CHICAGO — A jury was selected Tuesday in the trial of a man accused of offering a $10,000 bounty for the life of a Border Patrol commander behind an immigration crackdown in Chicago last year.
Juan Espinoza Martinez, 37, faces one count of murder-for-hire. Federal prosecutors allege he's a ''ranking member'' of the Latin Kings gang who offered a reward for Gregory Bovino's killing. The Border Patrol official has been the public face of the Trump administration's combative immigration operations including in California, North Carolina and Minnesota.
Espinoza Martinez is the first person to be criminally tried in connection with the crackdown in and around the nation's third-largest city. Bovino and the Trump administration have held up the case up as an example of increasing dangers faced by federal agents.
But a slew of federal lawsuits have fueled skepticism about the Trump administration's narrative on the Chicago operation. Of the roughly 30 criminal cases stemming from Operation Midway Blitz, charges have been dismissed or dropped in about half. In a notable lawsuit that forced Bovino to sit for depositions, a federal judge found he lied under oath including about alleged gang threats.
Days ahead of Espinoza Martinez's trial, prosecutors acknowledged they didn't have evidence proving gang ties, leading U.S. Judge Joan Lefkow to bar questioning on the Latin Kings.
Espinoza Martinez, who has pleaded not guilty, wore a dark suit and tie to court and watched the proceedings intently. He's been in federal custody since October when he was arrested.
Born in Mexico, he's lived in the U.S. for more than 30 years. He does not have legal permission to stay in the United States.
His family and attorneys say he is not in a gang. The father of three worked as a carpenter.