AP/ January 29, 2013, 6:50 PM

Teen may be tried as adult in ICE agent's shooting

This undated photo provided by the Hidalgo County Sheriff's Office shows Arnoldo Alvarado. Alvarado and his father Pedro Alvarado, both of Hargill, Texas are charged with assault of a federal officer and knowingly using and carrying a firearm during a violent crime.

This undated photo provided by the Hidalgo County Sheriff's Office shows Arnoldo Alvarado. Alvarado and his father Pedro Alvarado, both of Hargill, Texas are charged with assault of a federal officer and knowingly using and carrying a firearm during a violent crime. / Hidalgo County Sheriff's Office

EDINBURG, Texas A South Texas judge said Friday he will take the weekend to consider whether a 17-year-old boy will stand trial as an adult for allegedly firing on a vehicle driven by a federal agent.

Hidalgo County District Judge Jesse Contreras said he was "puzzled" by the case of the boy who had no prior record and who a probation officer said was extremely compliant. At the end of arguments Friday, Contreras told attorneys he would offer his decision Jan. 29.

Authorities say the boy's father, Pedro Alvarado, woke up his 18-year-old son, Arnoldo Alvarado, and his then-16-year-old son last July and told them a suspicious vehicle was vehicle parked near their home. The boy and the two men are charged with the attempted murder of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Kelton Harrison. The boy is charged in state court, while the men are charged in federal court.

The state asked that the 17-year-old be tried as an adult. Prosecutor Marisela Ledesma argued that the seriousness of the offense and the boy's own admission that he grabbed his .22-caliber rifle warranted that he be tried as an adult.

Ricardo Flores, the boy's attorney, said it was a mistake made by a boy awakened in the middle of the night by his father.

Contreras dismissed that argument. "We're dealing with a sophisticated, mature individual," he said.

No one has suggested the boy knew a federal agent was inside the silver Jeep Grand Cherokee. Harrison was conducting surveillance in the area in a drug trafficking investigation. He was unarmed and fled at speeds of 100 mph.

The Alvarados followed in Pedro Alvarado's pickup truck.

The chase happened in the pre-dawn hours of July 3 in Hargill, a rural community northeast of Edinburg. Court documents indicate a related drug investigation had been under way for two years. Six others have been charged with drug offenses, but not the Alvarados.

At least one neighbor called sheriff's deputies to the area to investigate shortly before the confrontation and called Pedro Alvarado as well.

The younger brother fired the rifle from the pickup's back seat, while Arnoldo Alavardo fired a 9 mm handgun from the front, according to court documents.

The Alvarados chased Harrison for more than two miles until he crashed into a field.

Hidalgo County sheriff's deputy Joshua Kaltenbach testified Friday that Harrison heard vehicle doors slam after he crashed and believed it was the shooters. He ran into nearby woods and hid for about 15 minutes before returning to his vehicle. He had been shot once in the back, but recovered and transferred out of the area, Kaltenbach said.

Kaltenbach said when he asked the boy why they chased and shot at someone they didn't know, he replied that they had to. Asked why not call police to report the vehicle, the boy said, "We don't call the police." When authorities searched the home, they found marijuana, the guns and two illegal immigrants who did chores for the family.

Under questioning from Flores, Kaltenbach conceded Harrison could have turned on his unmarked vehicle's emergency lights to indicate he was law enforcement.

"This could have been avoided," if both sides had made different decisions, he said.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
11 Comments Add a Comment
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rightontarget says:
"Harrison was conducting surveillance in the area in a drug trafficking investigation. He was unarmed and fled at speeds of 100 mph.
The Alvarados followed in Pedro Alvarado's pickup truck."
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The fact that the Alvarados followed the agent who was leaving the area says it all. This is no innocent "kid". He needs to be tried as an adult. And it should be for murder. They were in no danger. THEY were the ones in pursuit.
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ejstx says:
1. the illegal immigrants were ladies living with the family, not the Alvarados. I know its hard for some bigots to understand that Latino does not = illegal.

2. the guy in the picture is actually the older brother, not the younger one.

3. "NOT INCLUDED IN THE NEWS" - Everyone knew the dad was an oversize thug who bullied his kids around, and they would always do what he said; even now they that they were older.

At 16, I just don't see how he could have stood up to his dad in the middle of the night, and under perceived threat.

You people need to make up your mind, is not RATIONAL to think at 16 you have he same capacity to think as an adult, and then deny them all adults rights. If a 16 year old can make adult decisions, then they also vote. How about that?

And remember brown does not equal illegal.
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frankie2fing replies:
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EJ just STOP! Using facts and logic on a bunchh of bigotted teabaggers is like using rubberbands to tie up a cruise ship. IT JUST DOES NOT WORK! They hate, it is what they were taught and all they know.
Hopefully, these knuckle dragging tools will evolve (or more likely die). I just hope that they do not pass their bigotry onto the next generation...
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tsigili says:
This is an example of the violence wrought by the illegal immigrant problem. It goes on, in all of our border states on a regular basis.
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cab_351 says:
hang them,,bring back old school justice
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hbullis says:
Maybe he has no record because his luck just ran out. Record or not he attempted murder. Not to mention the drugs and illegals at his home. His dad sounds like a real pillar of the community as well!
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btrdb says:
Obama wishes he had a son just like Arnoldo. Obama would wish the devil himself were his son if he had something to gain from it, and the liberal media would shout in unison, "Heil..er...Hail Obama".
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CuriousServant replies:
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Huh?
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skeezix06 says:
The kid looks stupid. Odd thing though. The expression on his face is similar to the expression on the face of the old man in Georgia.
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Cowmpound says:
More bad guys with guns please! But why monitoring with no weapon on the official? Something we don't know.
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AmazingGrce says:
Try him as an Adult - The initial and continued pursuit was completely by choice and the entire situation was created when the young man, his father and brother entered a pursuit well off their property. They went well beyond protection of themselves and their property. Pursuing the 'stranger' into the woods approaches the standards of attempted capital murder. This was NOT self-defense even by the standards of Texas law.
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