Deal made after Mexican man died at border gets initial OK
SAN DIEGO — A federal judge tentatively approved an agreement Thursday for the U.S. government to pay $1 million to the children of a Mexican man who died after being detained by immigration authorities and shot several times with a stun gun.
The settlement considered by U.S. Magistrate Judge Louisa Porter is intended to end a nearly 7-year case that prompted widespread complaints that U.S. immigration authorities tolerated agents who use excessive force. Prosecutors declined to file criminal charges.
The five, U.S.-born children of Anastasio Hernandez will split the money if the deal receives final approval, with about a quarter going for attorney fees and costs.
“My husband’s life does not have a price,” Maria Puga, Hernandez’s longtime partner and the mother of their five children, said at a news conference after the hearing. “The decision I had to take was difficult. We had to turn the page.”


