Tuesday, April 16, 2013

PRIDE GOES BEFORE THE FALL...THE PETRIOCIOLI STORY


By Juan Montoya
Once upon a time Alejandro  Bernal  Petriocioli was on top of the world.
A nephew to Gustavo Petriocioli – a high-ranking Mexican government official in the 1980's who was later Ambassador to the United States from January 1989 to January 1993 during the Administration of President Carlos Salinas de Gortari – Alejandro enjoyed the privileges of class as few did..
His uncle was later named by President Miguel de la Madrid as Mexico's Treasury Secretary in June 1986. At that time, Mexico's foreign debt was near $100 billion, largely as a result of the collapse of oil prices at the start of the decade.
Gustavo also served during the time that Mexico began negotiations with the United States and Canada on the North American Free Trade Agreement, which went into operation on Jan. 1, 1994.
Alejandro never stopped exploiting his high Mexican government connections in his commercial ventures (tranzas) on the U.S. side of the border.
Alejandro's side of the family had huge transport concessions from the Mexican government and they made the most of it. At one time he was buying fabrics in the United States and selling them wholesale to interior decorators in Mexico City.
Pompous, filled with an exaggerated sense of self-importance, and displaying the worst habits of Mexico's ruling class, Alejandro let no one forget his family and government connections. Era un influyente and wouldn't let an opportunity to emphasize it.
When I met Alejandro, he was married to one of Jose Carretero's daughters and was doing business out of the same office where I edited the English version of El Bravo's El Valle de Texas section. That's right. At one time, El Bravo wanted to capture a section of the Brownsville English-speaking market and the local section was published in English and inserted in the Spanish-language daily.
Alejandro wasn't an easy person to ignore despite his small stature. He was loud, brusque, and sometimes downright rude with people. Those of us in the newspaper section of the office were annoyed when he spoke on the phone. "Me urge! Me urge!" (It's urgent) he would shout into the mouthpiece.
That was our nickname for Alejandro, Me Urge. We used to say, "Here comes Me Urge. Watch out."
Because he spoke to impress, we learned from his phone conversations and his name-dropping that he was a member of a very influential family in Mexican politics.
The next time I ran into Alejandro, he had found religion. He had become the minister of an evangelical group and wanted to set up a revival tent in the city temporarily until God answered the congregations prayers and provided the funds to build a permanent structure. He wanted to set up God's shop on a vacant field off San Marcelo, in the Brownsville Country Club.
My friend David Handleman, who lived there, received the notice from the City of Brownsville saying that Pastor Alejandro Petriocioli was appealing the denial of his permit for the tent by the Planning and Zoning Commission and would have a hearing before the city commission. Handleman, a sport writer from the days I worked at the Herald asked me and Tony Gray to come along. Tony had also worked with me at El Valle de Texas and knew Alejandro.
We showed up and sat through the meeting and, predictably, the city commissioners denied Alejandro the permit.
He was livid.
As people streamed out of the commission chambers after the meeting, Alejandro's wife (I won't mention her name, poor dear), saw me and said hello. She was a natural blonde but had colored her hair black, and we hadn't recognized her.
I reached over to give her the perfunctory peck on the cheek when Pastor Alejandro raced back from the stairs and pointed his index finger at me and screamed that if I ever kissed his wife he would do unspeakable things to my mother.
Everyone stood in shocked silence as he stalked away and his wife quietly walked down the stairs after him.
In November, 2009, Alejandro's world came tumbling down from the rarefied heights.
He was charged with  intoxicated manslaughter and with failing to stop and render aid to Reyna Hernandez Garcia, who died as a result of the hit-and-run.
And even when his attorney Noe Robles resisted him taking the stand, Petriocioli insisted and argued that it was the woman who had hit his car. Prosecutors were dumbfounded that the man seemed offended that he was even brought to trial on the woman's dead. The jury took just one day to render its verdict.
Petriocioli was sentenced to six years in the state penitentiary by the jury in the 404th District Court by Judge Elia Cornejo.
No one wishes anyone to be in that position. He can only hope that his religious convictions were sincere and that God may help him and his family as well as the family of the woman he killed.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

They should had given him life in prison, that asshole damaged a lot of people in Mexico, he is an arrogant good for nothing useless human being

monkey said...

sounds like a cool arrow to me 100% and not a minister. Well bubba is wating for him in the pen. welcome to that world and dont drop the soap alex

Joaquin said...

It is unfortunate he came crashing down like this but you know, we do these things to ourselves. Cool story, though. Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Good thing it happened in the us. It would have been in Mexico we would have had a murderer living amongst us. Even then I think he got a real good deal with the sentence he got. I hope no one in Cameron county got paid for this one, I doubt it!
Now where's his wife??

Anonymous said...

This is the type of scum that gives Mexicans a bad name. One rotten apple spoils the rest. Keep corrupted assholes on the other side. We got our hands full with our own governing politicians. Asshole!!!

Anonymous said...

This is the epitome of the obnoxious Mexican who thinks he can cut into any line, order people about and generally do as he pleases. I agree that he should have gotten at least 50 years.

Anonymous said...

His attorney was not NOE GARZA, babosetes!

His attorney was NOE ROBLES! Huge Difference!!!

Anonymous said...

Why did Alex get six years prison time? And the council woman from the Island only 30 days in county jail for exactly the same crime?

That's what I want to know? That's what everybody should be asking...
Both andaban pedos. Both killed a woman with their vehicles. Same set of facts? Was it because one was Mexicano and the other a Gringa?

Anonymous said...

Pobre!! Que duro!

rita