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Brownsville ISD aims to boost customer service, student attendance

A view of a Brownsville ISD school bus Wednesday, May 25, 2022, after school dismissal. (Miguel Roberts/The Brownsville Herald)
Jesus H. Chavez

The agenda for the first Brownsville ISD board of trustees meeting of the 2024-2025 academic year on Tuesday included discussion of two key initiatives, one dealing with customer service, the other with student attendance.

The overreaching goal of both is to improve student academic performance, which is BISD’s main goal, Superintendent Jesus H. Chavez said.

BISD’s human resources department, headed by Chief Human Resources Officer Linda Gallegos, developed the customer service initiative. Chief Operations Officer Nellie Cantu headed up development of the attendance initative, dubbed Every Day Matters.

The attendance initiative aims to get the district’s attendance rate back to its pre-pandemic level of 96% or better, Chavez said.

The customer service effort is guided by Chavez’s personal philosophy for public education, one of the main points of which is to treat everyone with dignity and respect.

“We all want to be treated well. And so one of the things that I want to be sure that we improve upon is the customer service that we provide everybody,” Chavez said.

“We expect a little over 36,000 students to show up here next week, but in addition to that we have over 6,000 employees, so make sure we’re working really well with each other, treating everybody with fairness, dignity and respect, and then of course we work with parents, so we have the proportionate number of parents based on the 36,000 students that we have, and in addition to that, we work with our citizenry here in the district as well as with businesses, so I want to make sure that we the district provide great customer service,” he said.

This is the last week of summer vacation for BISD students. Teachers already are getting their classrooms ready. Meet the teacher nights are scheduled this week across the city ahead of the first day of classes on Monday.

The district conducted a two-day leadership academy last week in preparation for the school year. One of the sessions was around customer service, Chavez said.

“Our first point of contact usually is the office, school offices, the central office, department offices and so we began by training those office folks, our executive assistants our secretaries and of course from there … our central office leadership, our campus leadership, principals and assistant principals,” he said.

The gym is full of families moving from booth to booth to pick up school supplies Thursday, Aug. 4, 2022, for the Brownsville Independent School District’s Back to School Community Bash at Hanna Early College High School. (Denise Cathey/The Brownsville Herald)

The training stressed treating customers with respect and dignity, being courteous and respectful, in addition to phone and email etiquette.

Concerning attendance, Chavez said when schools opened back up after the COVID-19 pandemic, attendance was very, very low.

“We’ve been open three years since COVID. It improved from the 70s to the 80s to this past year it was around 92%. We’re getting there but obviously we want to get to that 96% that we had. The first reason is the main reason. We want students in attendance so they can learn,” Chavez said.

He said in some cases of chronic absences, some students at some schools have been absent 20, 30 and as many as 60 days in a semester.

“Just imagine six weeks out of the year you’re out. Well, you can’t be learning unless you’re in class, and so that’s the main emphasis we have for our students and for our parents,” Chavez said.

“Now, it’s got an economic, business aspect. And here, if we improve by 1%, the district will receive $2 million dollars from the state in additional aid. We’re talking dollars there,” he said.

Chavez added that the district wants to incentivize good attendance, “and really not only for perfect attendance, but we want also for students to improve, right. If they were out 16 days last year, can you reduce that by half and only be out eight days this year, that kind of thing.” he said.

“We want to see improvement from all of our students in their attendance. … I’m hoping we surpass the 1% because it has great benefits. We’re going to emphasize it with students. Principals have already received training around promoting good attendance. We’re going to be working with our parental involvement program to promote it as well. Every time I speak to a group, I emphasize attendance as important, ‘so please emphasize that to your employees.’ It’s going to be a citywide effort to continue to improve student attendance,” Chavez said.

Texas Back-to-School Sales Tax Holiday starts Friday

Backpacks are displayed near the front entrance to JCPenney on Thursday, Aug. 10, 2017, at La Plaza Mall in McAllen. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

With the start of school for many Valley students just around the corner, the Back-to-School Sales Tax Holiday gets under way from Friday through midnight Sunday.

Texans have the opportunity to save on tax-free purchases of most clothing, footwear and various back-to-school essentials priced under $100 during the tax free weekend.

Qualifying items can be purchased in person at a Texas store or an online seller doing business in the state.

The exemption applies to each eligible item sold for less than $100, and there is no limit to the number of qualifying items you can buy.

Clothing that would qualify for exemption from tax include underclothes, shoes, sweaters, baby diapers, jeans and uniforms.

Some clothing items that do not qualify include umbrellas, hair clips, jewelry, purses, or wallets.

School supplies that are exempt from taxes consist of binders, composition books, index cards, lunch boxes, pencils, and writing tablets under $100.

Texans can also buy qualifying items online, by telephone, mail or custom order. The sale of the item must take place during the specific time of tax free weekend.

For an online purchase, if a person enters their credit card information in a website to buy qualifying items anytime during the specific period but the items do not ship or arrive until after the tax-free week, the purchase will still qualify for exemption.

However, if the charge to the credit card is declined by the payment processor and the purchaser does not resubmit payment until after the weekend, the purchase is taxable.

“The back-to-school season is a great chance for Texas families to score deals and save money, while also supporting our local businesses,” State Senator Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa said in a press release. “I urge families to make the most of the sales tax holiday this weekend to stretch their hard-earned dollars further. You can shop either in stores or online with Texas-based sellers.”

A trip to Jerusalem: Edinburg eatery offers tastes from the Middle East

Jerusalem in Edinburg makes a delicious lamb shawarma sandwich. (Travis M. Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)
Turkish coffee at Jerusalem. (Travis M. Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)

EDINBURG — I step into a place of fascination and intrigue and the awakening of memories cherished for many lifetimes.

“Is that chai? Turkish chai?” I ask when I see that familiar curved class on a plate in a photograph on a wall.

“Yes,” says a woman who greets me as I enter Jerusalem Mediterranean Bistro and Grocery at 1601 W. Trenton Road.

I immediately order a Turkish coffee for a remembrance of drinking Turkish coffee at the bazaar in Istanbul in October 1985.

The gentleman in an apron who I believe to be the proprietor has heard my exclamations about the chai, so he brings me chai in a paper cup first and then my Turkish coffee.

I’m disappointed the chai did not come in the curved glass like it did while I was on the deck of a boat traveling up the Bosporus Strait toward the Black Sea in October 1985. It was a chilly day and the hot chai tasted good and felt good in my hands and in my mouth. Something about the warmth of the chai and taste of the chai imprinted a permanent memory which includes the choppy sea and the cold and the drizzle and the passing of a boat with the hammer and sickle of the Soviet Union.

Back at the Jerusalem in Edinburg, the proprietor, who identifies himself as Palestinian, explains it’s a matter of expediency to use the disposable cups instead of the curved glass.

I ask him if he serves couscous, a dish I first enjoyed while in Panama while having dinner with an American man named Dave and his French wife Marie Francois. They had spent time in Tunisia where Madame Marie Francois had learned how to make this historically North African dish. I recalled it had been a big pot of grain with meat and vegetables. Later I find many descriptions, but they all mention semolina, which is coarsely milled durum wheat.

After my dinner with David and Marie Francois in Panama, I had mentioned the dish to my coworkers at the Southern Command Newspaper. One of them, Boston-raised John whose family originated from the Middle East, remarked that it was very good. The very next time I had it was at Texas State University in San Marcos where I had the pleasure and privilege of dating a Palestinian woman who was born and raised in Honduras.

She had also made a fine couscous so I had thought it was a Middle Eastern dish, and so at the Jerusalem in Edinburg I naturally assume couscous will be on the menu.

Jerusalem in Edinburg makes a delicious lamb shawarma sandwich. (Travis M. Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)

But I don’t see it. Certainly, there must be some mistake.

“No, couscous is Moroccan style,” says the proprietor.

But people everywhere eat it. I’m somewhat confused.

OK, diversity is what I seek in all things, and I don’t have time to be confused, I’m here to enjoy.

I face a huge photo on the wall of the city of Jerusalem and another of the Turkish coffee. Along the walls are tall hookahs and boxes of flavored tobacco and again I remember the bazaar in Istanbul where people smoked tobacco in tall hookahs and played backgammon and drank coffee and shopped for gold and also for lambskin jackets. The memory is vivid to me even 40 years later and I am there again.

I sip the chai and the coffee and look over the menu. I am the only patron here at the moment, but I know there will soon be a lunch crowd because the menu has a fine array of items.

Some of the menu items are familiar to so many. Hummus is a favorite among many and so is falafel. I do not, however, recognize baba chanouj or musakhan rolls or labneh in the list of appetizers. The kibbeh at first rings a bell, as my friend from the Ukraine who had lived in Saudi Arabia and Lebanon for a time had once made rolled grape leaves for me with some filling inside, and I remembered her calling it kibbet.

However, the stuffed kibbeh does not fit that description. Another listing in the appetizers does have rolled grape leaves with seasoned rice and mince meat but is simply called grape leaves.

I don’t order any of the appetizers but I do ask for a lamb shawarma sandwich and something else: baklava. A walnut baklava, to be exact.

Now that is something, indeed.

Turkish coffee at the Jerusalem might reveal all sorts of delicious wonders for your eyes only. (Travis M. Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)

I recall very well the first time I ever had baklava. In order to tell that story, allow me to tell a cherished story about my trip to Europe in 1985. It started out in Panama where I had served as a U.S. Army photojournalist since 1982. It was a glorious and painful time, but these days I focus more on the glorious for spending three and a half years on the Panama Canal.

I had the occasion to meet and befriend many people from many places. I met Rolly Bain from Trinidad, Loren Upton who was driving around the world, and Charles Handley, Curator of Mammals for the Smithsonian Institution who was studying bats.

This story, however, begins with an individual from Turkey who was serving as a chaplain’s assistant in the U.S. Army in Panama. He went by Turk, and that is how I shall refer to him. Turk was going home to Izmir in Turkey to visit his family and invited me to come along.

I spent a few days in Izmir, exploring the streets and the seawall, and I soon became restless. I took a 19-hour boat ride from Izmir overnight through the Greek Islands to Istanbul.

During the boat ride I made the acquaintance of a young Turk named Uluc who had just finished his service in the Turkish Army.

He invited me to have breakfast at his home. I don’t remember all the contents of that breakfast, only it had a cherry sauce and then something I had never seen.

“Turkish baklava!” said his mother as I delighted in this new dessert. I fell in love with this new delicacy that day and have always sought it out.

After that breakfast, Uluc took me on a tour of Istanbul, to the fine and ancient mosques, to the bazaar, and to Topkapi Palace.

Upon my return to Izmir, there was some sort of census day in which everyone had to remain inside while we were called by the census takers. By that time, I was in a hotel as Turk and I had had our differences, and I was more than happy to have my own hotel room.

Lamb Shawarma plate with pita bread, hummus and rice at Jerusalem Mediterranean Bistro and Grocery in Edinburg. (Travis M. Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)

To keep myself company, I picked up an entire box of baklava, took it to my room, and consumed every single piece. Of course, I felt sick afterwards, but it was a delightful sickness, a guiltless sick for which I had no regrets.

So here I was at the Jerusalem on Wednesday in Edinburg, and I order the walnut baklava. The man who I believed to be the proprietor brought me only one piece, so of course I ordered three more to go.

I quickly devoured the shawarma and slowly sipped the Turkish coffee. I remembered again the bazaar in Istanbul. I had spent the entire day walking and was quite tired. One cup of Turkish coffee and it gave me such a zip I was ready to explore Istanbul all over again.

I sat now in the Jerusalem in Edinburg and slowly sipped my Turkish coffee. It became quite thick at the bottom and I recalled something I had not thought of in many years.

I did have dinner at Turk’s home in Izmir once. I don’t remember the dinner itself, only that I had eaten until I knew his mother was very happy. And then we had…Turkish coffee.

When I had finished, she took the cup and dipped some of the grounds onto a small plate and read my fortune.

The rest is confidential.

Jerusalem is open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday and 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday. It is closed Sunday.

McAllen ISD educator wins award for devotion to district’s at-risk students

Erick Morin, an English teacher at McAllen ISD’s Instruction and Guidance Center, won the Region One Secondary teacher of the year award through his passion and dedication for helping the district’s at-risk students. (Courtesy photo)
Erick Morin, an English teacher at McAllen ISD’s Instruction and Guidance Center, won the Region One Secondary teacher of the year award through his passion and dedication for helping the district’s at-risk students. (Courtesy photo)

Erick Morin, an English teacher at McAllen ISD’s Instruction and Guidance Center, won the Region One Secondary teacher of the year award through his passion and dedication for helping the district’s at-risk students.

Region One Education Service Center held the annual Teacher of the Year ceremony on Aug. 1 in Edinburg where the center celebrates the district’s teacher of the year.

Morin is the 19th McAllen ISD teacher to earn a Region One teacher of the year award in the past 34 years.

Describing himself as a big jokester, Morin said his wife at first did not believe him when he texted her the news the night of the ceremony.

“When they said McAllen, I was like, ‘Wow,’” Morin said. “I couldn’t believe it. I felt shocked at first, but I just embraced it. I get to represent, really, like myself, my district and the campus, right. Because especially where I’m coming from, where I’m teaching … it showcases what I’m doing with the kids and validates what I’ve been doing on campus.”

An educator at McAllen ISD for a decade, he teaches middle school English along with being a grant writer, campus team leader, robotics club instructor and podcast host.

The Instruction and Guidance Center is a disciplinary alternative education program at the district and is where Morin has spent 8 of his 10 years

Initially starting his career at the center, Morin was moved to a middle school and upon getting the chance to come back to the center he took it.

“I work with at-risk students and I feel like that’s where my strengths are,” Morin said. “I like working with those kids and being able to make a connection.”

With students attending the center for only about 20 to 40 days before they go back to their home campus, Morin said he tries his best to make connections with the students in a short amount of time.

“A lot of it has to do with just being able to connect with them,” he said. “Not to say my childhood was perfect but I had struggles and everything just like most kids. When we get these certain kids and I hear their issues … it just hits home in a way and I realize that they need a different approach.”

Incorporating a non-traditional style of teaching, Morin said the center’s system includes building student’s emotional intelligence and hands-on activities such as gardening.

“Students need somebody there to help them and guide them, and especially the kids that we get sometimes,” he said. “Family life is different or they don’t have a stable adult … and they need someone else they can look forward to listening to them. I think that’s what gravitates me to that school, and that’s why I went back.”

Asked how working at the center for close to a decade had impacted Morin, he replied, “It’s making me a better person. I have kids of my own, so being able to do what I do there kind of reflects on how I parent my own kids … as I’m learning to be a better father and better teacher to these kids, to me, I feel like there’s a growth inside.”

Harlingen High School band gets ready for the fall season

Ava Valadez, 16, a junior, performs her color guard routine while practicing at Harlingen High School Summer Band Camp on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2024. (Travis Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)
Ava Valadez, 16, a junior, performs her color guard routine while practicing at Harlingen High School Summer Band Camp on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2024. (Travis Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)

HARLINGEN — Ava Gutierrez stood atop the platform and waved her colorful flag in the bright of the morning sun.

The music of the show “Time Travel” on the parking lot of Harlingen High School seemed to direct her movement with the color guard of the band. However, her spirit for the school year and for the Cardinal band empowered her intensity and her passion as she performed.

That passion seemed to empower every student Tuesday morning as the flags rippled, as the saxophones and trumpets charged into the air, and as the drumline thundered.

“It’s going amazing,” said Ava, 16, a junior, giving special accolades to the color guard.

“They’re destroying it,” she continued, meaning they were killing it, or rather taking firm control of their parts and mastering those parts and for performing in unison with the rest of the band.

The sections moved together with admirable precision, perfect diagonals and straight lines and forward steps and backward steps while playing.

“Let me hear that one more time,” said Maria Coronado, band director.

“Great work,” she continued. “Give yourselves a hand.”

The kids clapped for a moment and then …

“OK, drum majors, here we go,” Coronado continued.

And then the high-pitched “ding-ding-ding” of the metronome, and then the rather fluid and dreamy notes of the vibraphones and the melophones and then the brass making a sudden appearance to signal the drama and the majesty of it all.

Michael Whalen, 15, a sophomore, plays his saxophone at the Harlingen High School Summer Band Camp on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2024. (Travis Whitehead | Valley Morning Star)

Coronado spoke excitedly about the show, a fine amalgam of styles and pieces woven together in a lovely tapestry of sounds which would take listeners on a magical journey through time.

“We titled it ‘Time Traveler’ because the music that we are preparing for our season jumps around,” she said. “It starts with 1988 – 89 ‘Fast Car’, and then it jumps over to 2014 with a real fun band piece entitled ‘Ride’ by Sam Hazo, and then it jumps back to 1880, a piece called the ‘Manfred Symphony’ by Tchaikovsky and we just …”

Whew! That’s quite a road trip just talking about it!

For clarity, “Fast Car” is a hit song performed by Tracy Chapman in 1988. Pyotr Tchaikovsky was a Russian composer.

“It just jumps around with each of those three songs with one another, and it actually works really really well,” Coronado said. “I think what’s making it one of the more unique ones in quite awhile is the way that our music arranger put together the music, the sound, the production of the sound, of the tones, it’s pretty outstanding and we’re really excited.”

Michael Whalen, 15, stood tall on the parking lot in the morning heat and pressed his lips tightly around the mouthpiece of his saxophone. On Coronado’s command, he sent his saxophone’s song high and clear and powerful into the whole of the musical tapestry of the entire band.

“We are enjoying it,” said Michael, a sophomore. “There’s a lot of energy and we’re coming together as a group.”

DHR Health Brownsville sees 25th surgery treating ACL injuries performed

Dr. Daniel Romanelli is the first orthopedic surgeon in the Rio Grande Valley to conduct the Bridge-Enhanced ACL Repair, or BEAR implant, at DHR Health’s sister hospital in Brownsville. (Courtesy photo)
Dr. Daniel Romanelli is the first orthopedic surgeon in the Rio Grande Valley to conduct the Bridge-Enhanced ACL Repair, or BEAR implant, at DHR Health’s sister hospital in Brownsville. (Courtesy photo)

ACL injuries are among the most common sports injuries with somewhere between 100,000 and 200,000 ruptures every year in the U.S. alone, according to Corewell Health.

They’re often treated with the Bridge-Enhanced ACL Repair, or BEAR implant, an orthopedic procedure that restores the ligament rather than replace it. And after only joining DHR Health since this January, Dr. Daniel Romanelli, orthopedic surgeon at DHR Health Brownsville, has just completed his 25th BEAR implant.

Romanelli was the first orthopedic surgeon in the Rio Grande Valley to conduct the procedure at DHR Health’s sister hospital in Brownsville, according to the hospital system.

For Romanelli, being able to conduct a procedure that restores the natural function of the knee to Valley residents has been a “great joy” that he hopes to continue.

“There are a number of advantages to restoring a ligament instead of replacing it as well as providing a healing environment to an ACL reconstruction with the natural function of the knee,” Romanelli said in a news release. “The BEAR implant is an exciting medical technology that has been clinically proven to enable a patient’s torn ACL to heal and to restore the natural function of the knee as well as enhancing the healing environment for the ACL graft.”

The way it works is that a physician will remove the remaining part of the torn ACL and reconstruct the ligament with another tendon from either the patient’s leg — also known as an autograft — or a tendon from a deceased donor, or allograft.

Romanelli is currently using quadriceps autografts for the procedure, a new gold standard for ACL grafts, according to the release.

The implant then surrounds the ACL graft to protect the injury from the synovial fluid to create the “ideal healing environment.”

The implant acts as an ortho biological barrier as well as a bridge that helps the ends of the torn ACL heal simultaneously.

“Dr. Romanelli injects a small amount of the patient’s own blood into the implant, which is applied in and around the ACL in a minimally invasive procedure,” stated the release. “The combination of the BEAR implant and the patient’s blood enables the body to heal the ACL.”

Romanelli currently treats patients at his Brownsville and La Joya clinics — located at 4770 N. Expressway, Suite 305A in Brownsville and 1000 E. Expressway 83, Suite 5B in La Joya, respectively — and will soon be seeing patients in DHR Health’s Edinburg campus in the fall.

For more information about the BEAR implant procedure, call Dr. Romanelli’s office at (956) 362-5870.

Former La Villa prison guard gets home confinement for smuggling phones

The privately owned East Hidalgo Detention Center in La Villa is seen in this undated file photo. (Monitor Photo)
The privately owned East Hidalgo Detention Center in La Villa is seen in this undated file photo. (Monitor Photo)

Two of the three suspects charged for their involvement in smuggling contraband to a federal inmate at the East Hidalgo Detention Center in La Villa were sentenced to time served.

Jose Martin Espinoza, Jr., a former prison guard, and Abel Angel Solis were charged with graft and conflict of interest in federal court.

Espinoza, who pleaded guilty in late April to his role in the scheme, was sentenced on Monday to two days of time served and two years of supervised release with the first nine months in home confinement.

Solis was sentenced on July 31 and received 785 days of time served and two years of supervised release.

Each of the two men were charged with one count for the smuggling event at the federal detention facility in La Villa on May 17, 2022.

“On May 17, 2022, Espinoza attempted to enter the detention center for his normally scheduled duty,” a news release stated. “At that time, other prison officials conducted a search and found a cellphone wrapped in cellophane inside his work cap.”

Espinoza and Solis were found to have Cash App transactions totalling $1,500 for the delivery of three phones from Espinoza to Pharr resident Sixto Gonzalez Jr.

On May 15, 2023, Gonzalez pleaded guilty to hostage taking for luring a 19-year-old man to Mexico in order to force a ransom to be paid for his safe return, a news release stated.

That man was beaten.

Gonzalez has not been sentenced and court records don’t reflect a sentencing date. He is scheduled for sentencing on Aug. 13 in the hostage taking case and faces up to life in prison.

Man accused in Port of Brownsville job scam sought by police

Diego Amir Paz
Diego Amir Paz
UPDATE (12 p.m. Wednesday):

Brownsville police said Paz has been arrested after turning himself Wednesday morning.

ORIGINAL STORY:

The Brownsville Police Department is asking for the public’s help in locating a man who is accused of scamming 33 people out of $6,600.

The suspect is 28-year-old Diego Amir Paz, who has an active arrest warrant for theft, a state jail felony, police said in a Facebook post.

“Mr. Paz has been falsely claiming to work for a business inside the Port of Brownsville and promising people jobs for a fee of $200. So far, 33 victims that have been scammed have come forward,” police said.

Anyone with information about his whereabouts is asked to call Brownsville Crime Stoppers at 546-8477. Tips can also be submitted through the smartphone application P3 Tips.

Man arrested at Falfurrias checkpoint for trying to smuggle people in cattle trailer

A U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agent keeps watch at a checkpoint station, on Feb. 22, 2013, in Falfurrias. (Eric Gay/AP Photo)

United States Border Patrol agents working at the Falfurrias checkpoint apprehended a man attempting to smuggle nine people further into the country by hiding them inside a cattle trailer he was hauling, according to a criminal complaint.

Fernando Torres-Miranda was charged with knowingly attempting to transport people illegally present in the U.S.

At about 4:45 a.m. on Sunday, agents encountered Torres driving a white 2011 Ford F-250 pickup pulling a cattle trailer entering the immigration inspection lane.

During questioning, Torres said he was the only occupant in the vehicle and hauling cattle to George West, according to the complaint.

Due to agents’ experience in human smuggling, they asked Torres if he would consent to an X-ray of his truck and trailer to which Torres agreed and headed to the secondary inspection area.

Once there, the X-ray revealed several anomalies inside the cattle trailer according to the Z-portal operator, the complaint said.

“Upon physical investigation of the anomalies, nine subjects were discovered concealed inside the cattle trailer,” the complaint said.

All nine were discovered to be illegally present in the country.

While Torres declined to make a statement, two of the people being smuggled provided statements and were able to positively identify Torres as the driver of the vehicle.

Torres is scheduled to appear before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jason B. Libby in Corpus Christi federal court for his preliminary examination and detention hearing Wednesday morning.

CBP finds 75 pounds of cocaine in gas tank at Hidalgo Port of Entry

Hidalgo Port of Entry (Courtesy: CBP)
Hidalgo Port of Entry (Courtesy: CBP)

A Mexican citizen was arrested at the Hidalgo Port of Entry on Monday after United States Customs and Border Protection officers discovered he had 75 pounds of cocaine concealed within his fuel tank, according to a criminal complaint.

Luis Angel Martinez Almanza, born in 1996, was charged with knowingly and intentionally illegally importing slightly over 75 pounds of cocaine into the U.S. on Monday.

Martinez was attempting to enter the U.S. in a Ford Ranger with Mexican plates when he was interviewed by a CBP officer who utilized a handheld mirror to inspect the bottom of the Ranger.

The officer didn’t notice any signs of tampering but when he tapped the fuel tank with the mirror, he noticed that the tapping sounded solid and not hollow, the complaint said.

Due to his experience, he determined that this noise meant something could be concealed inside the tank.

Another officer was informed of the sound and he asked Martinez for the purpose of his visit to which he responded by saying that he was heading to a Walmart in Pharr to purchase groceries for his taqueria in Mexico, according to the complaint.

One CBP officer was instructed to utilize a fiber optic scope in order to inspect the gas tank and noticed what appeared to be a vacuum sealed package inside.

Once Martinez was secured in a cell, officers began a closer inspection of the Ranger and extracted 30 packages from the gas tank.

“The contents of the packages contained a white powdery substance that field tested positive for the properties of cocaine,” the complaint said.

In an interview with authorities, Martinez said he was aware there were narcotics in the vehicle and suspected it was in the fuel tank due to the gauge not working and added that he was supposed to be paid $200.

Martinez was supposed to cross the truck into the U.S. and wait for a call for instructions on where to drop it off.

He also admitted to having done two similar trips in the past where he was paid $2000 and $700.

Martinez is scheduled to appear before U.S. Magistrate Judge Juan F. Alanis in McAllen federal court for a preliminary examination and detention hearing Friday afternoon.