McAllen, Texas Criminal Defense, Divorce and DWI Lawyer Johnathan Ball

August 16, 2010

Mayor Ahumada arrested for DWI

Brownsville Mayor Ahumada arrested for DWI
Comments 99
May 11, 2010 9:47 AM
By EMMA PEREZ-TREVINO, The Brownsville Herald
© The Brownsville Herald

Brownsville Mayor Pat M. Ahumada was arrested on one count of driving while intoxicated by Brownsville police early this morning.

Ahumada confirmed his DWI arrest in an interview with The Brownsville Herald.

He was arraigned before Municipal Judge Ben Neece and released on a $3,500 personal recognizance bond.

“I’m disappointed about the incident,” Ahumada said, but added, “I’m not admitting to anything.”

Ahumada said he was driving in the early morning hours when he was stopped by police officers.

“I was coming from a friend’s house,” the mayor said.

He said he was taken to the police department, processed and taken to a city cell. “They followed the procedures. I didn”t ask for any considerations,” the mayor added. “Everybody has a job to do and I respect that,” the mayor said.

This is Ahumada’s third DWI arrest in a period of two decades.

He was first charged in July 1987 on a driving while intoxicated charge. He pleaded guilty to the charge on Feb. 26, 1988, and signed a written waiver of jury.

He was ordered to serve six months probation, attend 10 hours of alcohol awareness classes, abstain from consumption of alcoholic beverages and maintain automobile liability insurance. Ahumada paid $85 in court costs and a $100 fine.

“I had just lost my wife and daughter. I fell into depression,” Ahumada said in a 2007 interview. “I began to drink.”

According to funeral records, Ahumada’s wife, Adriana Gloria Ahumada, was killed in a car accident on Dec. 10, 1987. His daughter drowned in April 1986 while swimming in the family’s pool.

“It’s part of life, unfortunately,” he said. “Sometimes those things happen.”

He was arrested on another DWI charge in 2003, 10 years after he resigned from the mayor’s office to unsuccessfully seek the county judge’s seat. The charge was later dismissed.

For more on this developing story, stay with the Brownsville Herald.

Brownsville Woman Killed by Drunk Driver

Police: woman dies after being hit by drunk driver
Comments 15
August 16, 2010 12:37 PM
The Brownsville Herald
A 34-year-old woman is dead and her 4-year-old son remains hospitalized after the mother and child were struck by an alleged drunk driver, police reported.

Edgar Reyes, 33, of Brownsville, remains in custody following his arraignment on one count of intoxication manslaughter. His bond was set at $300,000.

The accident happened at 11:40 a.m. Saturday at the 700 block of South Indiana. Police said Brenda Gomez and her son were standing by a mailbox when they were struck by a 1998 Chevrolet Silverado truck driven by Reyes.

Reyes reportedly first collided with a 2005 Volkswagen Jetta and then hit the mother and child. Gomez was pronounced dead at the scene.

Although Reyes fled the scene of the accident, authorities were able to track him down, police reported.

Reyes was “said to have been drunk at the time of the accident,” police reported. Speed is also believed to have played a factor.

May 11, 2010

Former McAllen Mayor’s DWI Case Filed

Former McAllen mayor’s DWI case filed

Comments 74 | Recommend 44

District judge’s case status unknown

The Monitor

EDINBURG — Prosecutors said they filed the driving while intoxicated case of former McAllen mayor Leo Montalvo on Monday, seven months after his arrest.

Meanwhile, the DWI case of Jesse Contreras, presiding judge of the 449th state District Court in Hidalgo County, has yet to be filed in Cameron County — and prosecutors did not offer an update on its status.

Because the charges against the two officials are misdemeanors, prosecutors have two years after their arrests to decide whether there’s enough evidence to prosecute them.

Montalvo was arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated after a collision June 8, 2009, along Ware Road in McAllen. Police said the former mayor smelled of alcohol and slurred his words as he explained to officers that no one involved in the crash was hurt.

“Do you know who I am?” he asked officers, according to the police report. “Please, sir, don’t ruin my several years of public service.”

The case remained unfiled by Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra until Monday. The Monitor inquired about Montalvo’s case on Friday, when court records showed it had not yet been filed.

Cases such as Montalvo’s hung in limbo while other DWI arrests of lesser-known officials publicized by local media were assigned to courts more quickly.

For instance, McAllen police Officer Alex Alvarez was arrested on a DWI charge on July 5, 2009. His case was filed in Hidalgo County court on July 31, 2009. The case is still pending in Hidalgo County Court-at-law No. 2, after Guerra filed a motion this month to reconsider and reopen evidence that had been suppressed in the case.

In another case, Mission police Officer Martin Flores Villarreal was arrested June 28, 2008, after allegedly driving an unmarked Mission police vehicle while intoxicated. That case was assigned to Hidalgo County Court-at-law No. 2 on July 31, 2008, and is set to go before a jury on March 16.

Guerra, for his part, said he had waited to file Montalvo’s case so he could review it himself — unlike most other cases, which are reviewed by his assistant prosecutors. When asked why the case had not been filed until Monday, he said “it was a mistake” to wait on it.

“We had a miscommunication,” Guerra said of his assistant prosecutors. “We file those cases usually within six months.”

Montalvo became McAllen’s first Hispanic mayor after he defeated longtime leader Othal Brand in 1997. The victory marked a symbolic change in power locally — something Montalvo downplayed at the time.

A woman who answered the telephone at Montalvo’s house Monday said the former mayor would not discuss the drunken driving case with the media.

Contreras’ case has remained under consideration by Cameron County District Attorney Armando Villalobos’ office since September 2008.

Contreras, a Mercedes municipal judge at that time, was arrested on South Padre Island on Sept. 21, 2008. He was elected to the 449th state District Court later that year.

Police responded to a disturbance involving a patron at the Coral Reef Lounge early that Sept. 21 morning but learned the person had already left, according to Monitor archives. Officers obtained a vehicle description at the bar, and Contreras was pulled over about three miles south of the business with a female companion inside his vehicle.

Asked Friday about the status of Contreras’ case, Villalobos’ spokesman, Jason Moody, asked for an information request in writing. That request was submitted to his e-mail address. Moody has not responded to subsequent inquiries regarding the case’s status. Villalobos has until this fall to decide whether his office will prosecute Contreras’ DWI case.

Contreras could not be reached for comment on his cell phone Tuesday afternoon.

A Monitor analysis of Hidalgo County court records after Montalvo’s arrest revealed that since 2004, at least 20 local high-profile people had been charged with driving while intoxicated. Some of the cases are still pending in local county courts years after the initial arrest, while others were dropped without any hearings in court.

Of the resolved cases, 73 percent were dismissed by judges or closed when a district attorney refused to prosecute. The dismissal rate was 23 percent higher than all DWI cases in Cameron, Hidalgo, Starr and Willacy counties in the same period.

Other local public officials have been arrested on suspicion of drunken driving since Montalvo’s arrest — notably, Hidalgo County District Clerk Laura Hinojosa, who was arrested in December.

Guerra, the Hidalgo County district attorney, said his office continues to review evidence in Hinojosa’s case, adding that he has made no decision on when or whether it will be prosecuted.

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Jared Taylor covers law enforcement and general assignments for The Monitor. You can reach him at (956) 683-4439.

Hidalgo County deputy constable arrested for DWI

Hidalgo County deputy constable’s DWI arrest not his first

Comments 76 | Recommend 24

The Monitor

ALAMO — Police arrested a senior deputy constable Saturday after he allegedly lost control of his pickup truck and collided with a car driven by an elderly couple.

 

It was his third DWI arrest in three years.

 

Alamo police arrested Javier Hinojosa on driving while intoxicated and intoxication assault charges Saturday evening after he allegedly lost control of his Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck and collided nearly head-on with the elderly couple’s car.

 

Saturday’s DWI arrest is the second in about four months for Hinojosa — he has an August 2009 DWI case pending in Hidalgo County Court-at-Law No. 5.

 

Precinct 2 Constable Gilbert “Chato” Alaniz said he suspended Hinojosa for one week without pay after the DWI arrest last year.

 

Hired in June 2005, Hinojosa serves as senior deputy constable for Alaniz, who said he has been unable to talk with Hinojosa. The constable said he would conduct his own investigation into the matter to determine Hinojosa’s job status.

 

“Something is going to be done, believe me,” Alaniz said. “Something is definitely going to be done.”

 

In his latest arrest, Hinojosa, 45, was driving on the 300 block of East Business 83 in Alamo about 6:50 p.m. Saturday when he allegedly lost control of his Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck, veered into the oncoming lanes of traffic and collided with a passenger car driven by an elderly couple, said Alamo Police Chief Arturo Espinoza.

 

“It looks like he went into the oncoming traffic and they collided almost head-on,” the chief said.

Hinojosa’s 12-year-old son was riding in the pickup truck with him at the time. The boy was transported to an area hospital for observation along with the elderly couple, Espinoza said. The couple, both who are in their 70s, remained hospitalized in serious condition Monday.

 

Hinojosa, of Edinburg, refused to provide a field sobriety test, Espinoza said.

 

Oddly, Hinojosa was taken to three different hospitals — Edinburg Regional, McAllen Medical Center and Rio Grande Regional Hospital — and no blood was drawn because he refused to provide submit to a blood test, Espinoza said.

State law requires anyone arrested for driving while intoxicated who is involved in an accident that causes “serious bodily injury” or death to provide a blood specimen.

 

Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra said he has never encountered a situation where a person arrested on intoxication assault or manslaughter charges did not provide a blood sample — and the hospital complies with a suspect’s request.

 

“No one has ever had an issue,” Guerra said.

 

Police did not try to obtain a search warrant, which would have forced Hinojosa to submit to the blood test because it was the weekend, and whatever alcohol or drugs he may have consumed had left his system, the chief said.

 

“We didn’t go that route as to try and get a warrant on him,” Espinoza said. “We’re going with a refusal” to submit to a blood or breath sample.

 

Hospital officials could not be reached for comment after business hours Monday.

 

Hinojosa was formally charged with intoxication assault and driving while intoxicated with a child passenger during an arraignment Sunday in Alamo Municipal Court. Bond was set at $150,000.

 

“It’s troubling to us when those entrusted with upholding the law don’t,” said Ana Verley, a local victims’ advocate for Mothers Against Drunk Drivers. “It’s sad and disappointing that these things happen and innocent people keep getting hurt.”

 

Records detailing Hinojosa’s career before he was hired by the Hidalgo County Precinct 2 Constable Office were unavailable Monday.

 

An open records request with the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Standards and Education, which maintains peace officers’ career histories, was not immediately returned Monday afternoon.

 

Hinojosa was also arrested in January 2006 on DWI charges that were dismissed by Hidalgo County Court-at-Law No. 5 later that year, court records state. Alaniz said he did not suspend Hinojosa at that time because he was not convicted.

 

Hinojosa had a DWI arrest dismissed from Hidalgo County Court-at-Law No. 2 in September 2003. He also had assault charges dropped in Hidalgo County Court-at-Law No. 1 in March 2002.

 

Hinojosa remained at the Hidalgo County Jail on Monday. Intoxication assault is a third degree felony that has a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and up to a $10,000 fine upon conviction. Driving while intoxicated with a child passenger is a state jail felony that has a maximum sentence of two years in jail and up to a $10,000 fine.

 

Hinojosa is not Alaniz’s only deputy to have been arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated.

 

In October 2007, Hidalgo County Precinct 2 chief deputy constable Sergio Hinojosa — Javier’s younger brother — was arrested for allegedly driving while intoxicated in San Juan. That case was dropped in Hidalgo County Court-at-Law No. 1 in May 2008 due to insufficient evidence. Alaniz said he fired Sergio Hinojosa after his DWI arrest.

 

With the latest DWI arrest, Alaniz would not say whether he intends to dismiss Hinojosa. Regardless, the constable said he plans on another suspension for his senior deputy.

 

“What can I say? We all do mistakes that we regret later on in life,” Alaniz said. “It’s sad, but what can we do about it?

 

“What’s done is done, my friend.”

___

 

Monitor staff writer Jeremy Roebuck contributed to this story.

___


Jared Taylor covers law enforcement and general assignments for The Monitor. You can reach him at (956) 683-4439.

Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Deputy Arrested

Sheriff fires sergeant arrested on DWI charge

Comments 19 | Recommend 4

The Monitor

EDINBURG — Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Treviño said he fired a deputy sergeant arrested recently on suspicion of driving while intoxicated.

Treviño said he dismissed Mauricio Ramos after internal investigators found the sergeant had violated the sheriff’s office’s conduct policy.

Pharr police arrested Ramos about midnight Saturday outside Whataburger, 100 E. Expressway 83, according to the criminal complaint in the case.

Someone had called police after an individual nearly caused a collision in the restaurant’s parking lot, the complaint states. A “concerned citizen” in the parking lot flagged down the police officer and directed him to Ramos’ tan Toyota Tundra pickup truck.

Police said Ramos was improperly parked by a fence in the parking lot and appeared to be asleep behind the wheel, the complaint states.

Ramos had most recently been employed with the sheriff’s office since April 2005. Former sheriff Henry Escalon fired Ramos after a DWI arrest in 1999; that case was later dismissed. Treviño re-hired Ramos following that case’s dismissal and after Ramos worked as an officer in Elsa, Donna and Weslaco.

But the sheriff said he told Ramos upon hiring him that another arrest would likely result in his termination. Ramos has the option to appeal his firing as part of the civil service process.

“The dismissal has nothing to do with a conviction” in the DWI case, Treviño said. “His actions violated our official misconduct policy.”

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Jared Taylor covers law enforcement and general assignments for The Monitor. You can reach him at (956) 683-4439.

Brownsville Mayor Arrested for DWI

Valley Morning Star

SAN BENITO — A baby who was found unresponsive in a San Benito home last week died over the weekend after spending several days on life support, police said.

The infant’s teenage aunt, who was arrested last week on charges of injury to a child, could face further charges in light of the child’s death, police said.

Police arrested Ada Marlene Rodriguez, 17, after her 4-month-old niece was rushed to Valley Baptist Medical Center in Harlingen last week when the infant’s mother found the child lying facedown in a baby carrier inside the home, unresponsive and not breathing. The child’s mother had told officers that she left her baby, Kimberly Nicolas, with Rodriguez earlier that morning.

San Benito police Lt. Martin Morales called the incident “suspicious” and questioned why the infant would have been turned face-down in the baby carrier.

After several days in intensive care, Kimberly died Sunday afternoon, Morales said. In light of the baby’s death, detectives are continuing to investigate and are working to determine whether charges against Rodriguez should be upgraded.

The preliminary investigation indicates the aunt was responsible for the infant’s death, Morales said.

“There are some facts that are coming out that are swaying things toward the 17-year-old being responsible,” he said Tuesday.

“They had an autopsy yesterday, so we’re still following up on it and we’re going to have to wait until we gather more facts,” Morales said. “Right now we’re just tightening up the case.”

Given the outcome of the investigation so far, detectives will likely send their findings to the Cameron County District Attorney’s Office with a request that additional charges be filed, Morales said.

“It would be a DA case, so we would have to submit our case with our findings to the DA’s office and request to have them look at it and see if there should be upgraded charges,” he said.

Cameron County Jail records show Rodriguez is being held there, with her bail set at $100,000, and that she has been identified as an undocumented immigrant.

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Michael Barajas is a reporter for the Valley Morning Star in Harlingen.

March 19, 2010

McAllen Police Officer Arrested for DWI

McAllen officer charged with DWI

Comments 33 | Recommend 2

The Monitor

ALAMO — A McAllen police officer has been suspended without pay after his arrest Sunday on suspicion of driving drunk.

Jorge Ibarra, 43, of San Juan, refused to take a Breathalyzer test after state troopers he was involved in a wreck just before 3 a.m. near the intersection of North Alamo and East Minnesota roads, north of Alamo.

Ibarra reportedly ran off the road and hit a fence, causing minor property damage, said Trooper Johnny Hernandez, spokesman for the Department of Public Safety. The officer did not hurt himself or anyone else.

He will remain on leave until the conclusion of the criminal charges against him, said McAllen police Chief Victor Rodriguez. Internal investigators have also opened their own probe into Ibarra’s alleged conduct.

Ibarra, a 12-year veteran of the department, was released from the Hidalgo County Jail on a $500 bond shortly after his arrest.

If convicted, he could face up to six months in the county jail, termination from the police force and $2,000 in fines.

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Jeremy Roebuck covers courts and general assignments for The Monitor. You can reach him at (956) 683-4437.

December 31, 2009

Mission Texas police officer suspended after DWI arrest

Mission police officer suspended after DWI arrest

Comments 12 | Recommend 4

SAN JUAN — A Mission police officer has been suspended indefinitely after a Saturday morning arrest for allegedly driving an unmarked police car while drunk, officials said.

This is at least the third arrest on suspicion of driving while intoxicated for Officer Martin Flores Villarreal, 40, of Mission, and at least his second while driving an unmarked Mission police car, according to court records and Trooper Johnny Hernandez, a local spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety.

The first two charges, in 2004 and 2006, were both dismissed, court records indicate.

Villarreal is suspended from the department indefinitely and without pay following his latest arrest, said Lt. Martin Garza, a Mission police spokesman. The accused officer has the right to appeal the suspension.

State troopers arrested Villarreal about 2:30 a.m. Saturday along the eastbound frontage road of Expressway 83 near the intersection with Raul Longoria Road, according to Hernandez.

Villarreal apparently was stopped on suspicion of a traffic violation, which Hernandez refused to detail. The Mission police officer failed a field sobriety test and was taken to the Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office, where a breath test indicated his blood alcohol concentration was twice the legal limit, Hernandez said.

Under Texas law, any driver with a BAC of 0.08 percent or higher is considered intoxicated.

Three other passengers in the car — two women and another Mission police officer — did not appear to be intoxicated and were not detained, Hernandez said.

Villarreal, who was arraigned at the sheriff’s office on a charge of driving while intoxicated, posted the state-mandated $502 bond and was released sometime Saturday morning, according to the sheriff’s office.

Mission police Chief Leo Longoria could not be reached for comment.

This was at least the second time this year an officer with a local law enforcement agency was arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated.

Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Deputy Sergio Salaiz De Hoyos, 36, was arrested in mid-February in Donna. He resigned after Sheriff Lupe Treviño suspended him with pay. His case is pending in Hidalgo County Court-at-law No. 4

De Hoyos had at least one prior DWI arrest in 1990. Court records indicate he was convicted and completed a DWI education program.

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Sean Gaffney covers law enforcement and general assignments for The Monitor. He can be reached at (956) 683-4434.

September 26, 2009

McAllen police officer charged with DWI

The Monitor

McALLEN — Police arrested one of their own Sunday night, charging an off-duty officer with drunk driving after he crashed into a parked car.

Alex Alvarez apparently argued with a manager at Chili’s Grill & Bar on Nolana, refused to wait for a taxi that had been called and then backed into the same manager’s truck just after 10 p.m. Sunday, according to police records.

The 39-year-old Alvarez was arraigned in McAllen Municipal Court Monday and released on a $5,000 personal recognizance bond. He has been suspended without pay, until the criminal charges are resolved, said McAllen police Chief Victor Rodriguez.

“In our business, these kinds of matters have the potential to have very, very serious consequences,” Rodriguez said. “The outcome of last night may determine his future.”

Aside from the criminal charges he is facing, Alvarez could endure a range of punishments, from suspension to termination. He could also be stripped by the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Officer Standards of Education, TCLEOSE, of his license to be a police officer if he is found guilty, Rodriguez said.

If he is convicted of the drunk driving offense, a class B misdemeanor, he faces up to a $2,000 fine and up to 180 days in jail.

A 14-year veteran of the force, Alvarez repeatedly asked officers to let him drive home when they arrived Sunday night. Officers found Alvarez behind the wheel of his Ford truck, a red security club still clamped on the steering wheel, according to police records.

Witnesses and Chili’s employees told police that Alvarez had been bothering four female customers and had to be escorted from the table. A manager at the restaurant said that Alvarez was “too intoxicated” to drive home, so he called a taxi, according to the records.

When the manager tried to stall Alvarez until the taxi arrived, Alvarez apparently stripped a pair of glasses from the manager’s head and threw them to the floor.

A security camera in the parking lot then captured Alvarez get into his truck and back into the other vehicle, according to police records. Police suspect that he forgot to remove the security club from the steering wheel before backing up, according to the records.

Alvarez refused to take a Breathalyzer test, and he refused other sobriety tests once at the police station. When officers arrived at the scene, Alvarez said he couldn’t remember “doing anything to the manager” and he repeatedly asked officers to let him drive home.

But after officers recounted what witnesses described, Alvarez apologized to officers for putting them in the precarious situation of arresting a fellow policeman, according to the records.

“(Alvarez said) that we should do what we had to do and that it was all his fault,” according to the report. “(Alvarez said) that he did not want us to get in trouble for his actions.”

Officers who responded to the scene notified their superiors, who also responded to the scene, according to the records. It’s police procedure for supervisors to be involved when a department employee is part of an investigation, Rodriguez said.

“I believe they responded adequately,” Rodriguez said.

Alvarez was a well-trained officer, often receiving far more instruction that what TCLEOSE requires, said Tim Braaten, executive director of the commission. For officers who are convicted of a DUI, the commission normally suspends the police license for 10 years, he added.

“(Alvarez) has been a … good officer for us,” Rodriguez said. “We’ve been lucky to have his services; however, you have what happened last night.”


Sean Gaffney covers business, the economy and general assignments for The Monitor. He can be reached at (956) 683-4434.

Sheriff’s deputies net dozens of DWI arrests in July Fourth operation

Filed under: McAllen Texas DWI Lawyer — Tags: , , , , , , — Johnathan Ball @ 3:26 pm
The Monitor

EDINBURG — The Hidalgo County Sheriff’s Office participated in the statewide “Drink. Drive. Go to Jail.” campaign along with the national Impaired Driving Mobilization campaign during the Fourth of July weekend.

Sheriff’s deputies arrested a total of 53 intoxicated drivers, according to an agency statement.

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