![]() Ricardo Ramirez, who is president of IBC Bank Zapata, said the trooper made him stand behind his truck and questioned his daughter about how they paid for the $52,000 vehicle. But he said he was most angered by a September 2011 incident in which his son and 13-year-old granddaughter were pulled over on their way to the dentist.Īccording to an affidavit provided to The Associated Press by his father, Ricardo Ramirez said a trooper pulled him over for driving in a turn-only lane. Ramirez said he has been personally pulled over “eight to 10 times” in the past few years for violations he described as mundane. He has been active with the Texas Civil Rights Project for the past decade, and his high public profile includes being a key fundraiser for the Tejano Monument that was unveiled last year on the lawn of the state Capitol. Records show Ramirez has given more than $50,000 to state Republican and Democratic candidates since 2000, including Zaffirini. Ramirez and McCraw are scheduled to talk next week. “I would love to be able to talk to him and review those tapes to see if we have acted inappropriately,” McCraw said during his testimony. McCraw said he wanted to see dashcam video. Zaffirini told McCraw a “very prominent citizen” had raised other misconduct allegations, meaning Ramirez. She brought up dashcam video in July of trooper Kelly Helleson giving body cavity searches to two women, ages 38 and 24, who say in a lawsuit that they were pulled over for flicking cigarette butts out the window and were searched with the same glove. Judith Zaffirini asked DPS Director Steve McCraw about trooper conduct during a public hearing. The allegations made by Ramirez, 73, surfaced Thursday when Democratic state Sen. “These guys feel empowered to do what they want to do,” said Ramirez, who said he came forward as a member of the board of the Texas Civil Rights Project. Earlier this week, the department fired a female trooper near Dallas whose videotaped body cavity search of two women went viral on the Internet. IBC Bank Zapata CEO Renato Ramirez said his own experiences are emblematic of larger problems at the Texas Department of Public Safety. A prominent Texas political donor and IBC Bank executive said Friday that state troopers harassed his family during routine traffic stops, and he has secured a meeting with the state’s top law enforcement executive over those and other allegations of trooper misconduct statewide.
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