Texas governor backtracks on ‘illegal immigrants’
remarks after shooting
Greg Abbott rows back on ‘inhumane’ remarks amid
barrage of criticism after shooting that killed five, including a child
Edwin Rios
@edwin_d_rios
Tue 2 May
2023 09.36 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/02/greg-abbot-texas-mass-shooting-illegal-immigrants
After a
barrage of public criticism from immigration advocates, Latino state lawmakers
and Congress members, Texas’s Republican governor Greg Abbott has backtracked
from controversial remarks he made referring to the victims of a recent mass
murder as “illegal immigrants”.
“Any loss
of life is a tragedy, and our hearts go out to the families who have lost a
loved one,” Renae Eze, a spokesperson for Abbott, told ABC News in a statement
about those slain in a shooting in Cleveland, Texas, on Friday night. “Federal
officials provided the state of Texas information on the criminal and the victims,
including that they were in the country illegally. We’ve since learned that at
least one of the victims may have been in the United States legally.”
Eze’s
statement also apologized “if the information was incorrect and detracted from
the important goal of finding and arresting” the accused killer in the case,
who remained at large as of Tuesday.
Francisco
Oropeza allegedly killed five neighbors – including a young boy and two women
shielding children – in Cleveland after members of the family asked him to move
farther away if he was going to fire a rifle in his yard. Oropeza, 38, had
previously been the subject of similar complaints by neighbors.
Not long
after Wilson Garcia and others asked Oropeza, their neighbor, to shoot
elsewhere because Garcia’s infant was crying, Oropeza approached Garcia’s home
with an AR-15-style rifle and carried out the 17th mass killing – one with four
or more victims – in the US so far this year.
In a tweet
announcing a $50,000 reward for capturing Oropeza, Abbott said that the reward
was for “a top 10 fugitive who is in the country illegally and killed five
illegal immigrants”.
His
rhetoric drew ire as it hewed closely with his track record of smearing
immigrants in the wake of mass shootings.
Advocates
and lawmakers decried Abbott’s language as dehumanizing and part of an attempt
to deflect attention from the role Republican lawmakers played in shaping
Texas’s lax gun laws that Democrats say have created an unsafe environment for
residents.
State
senator Roland Gutierrez – a Democratic lawmaker whose district includes
Uvalde, where 19 elementary school students and two of their teachers were shot
to death by an intruder last year – went on Twitter to call Abbott’s statement
a “new low”. Veronica Escobar, who represents El Paso in Congress, called Abbott’s
rhetoric a “disgusting lack of compassion and humanity”.
Authorities
said the victims – Sonia Argentina Guzman, 25; Diana Velázquez Alvarado, 21;
Obdulia Molina Rivera, 31; Jose Jonathan Casarez, 18; and Daniel Enrique Laso
Guzman, a 9-year-old boy – were all originally from Honduras.
Oropeza,
who remained at large as federal and local enforcement frantically searched for
him, was a Mexican national who had reportedly been previously deported from
the US.
As of
Monday, law enforcement authorities had not confirmed the immigration status of
the five people killed. Political comments about those facts prompted the local
sheriff, Greg Capers of San Jacinto, to say they were irrelevant to his
deputies.
“My heart
is with this … boy” and his family, Capers told reporters. “He was in my county,
five people died in my county, and that is where my heart is – in my county,
protecting my people to the best of our ability.”
In response
to Abbott’s initial tweet, Carlos Eduardo Espina, who is described as a
community organizer and immigrant rights activist, shared an image of a photo
identification card from one of the victims, Diana Velázquez Alvarado,
indicating she was a permanent US resident and therefore in the country
legally.
Jefrinson
Josué Rivera, who was Velázquez Alvarado’s partner for the last six years,
confirmed that to ABC News, calling Abbott’s descriptions “inhumane”.
He
described Velázquez Alvarado as a “happy, humble and caring” person who “gave
everything for her children” and “never had issues with anyone”.
“Why do
they discriminate against immigrants so much? In what way are we affecting him?
What harm have we caused him?” Josué Rivera told ABC News. “He’s making his
living and we’re here to make our own? We don’t care if he wants to make his
money through politics – we’re here to make an honorable living.”

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