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Former El Pasoan Jimmy Chagra the man accused of a plot to kill judge in San Antonio dies. He was freed on parole in '03, he had been living in Mesa Arizona in a federal protection program. by Michael Webster: Investigative Reporter July 26, 2008 6:00 PM PDT Revised 10:oo PM same date
Jimmy was accused of leading a 1979 conspiracy to assassinate the federal judge in San Antonio Texas set to preside over his drug trial, died Friday. He was 63. Jimmy, who was living in Mesa, Ariz., had been battling cancer since November, said his sister, Patsy Chagra of El Paso. "That's where he was living with his wife," she told the El Paso Times. U.S. District Judge John Wood Jr. was fatally shot in the back on May 29, 1979, outside his San Antonio home. Hit man Charles Harrelson, the father of actor Woody Harrelson, was convicted of murder in the slaying and died in federal prison in Denver in March 2007 while serving two life sentences. Wood was the first federal judge assassinated in the 20th century, and his killing triggered the biggest FBI investigation since the assassination of President Kennedy. Harrelson while in custody confessed to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Many conspiracy theorist believe he may have been the hobo depicted in some photo's taken just before the shooting and after on the grassy knoll and behind the fence near the railroad tracks. Jimmy was acquitted of most charges in Wood's death, but was found guilty of obstructing the investigation and sentenced to 10 years in prison. The government believed at the time Jimmy hired and paid Harrelson to do the hit.
Jimmy also pleaded guilty in
a failed 1978 assassination
attempt on Assistant U.S.
Attorney James Kerr of San
Antonio and was sentenced to
life in prison.
He faced federal indictments on several narcotics conspiracy charges at the time of the judge's assassination. After the slaying of Wood, Presiding Federal District Judge and former El Paso U. S. District Judge and later appointed FBI director William Sessions, agreed to a change of venue and transferred the case to Florida, where he presided. Jimmy was convicted of masterminding an international drug smuggling venture. After that conviction, Jimmy became a fugitive and the subject of a worldwide man hunt, the largest before the Oklahoma bombing according to FBI sources. Jimmy was on the lamb for about six months. He was finally arrested in February 1980 in Las Vegas where authorities said they recovered over $900,000 dollars in cash in the back seat floor board hidden in a baby diaper pail. Jimmy was a will known Las Vegas gambler and was defended by Oscar Goodman the current mayor of Las Vegas.
The Chagras were a prominent
family in El Paso. But
several family members were
involved in high-stakes
gambling in Las Vegas and,
prosecutors alleged, drug
smuggling.
Lee Chagra, the oldest of the brothers, was shot to death in his new law offices on N. Mesa in El Paso Texas on December 24, 1978. He had been one of El Paso's best-known criminal defense lawyers and was suspected by federal agents of being involved in drug trafficking. He was never arrested on drug-related charges. A month later, Jimmy was sentenced to 30 years plus life on drug and other charges. He was freed early and put on parole in 2003. It is rumored that Jimmy obtained the early release and was put into a federal witness protection program for information he gave authorities about people he worked with before prison and during his prison term. Jimmy's third wife, Elizabeth, was found guilty of delivering $250,000 cash to hit man and friend of the families Charles Harrelson to kill Wood. She was sentenced to 30 years and died in prison in 1997 of ovarian cancer. Jimmy was still locked up. After his early release Jimmy remarried and lived the rest of his life as what people close to him said was a pretty normal life. For more details of the Chagra family saga in-depth articles appeared in the El Paso Journal newspaper and the "fifth estate" news magazine featured on the cover was Jimmy and several other family members, titled "Cash Is King" both publications can be found and read at the El Paso public Library heritage section.
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