Immigrant killed by Border Patrol reached for gun, had criminal record

The Mexican immigrant shot and killed by Border Patrol agents in Texas on Tuesday reacted to agents learning about his criminal record by grabbing for an agent’s gun, a source with knowledge of the investigation told The Post.

The unidentified Mexican national reached for the weapon after agents ran a background check and discovered he had criminal charges, the city’s Mexican consulate confirmed to The Post.

He was then shot by officers and transported to a local hospital but died from his injuries.

The FBI has stepped in as the lead investigative agency into the deadly shooting, due to the nature and location of the incident.

Sources also said they believe there was an assault on a Border Patrol agent during the incident.

Neither the Ysleta Border Patrol Station in El Paso nor the Mexican Consulate would comment on what criminal charges the man who was shot had initially faced or confirm his identity.

Tuesday’s shooting happened around 12:45 p.m. at the Ysleta Border Patrol Station in El Paso, Texas.
REUTERS

“There’s been an uptick in assaults against Border Patrol agents,” US Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas), whose district included immigration hot zones Del Rio and El Paso, told The Post.

“I know a lot of people see the [immigrants] that are coming over and immediately giving themselves up.

“There’s a lot of that, but there’s also a lot of people that are trying to get away [from Customs and Border Protection].”

Assaults on agents are up this year compared to the two previous years, according to Border Patrol statistics.

The immigrant was shot after he reached for an agent's gun while he was being processed.
The immigrant was shot after he reached for an agent’s gun while he was being processed, a source said.
Go Nakamura for New York Post

In recent weeks, El Paso has been overwhelmed with a surge of immigrants and asylum-seekers arriving in the Texas border town. The city was seeing more than 1,500 immigrants arriving in the city a day, taxing the city’s shelter system and other resources.

Since the surge started in August, the city has bused thousands of immigrants to New York City.

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