Arizona rancher faces murder charge in killing near U.S. border
NOGALES, Ariz. — A rancher who lives near Arizona’s border with Mexico is being held on a charge of first-degree murder in last week’s fatal shooting of a man tentatively identified as a Mexican citizen. His bail was set at $1 million.
The Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s office in Nogales, Ariz., confirmed Monday that George Alan Kelly, 73, was arrested last week in the killing. Authorities believe the victim was Gabriel Cuen-Butimea, 48, who lived just south of the border in Nogales, Mexico, because of a Mexican voter registration card he carried.
The killing occurred Jan. 30 in the Kino Springs area just outside Nogales, Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Gerardo Castillo said. The address where the killing happened is the same one listed in public records for Kelly’s cattle ranch.
Details about the shooting were scant; it was unknown whether the two men knew each other. Authorities have not given a motive.
As President Biden visits El Paso, thousands of people who fled oppressive countries are marooned in Mexico in the wake of his expansion of a Trump-era policy.
Kelly was being held at the Santa Cruz County Jail and is set to return to court Wednesday.
Local attorney Brenna Larkin, who was appointed by the court to represent Kelly, did not immediately return a call seeking comment on the charge against him.
Democrats saw the lame-duck session between November’s election and the next Congress as their last chance to pass significant legislation before losing their House majority.
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