A man allegedly spits on and attempts to bite border agents before transferring him from chair to car.
Aland Donaldo Martinez Vasquez is scheduled to appear in El Paso on Monday for a detention receiving before U.S. Magistrate Judge Miguel Angel Torres.
After Martinez’s lawyer suggested the defendant was unable to comprehend the proceedings against him and was n’t assist in his own defence, the reading was put on hold for several months. But Torres on June 4 ruled there was n’t sufficient evidence that Martinez suffered from psychosis, mental illness or defect, or does n’t have a reasonable degree of rational understanding.
The claims stem from a commotion at the Northeast El Paso soft-sided control facility run by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection on March 7. A Border Patrol agent by the last brand of Mendoza appears in court documents to have cared for a person who “became problematic” to other migrant people in a holding place.
The broker escorted the personal, Martinez, to an loneliness “pod”. But, Martinez reportedly demanded a telephone and began eavesdropping on the holding room’s Plexiglass door. Federal court data reveal that Martinez repeatedly kicked, screamed, and turned the chair on its edge after agents ordered private security guards to control him.
Martinez was given instructions to move to the boundary police station and processing facility close to Hondo Pass Drive. The alleged assault on a common servant took place during that shift.
A Border Patrol agent’s affidavit alleged that two Border Patrol agents wheeled Martinez out of the soft-sided facility while some others attempted to move him in the seat of a delivery.
Martinez reportedly attempted to bite him while a border representative by the last name Regan was buckling him up. According to the national complaint, Martinez allegedly spit at two officials by the last brands of Gill and Gomez when he could never sink his teeth into Regan.
According to the complaint, Martinez allegedly kicked the front seats of the delivery before going to the Border Patrol station and then resisted being placed in a cushioned body.
Martinez was ordered held without bail until the case’s conclusion was reached, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. It cited the” crime of violence”, Martinez being a foreign national ( his nationality is not specified ), and having no ties to the El Paso community.
Martinez’s counsel entered a plea of not innocent on behalf of his client on June 4, the same day Torres determined that he was fit for trial, and he waived trial.