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View Full Version : In killing blamed on immigrant, woman's kin want answers


texaschickeee
11-16-2008, 08:12 PM
On a cloudy Monday afternoon in April, Tina Davila was buried according to her wishes: dressed in her favorite Dallas Cowboys jersey, with a photo of all five of her children tucked inside her coffin. In the picture, Kaylynn, the baby girl Davila died trying to protect, looks fussy, her chubby cheeks puckered into a pout.

Billy Brewer, Kaylynn's father, watched as Davila's coffin was lowered into a grave at San Jacinto Memorial Park Cemetery in Houston.

Brewer, a long-haul trucker, had a crush on Davila since he was a teenager. He loved her wide smile and how, he said, ''she wouldn't back down from nothing for nobody." Most especially on the day Davila, 39, tried to fight off the man who cornered her in a parking lot while Kaylynn was strapped into her car seat.

Witnesses told police Davila refused to hand over her car keys and screamed as she was stabbed in the chest: "My baby! My baby!"

In the days after her death April 16, Brewer couldn't bring himself to watch the surveillance camera video of the slaying. Not yet. He had a 4-month-old baby, just learning how to roll from her back to her belly, and a house full of memories.

On the TV news, Brewer learned that Timoteo Rios, the man charged with killing Davila, was an illegal immigrant with a criminal record. Rios had admitted to local law enforcement twice before the slaying that he was in the country illegally, but he wasn't deported, according to arrest and immigration records.

"I just want to know why," Brewer said. "If they were doing their jobs right, he wouldn't have been out there. Why'd they let him go?"

First arrest
Rios, now 24, was arrested for the first time in Harris County on May 29, 2007, a Tuesday afternoon. He attracted little attention. About 370 inmates pass through the intake division of Harris County Jail daily. Rios, who was living in a southwest Houston apartment complex, was charged with failure to identify to a police officer and marijuana possession, both misdemeanors.

He was fingerprinted, photographed and asked a series of questions. His answers were entered into the jail computer system. Birth date: Oct. 6, 1984. Height: 5 feet 11 inches. Weight: 162 pounds.

The jailer eventually asked: Are you a U.S. citizen? The records show that Rios said no, he was a Mexican citizen.

The jailer then asked: Are you an illegal immigrant?

Yes, Rios replied, according to jail records.

The jailer entered Rios' name into a database of inmates, set up in September 2006, who have admitted they are in the country illegally. The data entries are shared with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials in Houston, who have unrestricted access to the county's four jails. Agents routinely question and place "holds" on inmates in Harris County Jail they suspect are eligible for deportation.

Rios' name was the 15th of 20 added that Monday to the database. ICE officials confirm that they did not file paperwork to detain him.

Rios pleaded guilty to both counts against him and was released from jail June 5, 2007.

Second arrest
Twenty-two days later, Rios was back in jail, charged with criminal mischief, a misdemeanor. Police said he argued with his 18-year-old ex-girlfriend, the mother of two of his daughters, and punched out her apartment window. Then he threw a beer bottle at his ex-girlfriend's mother.

Rios was booked at 4:35 p.m. Again, Rios told jailers he was in the country illegally and, for a second time, was added to the database. He filled out paperwork for the court, writing that he was from Michoacan, Mexico, and worked in construction.

He pleaded guilty, was sentenced to 20 days with 11 days credit and was released July 6.

Kenneth Landgrebe, ICE's head of detention and removal for Houston, said ICE agents didn't have a chance to get to Rios.

"He was released before we had an opportunity to handle the case," he said. "We're in Harris County (Jail) every day, but we can't be in all places at the same time. I believe he was in a different part of the jail that we were working in. He was not where we were.

"We have to prioritize," he said. "Should we have been over there identifying him and letting a child molester get out? Or a pedophile or a bank robber or someone convicted of a serious drug crime? In a perfect world, if we had all the staff we needed, we could hopefully identify every alien that is unlawfully present in the U.S."

Ruth Alsobrook, Davila's grandmother, still lives in the house where Davila was raised in Galena Park, a 1950s-era neighborhood near the Port of Houston. Davila's parents died before she was 12.

"I loved that girl," said Alsobrook, 93, sitting in an armchair. ''I raised her in the church. Every time the church doors were open, we were there."

Davila attended Galena Park High School and rebelled as a teenager. She married her high school sweetheart, Eric Matt, in the spring of 1988. They had three children: Patrick, 20, Patricia, 18, and Payton, 16. Davila and Matt divorced after eight years but stayed friends. Davila later remarried and had another daughter, but that marriage also ended after a long separation.

One night about two years ago, she and Brewer ran into each other at Del's, a diner on the city's east side. Brewer asked her out for a date, and she said yes.

He said he felt lucky every day since, until April 16.

It was Brewer's 35th birthday. He had to drive a load out to Oklahoma City. He kissed Davila and Kaylynn, who was 3 months and 28 days old. It was early morning when he left for work.

At 5:02 p.m., Davila pulled into the parking lot outside the Cricket cell phone store on Uvalde Road near Wallisville Road, about a five-minute drive from her house in Houston. The next few moments were captured on the video surveillance camera outside the store.

Davila parked her white Chrysler Aspen SUV and stepped out. She started walking toward the store, leaving Kaylynn buckled into her car seat. An older model Ford Taurus pulled in behind Davila's SUV. A man jumped out and ran to block the door. He and Davila struggled over her purse and car keys.

A witness in the parking lot told detectives Davila screamed for her baby. The man stabbed Davila and ran back to his car, tossing the keys away. She stumbled inside the store, clutching her chest.

That night, Brewer tried Davila's cell phone, but it went straight to voice mail. Finally, his mother called him.

"Billy, come home," she said. "Tina's had an accident."

"How bad?" he asked.

"Just come home," she said.

Unanswered questions
Davila was taken to East Houston Regional Medical Center. She was pronounced dead minutes after arriving. By the time Brewer reached his mother's house that night, Davila's death was already on the TV news.

Days after the slaying, Harris County detectives arrested 18-year-old Kennedy Escoto, the suspected getaway car driver. Investigators said Escoto implicated Rios in Davila's death. Detectives say Rios may have fled to Mexico.

Davila's older children had questions about what happened. They saw on the news that Rios had been arrested twice before the slaying — and was in the country illegally.

"The kids just couldn't understand why he could be illegal and commit crimes and still be here. And I couldn't explain it to them," Matt said.

After Davila was killed, Brewer exchanged his long-haul job for one that keeps him closer to home. He asked his cousin to care for Kaylynn, temporarily, he said, until she gets a little bit older.

He put down a $150 deposit on a grave near Davila's and is paying $50 a month.

The more he learns about the man accused of killing Davila, the more his anger grows.

"He should have been deported after the first arrest," he said. "It's that simple. There's got to be a better way."

Brewer has started putting together a scrapbook for Kaylynn. He's saving Davila's high school jacket, a bunch of magnets he picked out for her over the years on the road, and the program from her funeral service. On the cover, there's a picture of Davila, with a warm, wide smile.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6115226.html

texaschickeee
11-16-2008, 08:13 PM
This is one of two stories in the paper right now. This lady in no way deserved this but she was leaving her child in that truck. thats not a good thing either.

***discuss***

texaschickeee
11-16-2008, 08:18 PM
http://www.chron.com/news/photogallery/Immigration_and_crime.html

http://www.chron.com/databases/criminalimmigrants

Sgt. Slaughter
11-16-2008, 08:25 PM
In killing blamed on immigrant, woman's kin want answers

Frankly, I think they deserve them. No bullshyte, no political mumbojumbo. Straight answer followed by a REAL solution. Not just "amnesty".

sinned
11-16-2008, 08:46 PM
Frankly, I think they deserve them. No bullshyte, no political mumbojumbo. Straight answer followed by a REAL solution. Not just "amnesty".

I'll give you the REAL answer. The government doesn't care about illegal immigration and in fact would just assume open the borders up to let all the pedophile, rapist, murderer, robber, sick pieces of garbage run amuck through our streets. LE has their hands tied because we pick them up, and they get released the next day. ICE is worthless, a huge money pit. If we are not going to enforce the immigration laws and secure the border, why bother having this multi billion dollar machine running?

I believe we should treat Mexico’s illegal immigrants exactly like they treat Americans when detained in Mexico. Hold them in the same conditions; subject them to the same beatings and lack of humanitarian facilities. Eventually, they will just stay at home and commit crime rather than come here to do it.

Looker
11-17-2008, 01:02 AM
Sad story. I hope the family heals quickly.

Limeade
11-17-2008, 01:42 AM
Very sad, I remember when this happened and they were showing the video of the struggle. What got to me was that it was so quick and it looked relatively survivable. Goes to show you that even minor wounds can kill you if the placement is right.

David Hineline
11-17-2008, 02:58 AM
I carry a gun because I can not carry a COP. We need to take responsibility for some of our own protection.

Loren Pechtel
11-17-2008, 04:22 PM
Until we actually punish illegals rather than just deporting them it's not really going to matter anyway. Throw them out and they'll come back in anyway.

Sgt. Slaughter
11-17-2008, 05:27 PM
What we SHOULD do is charge the country they're from. Charge 'em for the ENTIRE criminal process (at the end if they're convicted). Once they're booked, they should NOT be released from jail. No 'deportation' (which is just another chance to play Frogger at the border), no bail, just sit your azz in jail.

If the turd is convicted, their country must continue to pay for the entire process. The cost of the initial officers' investigation, time for everyone up to the conviction, and I mean EVERYONE. Jurors, court clerks, janitors, window washers, police fleet maintenance technicians - EVERYONE! During their subsequent incarceration, their country must continue to pay for housing their delinquent citizen as well.

NYFedLeo
11-17-2008, 08:07 PM
ICE is worthless, a huge money pit. If we are not going to enforce the immigration laws and secure the border, why bother having this multi billion dollar machine running?

You know just like with any Law Enforcement agency, we cannot be in all places at all times and unfortunately there are occasions when a subject will get away. Just as you as a police officer cannot arrest every single criminal in your city. The fact is that there is an estimated 12-20 million illegal immigrants in this country and there are less than 10 thousand of us to handle this mess. The millions of illegals that have already been apprehended and deported by ICE is often ignored. We are doing the best we can with the tools that have been provided to us. There are alot of hardworking men and women who work for ICE and I don't think it's fair to say ICE is worthless.

sinned
11-17-2008, 10:44 PM
You know just like with any Law Enforcement agency, we cannot be in all places at all times and unfortunately there are occasions when a subject will get away. Just as you as a police officer cannot arrest every single criminal in your city. The fact is that there is an estimated 12-20 million illegal immigrants in this country and there are less than 10 thousand of us to handle this mess. The millions of illegals that have already been apprehended and deported by ICE is often ignored. We are doing the best we can with the tools that have been provided to us. There are alot of hardworking men and women who work for ICE and I don't think it's fair to say ICE is worthless.

Not the officers themselves but the agency as a whole. ICE cannot possibly do its job, it does not have the support of the federal govenment or the states on the border. What is the point in having agents out there day after day if the ultimate goal of the United States under the current and upcoming administration is to allow the illegal scumbags to stay?

NYFedLeo
11-18-2008, 07:02 PM
Not the officers themselves but the agency as a whole. ICE cannot possibly do its job, it does not have the support of the federal govenment or the states on the border. What is the point in having agents out there day after day if the ultimate goal of the United States under the current and upcoming administration is to allow the illegal scumbags to stay?

I do my job regardless of the ultimate outcome of the cases. As a police officer, not everyone that you arrest gets convicted, but you still do your part. Your job is to arrest someone who has violated the law just as it is mine. What happens after that is up to the courts. Is your agency worthless if the people your agency arrests beat the rap, get a lesser sentence than they deserve, or some clever lawyer gets them off? Does every alien I arrest get deported? NO. Sometimes they fight their cases and win. Sometimes they are granted political assylum, or their countries won't accept them back, but I still do my job and lock them up while they await the outcome of their cases.
Of course there is always room for improvement and I wish we had more resources available to us, but I will say this, the overwhelming majority of the aliens that I have arrested were deported and or criminally prosecuted. And I have never had anyone tell me that I was wrong for locking someone up.
Where I live in NYC, the NYPD does not have the support of the city of New York, yet I have the utmost respect for the cops because they are the ones who put the crooks into the system regardless of the final outcome.

Southflaguy
11-18-2008, 07:19 PM
I have said it a Million times, people that need to be deported are not those that bring nothing this country or themselves, mean while the kid w/ the 4.0 gpa scholarships to diffrent universities, hard working, good people are the first to go...:rolleyes:...May God comfort this family...

Sgt. Slaughter
11-18-2008, 09:32 PM
I think the frustration (at least on MY end in THIS case) is that the turd was already in jail (BOTH times) and his booking sheet showed that he admitted he was in this country illegally.

ICE says they could not get to him in time. Really? Why isn't that system setup to automatically hold people that self-identify as illegal immigrants? ICE couldn't get to him because they were working "in a different part of the jail." Wow. I have to assume that a metropolitan area in Texas has a computer system that could have flagged this jackazz and held him until ICE was able to review his paperwork.

The article says ICE did not file the paperwork to detain him, although they don't elaborate on the reasoning. This situation is where the Federal red-tape process really ****es people off.

NYFedLeo
11-19-2008, 06:57 AM
I don't know exactly what happened in this particular situation but I can tell you that in the jail that I cover, the jaill staff is sometimes less than cooperative with us. Especially when there are new admissions into the jail. While the new admissions are going through the booking process, we are not allowed to talk to any inmates because they have not been medically cleared. We raised a big stink about this because alot of inmates who we suspected of being illegal aliens were coming in for petty stuff like traffic infractions and literally getting booked in and out of the jail on the same day, never allowing us the opportunity to see the inmate and question him. See I have doubts about the accuracy of this article. I don't know how it is at different jails around the country but in the jails that I handle, there is no question during the book in process which asks someone if they are an illegal alien. What they ask is if you are a U.S. Citizen and if you are foreign born. Now answering NO to the Citizenship question and YES to the foreign born question alone in and of itself does not necessarily mean that the guy is an "illegal alien" and does not give ICE agents probable cause to issue a warrant for their arrest. It just gives us a reason to investigate and then make our own determination about the person's status before we can make an arrest.

texaschickeee
11-19-2008, 07:03 AM
http://blogs.chron.com/immigration/archives/2008/11/post_187.html


ICE responses to the investagation that I have posted.