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Border Patrol official praised agent’s ‘excellent service’ hours after he shot Chicago woman, new evidence shows

By Andy Rose, Bill Kirkos, Alaa Elassar, Danya Gainor, CNN

(CNN) — Newly released government evidence from last year’s Border Patrol shooting of a Chicago woman revealed body camera footage from the shooting, previously unseen text messages from the agent who shot her and praise from the then-top Border Patrol official just hours after the incident. The documents released by federal prosecutors were obtained by CNN affiliate WLS.

A judge ordered the release last week, clearing the way for key evidence in the case to be made public, including body camera footage, text messages and emails. Charges have been dropped against the woman, but she and her attorney argue the footage would have public value in the wake of a pair of deadly shootings involving federal agents in Minneapolis earlier this year.

Marimar Martinez, a 30-year-old American citizen, was shot multiple times by a Customs and Border Protection agent after her vehicle and a CBP vehicle collided amidst the immigration crackdown in Chicago – named Operation Midway Blitz – on October 4.

Federal prosecutors, alleging she rammed the agent’s car, charged her with assaulting, resisting or impeding federal officers. Martinez acknowledged she had been following Border Patrol vehicles before she was shot but denied any wrongdoing.

The government’s case dramatically fell apart a month later as Judge Georgia Alexakis dismissed the case at prosecutors’ request, saying the government’s handling of it had caused her “to question the narrative being put forward.”

What the documents reveal

The newly released evidence obtained by WLS includes body camera footage from one of the agents in the Border Patrol vehicle that collided with Martinez’s car. It shows agents in the federal government’s vehicle with weapons drawn moments before the shooting.

“Camera’s on,” an agent can be heard saying, with much of the body-cam video seen through the trigger guard of a long firearm the agent is holding.

“Do something, b*tch,” one agent is heard saying, over the sound of repeated honking from outside the vehicle.

“It’s time to get aggressive and get the f**k out, because they’re trying to box us in,” an agent says, seconds before the driver can be seen turning the wheel sharply to the left. The body-cam jostles, the vehicle stops and agents are heard saying, “we’ve been struck,” apparently reporting the collision to dispatch.

The driver exits the vehicle, and gunshots are heard roughly two seconds later. The agent wearing the body camera gets out of the vehicle seconds later, though he does not appear to face the direction of Martinez’s car.

Before the footage was released, Martinez’s attorney, Christopher Parente, lamented that while CBP agent Charles Exum had a body camera, he was not wearing it at the time of the shooting.

Among the evidence is an email from top Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino, who emailed Exum hours after the shooting, offering to delay his retirement beyond the agency’s customary 57-year-old retirement age “in light of your excellent service in Chicago.”

“You have much yet left to do!!” he added. Bovino has since left his post as head of the federal immigration operation in Minnesota after President Donald Trump announced he was dispatching White House border czar Tom Homan in his stead last month.

Exum exchanged messages in other chats saying, “Awe, I cry,” and “That hurt my feeling,” in response to a text that Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker “is saying bad things about you this morning.”

In one picture, Exum receives messages of support, calling him a “legend among agents.”

“Beers on me when I see you at training,” one message said.

New evidence ‘useful’ in wake of deadly DHS shootings, attorney says

Martinez’s request to put all of the government’s evidence into the public eye comes as the Trump administration faces intense criticism for rushing out narratives in the fatal shootings of US citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis that appeared to be contradicted by video.

The administration’s framing of the deadly shootings in Minneapolis was part of the motivation for the request to modify the protective order in the case and release the evidence, said Parente.

“Ms. Martinez believes certain information disclosed in her case, and currently subject to the Protective Order, would be useful for both the public and elected officials to know regarding how DHS responds in cases where their agents use deadly force against US citizens,” wrote Parente, who also said he plans to announce a civil lawsuit arising from the shooting.

DHS initially said Martinez deliberately rammed her car into an unmarked CBP vehicle, prompting Exum to exit his vehicle and open fire defensively. Martinez alleges the CBP vehicle sideswiped her car, and Exum opened fire even though she deliberately turned to avoid him once he got out of his vehicle. She was hit in the arm and leg as she drove away.

Martinez “was armed with a semi-automatic weapon,” DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin posted October 4 on X. But Parente told CNN the weapon was a licensed handgun Martinez kept in her purse and did not touch during the incident; an account never disputed by government attorneys in court.

FBI Director Kash Patel retweeted a video claiming to show the encounter between Martinez and the CBP, but it actually showed a different Chicago-area incident that had no connection to Martinez.

The DHS focus on Martinez being an armed protester was mirrored controversially in the fatal shooting of Pretti, with administration officials repeatedly suggesting his possession of a gun while protesting made him inherently dangerous to officers. Videos of the altercation did not show Pretti ever brandishing or reaching for the weapon.

DHS maintains Martinez ‘attacked law enforcement’ as attorney decries reputational harm

In the Martinez case, the judge skeptically questioned several aspects of the government’s use of force, noting the agent had bragged about the shooting in a text message.

“I fired 5 rounds, and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys,” Exum wrote to colleagues.

In court, Exum tried to explain the text messages, “I take pride in my shooting skills,” he said.

The agent also defended his use of force against Martinez, saying his life was at risk.

“I did what I had to do,” he told the court.

“That means illegal actions have legal consequences.”

Judge Alexakis was infuriated by the government’s decision to release the agent’s damaged car from impound days after the shooting, allowing Exum to drive it home to Maine – more than 1,000 miles from the scene – before defense attorneys could examine it.

Martinez’s attorney said allowing him to release the evidence gathered in the case was necessary to “combat the continuing harm to her reputation.”

The judge declined to order the release of Flock camera footage – outdoor cameras that can read license plates and identify other details about vehicles as they drive by.

That footage, Parente said, is less paramount than an admission from the US Attorney’s Office and DHS saying Martinez is not a domestic terrorist and that they made a mistake.

DHS has never retracted its public accusations against Martinez, referring questions about the decision to drop the case to the Justice Department. Although McLaughlin acknowledged the video publicized by Patel was incorrect, she again in January described Martinez and co-defendant Anthony Ian Santos Ruiz, who was driving a different vehicle, as “domestic terrorists,” CBS News reported.

Martinez will attend President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address on February 24 as a guest of Illinois Democratic Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García, Parente said in a court filing last week.

McLaughlin told CNN in a statement it is “shameful” García plans to bring Martinez to the State of the Union, again accusing her of being “a known doxxer who attacked law enforcement,” and calling Martinez and Ruiz “rioters.”

“It’s unfortunate to see someone who has sworn an oath to uphold the Constitution demonize federal law enforcement and prioritize politics over public safety with his guest decision,” said McLaughlin.

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CNN’s Omar Jimenez, Kara Devlin, Elizabeth Wolfe, Nicquel Terry Ellis, Dalia Faheid and Matthew Rehbein contributed to this report.

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