A former U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer pleaded guilty Tuesday to accepting bribes of cash and sexual favors in exchange for his willingness to wave through car loads of unauthorized immigrants at the San Ysidro Port of Entry.

Jose Luis Cota, 50, a 15-year veteran of the border agency, also submitted a resignation letter Tuesday.

His plea in San Diego federal court comes a week after his two co-defendants, Mexican nationals Miriam Juarez Herrera and her husband Gilberto Aguilar Martinez, admitted their roles in the smuggling scheme.

The conspiracy started in November 2015, with Juarez agreeing to recruit immigrant clients to be smuggled in her vehicle and Cota waving them through his lanes at the port of entry while he was on duty, according to the plea agreement. He admitted to allowing Juarez to smuggle at least 10 immigrants.


Aguilar admitted in his guilty plea last week to handling the transportation of the clients once they had crossed the border, reuniting them with family in the U.S. and collecting the smuggling fees.

The clients were charged as much as $15,000 each for illegal entry, Cota’s plea states. That fee sometimes included providing the client with fake identification for the crossing, provided by Juarez, the plea says.

In one instance, Cota admitted receiving $13,000 after allowing two unauthorized immigrants to cross in a vehicle. He also agreed in the plea that the government could prove he deposited more than $44,000 in bribes into his bank accounts while he was under investigation.

Federal agents from the FBI’s Border Corruption Task Force seized more than $17,000 in bribes when they searched Cota’s home in September, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.


Cota has agreed to forfeit all of the bribery money.

The trio were arrested in September — Cota at his workplace and the couple during a traffic stop following a smuggling incident.

The task force began investigating Cota in 2013 after an unauthorized immigrant reported that she and Cota flirted as he was returning her back to Mexico in 2011. They ended up meeting later in Tijuana and their conversation turned to how he could smuggle people across the border, according to a search warrant.

The investigation relied on many methods, including confidential sources, surveillance, border crossing records, GPS tracking and recorded conversations, court documents said.


Investigators said Cota married a Mexican woman who he had processed as she was being sent back to Mexico in 2010. He tried to obtain a visa for her to live in the U.S. legally but it was denied, and she continued to live illegally in the country, the search warrant said.

Cota is set to be sentenced April 7. He faces a possible sentence of at least five years in prison.

“Public corruption, which includes border corruption, is the number one criminal priority for the FBI because of the potential harm that actions, like Officer Cota’s actions, can have on our nation’s security,” San Diego FBI Special Agent in Charge Eric Birnbaum said in a statement.

The FBI and Department of Homeland Security has launched a recent campaign encouraging the public, including frequent border crossers and those who work near the border, to report suspected corruption. Reports can be made via the task force hotline, (877) NO-BRIBE (662-7423).


Related:

Warrants detail alleged smuggling scheme by Customs and Border Protection officer

FBI asks public to be on lookout for border corruption

kristina.davis@sduniontribune.com


Twitter: @kristinadavis