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Human rights bodies find border agents “actions in death on the Californian border” -Mexico “.

Since Maria Puga saw the cell phone film material from her husband almost 15 years ago, who circles in fear of the soil of federal border officials, she knew that he was tortured before his death, she said on Thursday.

This week, the Inter-American Commission for Human Rights agreed and found that the law enforcement officers of the Federal Officials Anastasio Hernández had tortured Rojas by beating him with batons, several kneeling and kneeling at him, while he was tied up with handcuffs at the San Ysidro port of the entry.

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The groundbreaking decision was the first time that the Commission, an international institution that is part of the organization of the American states and examined massacre, extrajudicial murders and other rights of rights in the western hemisphere, has issued such results in a case with regard to death by the US law enforcement.

The Commission also found that federal officials carried out an incomplete and incomplete examination of the death of Hernández Rojas, applied excessive violence while he was held back, discriminated against, and refused his family justice, all against international protocols that the USA approved.

“The actions of the police violence against Mr. Hernández in San Ysidro input harbor were deliberately committed with the aim of intimidating and punishing the victim, and … to an intensive suffering for the victim, and (the Commission) concludes that they wrote the officers released on Wednesday on Wednesday.

Maria Puga, the widow of Anastasio Hernandez Rojas, will take part in a hearing with the Inter -American Commission for Human Rights on November 4, 2022 in San Diego. (Ana Ramirez / UT -File)

“That is the truth,” Puga told the Union Tribune on Thursday. In Spanish, she said that the death of her husband and the five children of the couple destroyed her, but to hear that his screams had triggered a mixture of courage and anger that has made her for more than a decade to look for justice. She hopes that the United States will follow the commission's recommendations to reopen the investigation and to account for the responsible civil servants.

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