CHICAGO — A man accused of offering a $10,000 bounty over Snapchat for the life of a top Border Patrol leader was found not guilty on Thursday in the first criminal trial stemming from the Chicago-area immigration crackdown that started last year.
Jurors deliberated less than 4 hours before returning the favorable verdict for 37-year-old Juan Espinoza Martinez. He faced one count of murder-for-hire and up to 10 years in prison if convicted. Testimony lasted mere hours in the federal trial that was the latest test of the Trump administration's credibility on federal surges that have played out from Minnesota to Maine.
Espinoza Martinez, who wore a suit and tie, listened intently with his arms crossed near his stomach. He hugged his attorneys and shook their hands after court adjourned.
Attorneys for the defense declined comment. Prosecutors did not address reporters waiting in the lobby of the federal court in downtown Chicago. Neither did jurors.
At the heart of the government's case were Snapchat messages sent from Espinoza Martinez to his younger brother and a friend who turned out to be a government informant. One read in part ''10k if u take him down,'' along with a picture of Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol official who has led aggressive crackdowns nationwide, including in the Chicago area.
''Those words do not indicate that this was a joke,'' First Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Yonan told jurors during Thursday's closing arguments. ''Those words have meaning. They are not innocent and harmless words.''
But defense attorneys said the government didn't show any evidence against Espinoza Martinez who sent the messages as ''neighborhood gossip'' after coming home from work and unwinding with beers. He didn't follow up on the exchanges and had only a few dollars in his bank account.
''Sending a message about gossip that you heard in the neighborhood, it's not murder for hire,'' his defense attorney Dena Singer told jurors. ''It's not a federal crime.''