A Texas National Guard member was arrested and charged with human smuggling near the U.S.-Mexico border after he allegedly turned around at a Border Patrol checkpoint, then led state troopers on a high-speed chase that ended when police deployed road spikes, according to authorities and Kinney County court records.
Texas Department of Public Safety troopers arrested Savion Amari Donovan Johnson, 26, Sunday afternoon on Highway 90 in Kinney County after they pursued him at speeds of more than 100 miles per hour for 15 miles, according to arrest affidavits. He stopped mid-chase to drop off a young Hispanic man before speeding past cars on the wrong side of the highway, the affidavits said.
He finally stopped about two miles after the spike strip punctured the tires of the GMC SUV he was driving, the affidavits said.
Johnson was charged with a pair of felonies โ human smuggling and evading arrest in a vehicle โ as well as unlawfully carrying a weapon, a misdemeanor, after police discovered a 9-millimeter pistol in the vehicle.
Johnsonโs arrest was firstย reported Wednesday by NewsNation, which also reported that he had been deployed to Eagle Pass as part of the stateโs multibillion-dollar border initiative,ย Operation Lone Star.
It was not clear Thursday whether Johnson had a lawyer.
DPS investigators contacted Johnsonโs first sergeant after his arrest, according to the affidavits. The Texas Guard did not respond to requests for comment.
“If the allegations are true, the accused is a traitor and criminal,โ said Andrew Mahaleris, spokesperson for Republican Gov.ย Greg Abbott, who serves as the Guardโs commander in chief. โWe have zero tolerance for Texans who violate laws that directly contradict the mission we are seeking to achieve. The accused’s illegal smuggling may subject him to a mandatory minimum prison sentence of at least 10 years. He deserves more.”
A new state law passed by the Legislature last yearย increased the minimum sentenceย from two years to 10 years for people convicted of smuggling immigrants or operating a stash house.
โItโs not the first Guardsman that weโve caught,โ said Kinney County Sheriff Brad Coe, whose deputies also responded to the scene. โEverybody is susceptible to it because of the money involved. Guardsmen, other law enforcement agencies, Border Patrol agents have been involved in smuggling, FBI agents have been caught โฆ itโs an age-old deal.โ
This article was written by ALEJANDRO SERRANO of The Texas Tribune . This article originally appeared at :https://www.texastribune.org/2024/04/04/texas-national-guard-arrest-human-smuggling-pursuit/ย