Saturday
Jan292005
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 10:49PM
Preliminary autopsy results on the victim of a police-involved shooting
here show Francisco T. Barva was shot once in the head, according to
Lea County (N.M.) Sheriff’s Department public information officer Capt.
Rod D. Coffman. The preliminary investigation shows two shots were
fired by Hobbs police officer Reid Gunter but only one shot struck the
victim, Coffman said. He said there was one entry and one exit wound.
Coffman said the results were part of an oral report from the Office of
the Medical Investigator in Albuquerque, and he did not know when the
written report would be finished. The shooting of 23-year-old Barva, of
Hobbs, occurred at 5:36 p.m. Jan. 19 Hobbs time after Gunter
tried to make a traffic stop in the 300 block of West Gypsy, police
said. In addition to the investigation by the sheriff’s department,
Hobbs Police Chief Ken Bohn ordered an investigation by the Internal
Affairs Unit of the Hobbs PD. The Lea County District Attorney’s Office
was also asked to look into the case. Bohn also announced in a news
release Jan. 21 that he would request a meeting with the U.S.
Department of Justice for a possible review and/or investigation of the
case. Coffman said the sheriff’s department wants to talk to other
witnesses. Officials also want to ensure that witnesses actually saw
what happened and aren’t basing their stories on media reports. [more]
- The Hobbs Police Force has a History of Racial Discrimination.
As a result of a class action lawsuit against the Dobbs Police
Department for racial discrimination and police brutality against Black
and Latino residents, the Department has been under court order.[more] On
June 19, 2004 in an opinion highly critical of the Hobbs Police
Department, a federal judge ordered the department to self-monitor its
officers' contacts with racial minorities for another year. [more]
- In October Ross Lee Mackey, a Black man, age 26, was arrested and allegedly beaten by Hobbs police officers.
The arresting officer, Rodney Porter had various claims against him for
police brutality. In fact, before working for the Dobbs police force
Porter worked for the Midland (Texas) Police Department. Officer Porter
was forced to resign from the Midland police force after an internal
investigation uncovered evidence of serious misconduct. [more]
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