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Feds and Sheriff Square Off over Murder

Feds and law enforcement square off over Santa Maria woman’s murder by undocumented immigrant.

Feds and Sheriff Square Off over Murder
<b>LOOKING FOR MEANING:</b> As the warring tribes in the immigration debate, including Steven Redgate, who shouted, “Protect our women,” at protesters across the street, seize upon the murder of Marilyn Pharis, the Rape Crisis Center issued a statement: “Rape is rape,” adding, “Immigration had nothing to do with this crime.”

There’s scant agreement about anything surrounding the murder of Marilyn Pharis, a 64-year-old Vandenberg worker and Santa Maria resident, except for the savage way she was done in. About 10 a.m., July 24, two men broke into Pharis’s Dejoy Street home, raped and strangled her, and then beat her with a hammer. When they were done, both of Pharis’s eye sockets had been shattered and her neck broken. She would not die, however, for another eight days.

One of the two men since arrested and charged with rape, torture, and murder ​— ​Victor Martinez ​— ​is an undocumented Mexican immigrant. Santa Maria Police Chief Ralph Martin stated Martinez had been arrested in the past 15 months no fewer than six times. Martinez walked out of County Jail most recently just four days before allegedly killing Pharis, a crime for which he has pleaded not guilty.

Given this incendiary trajectory, Martinez has emerged as Santa Barbara County’s poster child for the intensely anti-immigrant jeremiads called forth by presidential candidate Donald Trump. Fox commentator Bill O’Reilly has seized upon Martinez as Exhibit A for everything that’s wrong with President Barack Obama’s immigration policy. This week, no less a personage than crime show host Nancy Grace exhorted viewers to call Santa Barbara District Attorney Joyce Dudley to express their outrage and displeasure. Grace posted the DA’s phone number on the screen.

Victor Martinez appears in a Santa Maria courtroom with his attorney Lori Pedego, left. Thursday. Martinez is accused of sexually assaulting, strangling and beating Marilyn Pharis last month.

As the politics surrounding America’s immigration debate grow ever more radioactive, so, too, does the intensity of the argument now escalating over who is most to blame for “letting” a certified repeat offender like Martinez out of jail. Sheriff Bill Brown and Santa Maria Police Chief Martin wasted little time in blaming Proposition 47, passed last November by state voters, which prevents prosecutors from charging low-level drug possession crimes as anything but misdemeanors. The bulk of Martinez’s transgressions involved possession of methamphetamine. If not for Prop. 47, Brown insists, Martinez could have been charged with a felony and held in custody for at least 15 days. Retired judge George Eskin, a vocal supporter of Prop. 47, took heated exception, noting that even before Prop. 47, it was customary for Santa Maria prosecutors to file meth possession merely as a misdemeanor.

Marilyn Pharis

More pointedly, Sheriff Brown also questioned why federal authorities with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have steadfastly refused to seek the court warrants needed by area law-enforcement agencies to detain defendants like Martinez past their locally mandated time behind bars. Without such warrants, Brown stated, a raft of federal court rulings has made it painfully clear local authorities could be successfully sued for holding undocumented immigrants at ICE’s behest. Under existing law, Brown noted, ICE could still seek advance notice of immigrant prisoners’ release dates. In the case of Martinez, Brown pointed out, no such request had been made. ICE spokesperson Virginia Tice countered that her agency had, in fact, sought advance notice the previous time Martinez had been arrested and jailed ​— ​in 2014 ​— ​for attempted sexual assault, but that no reply was forthcoming. ICE acknowledged no such request was made this July, explaining, “He had no prior deportations or significant criminal convictions.” In addition, ICE officials have argued that no federal warrant exists that they could see from a federal magistrate to secure the “holds” described by Sheriff Brown.

From there, the picture gets only muddier. One thing, however, is clear. The criminal profile of Martinez appears a far cry from San Francisco’s now infamous Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez, the other accused killer now galvanizing supporters of stricter immigration policies. Unlike Lopez-Sanchez, who’d been deported five times before shooting ​— ​accidentally, he claimed; randomly, police say ​— ​32-year-old Kathryn Steinle by San Francisco’s picturesque Pier 14.

Martinez was never convicted of a felony prior to the Pharis murder and only accused of a felony once before. Where Lopez-Sanchez had a lengthy criminal history and had been deported five times, Martinez never had been. Martinez’s attempted sexual assault last year ​— ​charged by police as a felony ​— ​would ultimately result in misdemeanor battery charges filed by the district attorney. A very drunk Martinez reportedly grabbed a woman around the waist after she’d rebuffed a crude sexual proposition. That was last year.

<b>BLOODY TRAIL:</b> Santa Maria Police Chief Ralph Martin said “a blood trail” existed between Sacramento and Washington, D.C., and Marilyn Pharis’s murder scene.