responding to his earlier request, while the   
   agents, according to CBP’s statement, “spread out to search for the man.”   
      
   The statement said CBP’s Office of Professional Responsibility has   
   reviewed video taken from body cameras worn on the agents and deciphered   
   that Mattia threw an object at the agents, which landed a few feet away   
   from them, and “abruptly extended his right arm,” causing them to shoot.   
      
   According to Mattia’s relative, she was not aware of any shots fired in   
   the area that evening before the Border Patrol and tribal police arrived.   
      
   She said there is no electricity at Mattia's home, making visibility for   
   law enforcement officers difficult at 9:35 p.m. The relative also said the   
   object Mattia threw may have been his cellphone, because he had just ended   
   his call with her when he approached the agents.   
      
   Neither CBP nor the FBI, which oversees all shooting investigations on   
   tribal land, have said what Mattia threw. They did not respond to a   
   request for comment about why none of the relatives have been interviewed,   
   when the body camera video would be made public or whether the Border   
   Patrol knew whether Mattia had made a call to them earlier in the day   
   before they arrived at his house.   
      
   The incident may further corrode trust between the Border Patrol and the   
   Tohono O’odham Nation.   
      
   “My uncle didn’t deserve to die like this,” Yvonne Nevarez, Mattia’s   
   niece, told The Arizona Republic. “After this happened, we feel like we   
   can’t trust [the Border Patrol] to come when there’s issues.”   
      
   According to Mattia’s relative, who rushed to the site of the shooting, a   
   Tohono O’odham police officer blocked family members from seeing his body.   
   She said that the officer told them to go home but that the family members   
   told the officers they needed to stay with their brother and bless his   
   body. She said they did not see Mattia until he was in a body bag on his   
   way to the medical examiner. The Tohono O’odham Police Department did not   
   respond to a request for comment about why the family was blocked from   
   seeing Mattia.   
      
   “We said our goodbyes while he was in a body bag,” the relative said. “The   
   elders said it was very disrespectful.”   
      
   The next morning, the relative said, all the crime scene tape around   
   Mattia’s house had been removed, but no law enforcement officers or agents   
   came to speak with the family about what happened.   
      
   “It looked like the whole investigation was over,” the relative said. “But   
   no one ever came to talk to us.”   
      
   Last weekend, the family organized two protests outside Border Patrol   
   stations in Tucson and near the Tohono O’odham Nation Reservation to   
   demand answers about Mattia’s death.   
      
   https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/family-wants-know-why-border-patrol-   
   agents-shot-ray-mattia-rcna87113   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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