Special to El Rrun-Rrun
Sometimes we have visitors to our home who ask about the small jewelry box/clock made of light wood and its surfaces adorned with intricate, interlocking square designs fashioned with toothpicks.
"Look at the detail," they say. "Can you imagine the patience and time it took to put it together?"
When they hear where it came from, and who made it, there is often a sober silence that follows.
The clock/jewelry box was made by the late Juan Raul Garza, of Brownsville, who on June 19, 2002, was executed by lethal injection in the execution chamber of the federal penitentiary in Terre Haute, Ind., after his conviction in federal court for running a drug trafficking enterprise and for ordering several murders.
Garza, a former migrant student at Josephine Castañeda School, was executed eight days after convicted white supremacist Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh received the same punishment.
His plea for clemency was rejected by then-President G.W. Bush. His was only the second federal execution after a 38 years hiatus.
When Garza was growing up, most people in town knew just about everyone or had heard about most other people. People close to the migrant stream remember Juan and his siblings.
“I remember going to school with Juan and his sister Irene,” said one. “In those days, all the migrant students from throughout the city were bused to the same school. We attended classes from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. to make up for the time we missed when we left in April and returned in October. It was segregated education.”
The school itself was circled with an eight-foot, chain-link fence topped with three strands of barbed wire. Students could only enter and exit through one gate under the watchful eye of Ruben Gallegos Sr., its first principal. A sign with a silhouette of a migrant with a fruit basket on his shoulder adorned the front gate.
Juan was shy as an adolescent and teenager, and was short for his age.
It was until much later that his activities brought him in contact with the law and the federal government. But when he lined up with the other migrant students for his free milk and baloney sandwich, he was just like anyone else – a working-class child who labored with his family in the fields of northern states.
For them, childhood meant getting up at the break of dawn and laboring their children’s bodies like adults until it was too dark to see the plants anymore. Some migrants overcame their humble beginnings and went on to become economists, Federal Reserve directors, professors, teachers, attorneys, mayors of major cities, accountants, etc.
One, Dr. Rene Rosenbaum, an economics professor at Michigan State University, wondered whether Juan might have turned out different if he hadn’t fallen through the cracks. “He was no different than any of us,” he said.
“We came from poor working families struggling to survive working in the fields. Many families could not afford to their children to school because they depended on the income earned by the entire family to carry them through the lean times in winter when they returned to Texas. There was very little choice for many of them.”
With little economic alternative left for many along the border, contraband and its attendant criminal activity has always been a lure.
And so it was for Juan.
Over time, his activities soon caught the attention of federal anti-drug agents.
Using a disaffected relative who was in his organization, they infiltrated his group and soon flipped enough of his co-defendants to pin several murders on him – including four in Mexico that were never proved. A federal jury sentenced him to death.
Garza’s attorneys asked for clemency citing Death Row statistics that at the time showed that of 20 federal inmates, 17, or 85 percent, were minorities (14 black, 3 Hispanics, and three white); that between 1995 and 2000, 80 percent of all federal cases submitted for capital punishment involved minority defendants.
Further, statistics showed that cases tried in the southern states of Texas, Virginia, Oklahoma, Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Georgia made up for 65 percent of federal death penalty prosecutions. Between 1995-2000, 42 percent of all federal death penalty cases came from five of the 94 federal districts.
Their pleas fell on deaf ears and the execution date set. His sister Irene – now deceased – would raffle the clocks/jewelry boxes Juan made from varnished plywood and toothpicks to send him money for his personal expenses. When the time came, she refused to attend his execution.
Witnesses said Garza showed little emotion at the time of his death and asked forgiveness for the pain and grief he had caused. He sighed once, and then it was over.
Sometimes we have visitors to our home who ask about the small jewelry box/clock made of light wood and its surfaces adorned with intricate, interlocking square designs fashioned with toothpicks.
"Look at the detail," they say. "Can you imagine the patience and time it took to put it together?"
When they hear where it came from, and who made it, there is often a sober silence that follows.
The clock/jewelry box was made by the late Juan Raul Garza, of Brownsville, who on June 19, 2002, was executed by lethal injection in the execution chamber of the federal penitentiary in Terre Haute, Ind., after his conviction in federal court for running a drug trafficking enterprise and for ordering several murders.
Garza, a former migrant student at Josephine Castañeda School, was executed eight days after convicted white supremacist Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh received the same punishment.
His plea for clemency was rejected by then-President G.W. Bush. His was only the second federal execution after a 38 years hiatus.
When Garza was growing up, most people in town knew just about everyone or had heard about most other people. People close to the migrant stream remember Juan and his siblings.
“I remember going to school with Juan and his sister Irene,” said one. “In those days, all the migrant students from throughout the city were bused to the same school. We attended classes from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. to make up for the time we missed when we left in April and returned in October. It was segregated education.”
The school itself was circled with an eight-foot, chain-link fence topped with three strands of barbed wire. Students could only enter and exit through one gate under the watchful eye of Ruben Gallegos Sr., its first principal. A sign with a silhouette of a migrant with a fruit basket on his shoulder adorned the front gate.
Juan was shy as an adolescent and teenager, and was short for his age.
It was until much later that his activities brought him in contact with the law and the federal government. But when he lined up with the other migrant students for his free milk and baloney sandwich, he was just like anyone else – a working-class child who labored with his family in the fields of northern states.
For them, childhood meant getting up at the break of dawn and laboring their children’s bodies like adults until it was too dark to see the plants anymore. Some migrants overcame their humble beginnings and went on to become economists, Federal Reserve directors, professors, teachers, attorneys, mayors of major cities, accountants, etc.
One, Dr. Rene Rosenbaum, an economics professor at Michigan State University, wondered whether Juan might have turned out different if he hadn’t fallen through the cracks. “He was no different than any of us,” he said.
“We came from poor working families struggling to survive working in the fields. Many families could not afford to their children to school because they depended on the income earned by the entire family to carry them through the lean times in winter when they returned to Texas. There was very little choice for many of them.”
With little economic alternative left for many along the border, contraband and its attendant criminal activity has always been a lure.
And so it was for Juan.
Over time, his activities soon caught the attention of federal anti-drug agents.
Using a disaffected relative who was in his organization, they infiltrated his group and soon flipped enough of his co-defendants to pin several murders on him – including four in Mexico that were never proved. A federal jury sentenced him to death.
Garza’s attorneys asked for clemency citing Death Row statistics that at the time showed that of 20 federal inmates, 17, or 85 percent, were minorities (14 black, 3 Hispanics, and three white); that between 1995 and 2000, 80 percent of all federal cases submitted for capital punishment involved minority defendants.
Further, statistics showed that cases tried in the southern states of Texas, Virginia, Oklahoma, Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Georgia made up for 65 percent of federal death penalty prosecutions. Between 1995-2000, 42 percent of all federal death penalty cases came from five of the 94 federal districts.
Their pleas fell on deaf ears and the execution date set. His sister Irene – now deceased – would raffle the clocks/jewelry boxes Juan made from varnished plywood and toothpicks to send him money for his personal expenses. When the time came, she refused to attend his execution.
Witnesses said Garza showed little emotion at the time of his death and asked forgiveness for the pain and grief he had caused. He sighed once, and then it was over.
14 comments:
Juan, El Paya Jerry has slacked-off on Denise Garza. She will still beat the shit out of La Frankie on election day. McHale esta bien quemado, bro!
Support for the Democratic Party remains strong, and appears to be immune to all external events (be it the conventions, or Trump’s latest bout of ridiculousness). Donald Trump is deeply unpopular, and nothing wants to move his numbers. And 200,000 dead Americans tweaked him down a whopping net-3 points, and that was seismic, in broader context. Meanwhile, Joe Biden isn’t just more popular than Trump, but he is on an upward trajectory as he continues to rally his party around him.
Now can you see why it would be so hard for Republicans to turn this thing around?
Hey Marisa, you are confusing the voters. You made it well-known you were part of the Erasmo Slate. Now I see your signs where Daniella Lopez Valdez, Denise Garza, and Eddie Garcia are at. What team are you on? It's too late to try to join the good people who are running for BISD. I am pretty sure you are a good person, but you chose the wrong people to associate with.
At every turn I see new red lights blinking is there a board or somebody that dictates to this idiota where to put blinking red lights? Or he just thinks and puts up blinking lights anywhere he wants.
I remember a previous traffic guy that was purchasing traffic lights from himself and had a storage place at his home.
IS THIS HAPPENING AGAIN????
City commissioners and city directors RUNNING WILD but with our tax monies.
STOP THIS NONSENSE NOW!!!!!!
Y ahora El Paya Jerry sigue mamandosela a Juan. Another photo of El Paya with Montoya on McHale's blog. Se suicidara el puto si Juan le diera lea espalda! Vato vale sebo!
Marisa Leal is and has been for over 20 years very close friends with the entire Erasmo Castro family. She and her hubby are very tight with the Castro family. So if anyone things she accidentally made friends with them during this election, you are mistaken. Marisa Leal and Linda Castro son uña y carne. Dime con quién te juntas y te diré quién eres! Marisa Leal está tratando de ponerse cerquita de Daniela y de DENISE para que la gente creía que Marisa Leal es una persona buena. Marisa Leal alaba a Erasmo Castro y a toda su familia. Qué lástima.
I wonder if Gallegos, Sr. ever bought one of Juan's articles? He sure did
get himself stated with the Fed Govt papita way back. Oh, but he was also a
migrant! Wonder what his students think about his quick-way of getting rich?
What ever happened to that case? He needs to know how Juan Garza must have felt locked up for his crimes!
@2:12 Blame now Dale "El tonto" Levsen for all traffic lights problems! This guy should be fired. He's been at traffic for so long, but we still haven't made much improvements or upgrade since the 90's!Harlingen is smaller, but has it all figured out concerning the traffic light synchronization!!!
Don't come to brownsville even to visit you won't get anywhere because of the traffic jams all over THE CITY. Candle light traffic signals will do better. That's how back-wards this city department is -
Oh except for the bike trails most modern wonders ever constructed here. Shelters galore, water foutains every 50ft, bike shopes at every turn and even valet parking for your bike....
LETS VOTER FOR her AGAIN AND AGAIN....
Is that another I've been here 50 years employee like that stupid finance idiota? No wonder "NEED TO GO bring it up-to-date".
Looks like gringos are hiding at every turn at city hall. Do a complete cleanup and fire all of them no more I've been here 50 years emlployees RETIRE NOW OR GET FIRED...
This guy didnt fall thru the qcracks he rose thru the cracks like a weed a nuisance to society
His family still lives here
Somehow their businesses are now legit and some are chotas
Big deal he is an afterthought a bad name associates with our city
That guy didn't fall through the cracks. He made a string of decision that ended up with a needle in his arm. Karma is a bitch!
We have a lot of bad names assoiccates but are unknown outside the city limits. Some have moved out unvoluntarily and some naturally. COMMON, WORLD WIDE so don't complain.
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