HOUSTON – An associate of a former U.S. Border Patrol (BP)
agent has been sentenced to for conspiring to accept money in return for
helping to smuggle marijuana and other illegal drugs into the United States.
U.S. Attorney Ryan K. Patrick, Assistant Attorney General
Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Special
Agent in Charge Perrye K. Turner of the FBI’s Houston Field Office and Special
Agent in
U.S. District Judge Gray H. Miller sentenced Daniel
Hernandez, 46, of Roseville, California, to 48 months in prison to be followed
by one year of supervised release and ordered him to forfeit $5,000. Hernandez
pleaded guilty Feb. 5, 2019, to one count of bribery before U.S. Magistrate
Judge Nancy K. Johnson.
According to the plea documents, between 2013 and May 2014,
Hernandez and BP agent Robert John Hall Jr., of La Feria, agreed and took overt
acts to facilitate the trafficking of illegal drugs, including marijuana, into
the United States from Mexico on behalf of a drug trafficking organization
(DTO). In exchange for cash payments, they provided an individual they believed
to be a member of the DTO with CBP sensor locations, the locations of
unpatrolled roads at or near the U.S.-Mexico border, the number of BP agents
working in a certain area, keys to unlock CBP locks located on gates to ranch
fences along the border and CBP radios. In total, Hernandez accepted
approximately $5,000 in cash in return for facilitating shipments of illegal
narcotics into Texas without law enforcement detection.
Hall was previously sentenced to 114 months in prison.
The FBI investigated the case with assistance from CBP -
Office of Professional Responsibility. Assistant U.S. Attorneys John Pearson
and Arthur R. Jones and Trial Attorneys Rebecca Moses and Peter M. Nothstein of
the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section are prosecuting the case.
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