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Posts Tagged ‘Illegals’

What do you think of new details in operation gun walker Armed illegals stalked Border Patrol?

November 29th, 2011 3 comments

Five illegal immigrants armed with at least two AK-47 semi-automatic assault rifles were hunting for U.S. Border Patrol agents near a desert watering hole known as Mesquite Seep just north of the Arizona-Mexico border when a firefight erupted and one U.S. agent was killed, records show.

A now-sealed federal grand jury indictmentin the death of Border Patrol agent Brian A. Terrysays the Mexican nationals were “patrolling” the rugged desert area of Peck Canyon at about 11:15 p.m. on Dec. 14 with the intent to “intentionally and forcibly assault” Border Patrol agents.

At least two of the Mexicans carried their assault rifles “at the ready position,” one of several details about the attack showing that Mexican smugglers are becoming more aggressive on the U.S. side of the border.

According to the indictment, the Mexicans were “patrolling the area in single-file formation” a dozen miles northwest of the border town of Nogales and — in the darkness of the Arizona night — opened fire on four Border Patrol agents after the agents identified themselves in Spanish as police officers.

Two AK-47 assault rifles found at the scene came from the failed Fast and Furious operation.

Using thermal binoculars, one of the agents determined that at least two of the Mexicans were carrying rifles, but according to an affidavit in the case by FBI agent Scott Hunter, when the Mexicans did not drop their weapons as ordered, two agents used their shotguns to fire “less than lethal” beanbags at them.

At least one of the Mexicans opened fire and, according to the affidavit, Terry, a 40-year-old former U.S. Marine, was shot in the back. A Border Patrol shooting-incident report said that Terry called out, “I’m hit,” and then fell to the ground, a bullet having pierced his aorta. “I can’t feel my legs,” Terry told one of the agents who cradled him. “I think I’m paralyzed.”

Bleeding profusely, he died at the scene.

After the initial shots, two agents returned fire, hitting Manuel Osorio-Arellanes, 33, in the abdomen and leg. The others fled. The FBI affidavit said Osorio-Arellanes admitted during an interview that all five of the Mexicans were armed.

Peck Canyon is a notorious drug-smuggling corridor.

Osorio-Arellanes initially was charged with illegal entry, but that case was dismissed when the indictment was handed up. It named Osorio-Arellanes on a charge of second-degree murder, but did not identify him as the likely shooter, saying only that Osorio-Arellanes and others whose names were blacked out “did unlawfully kill with malice aforethought United States Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry while Agent Terry was engaged in … his official duties.”

The indictment also noted that Osorio-Arellanes had been convicted in Phoenix in 2006 of felony aggravated assault, had been detained twice in 2010 as an illegal immigrant, and had been returned to Mexico repeatedly.

Bill Brooks, U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s acting southwest border field branch chief, referred inquiries to the FBI, which is conducting the investigation. The FBI declined to comment.

The case against Osorio-Arellanes and others involved in the shooting has since been sealed, meaning that neither the public nor the media has access to any evidence, filings, rulings or arguments.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/nov/22/armed-illegals-stalked-border-patrol/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS

This is the reason we need military on the border.You know the sad fact is that any one of the thousands of illegals that came here today could be a killer just like that and our govt doesn’t protect us in any way from them.

Is , U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez demanding Illegal-Alien Amnesty for these illegals?

February 16th, 2010 8 comments

An undocumented immigrant from Guatemala was sentenced Monday to 35 years in prison for the murder of a man nearly two years ago.

Adam Andrew Leyva, 25, pleaded no contest to second-degree murder and robbery with a deadly weapon in connection with the May 1, 2007 death of Roberto Ramirez, 58, of Ocala.

Ramirez was found dead on wooded Gainesville Regional Airport property. An autopsy showed Ramirez died of a blow to the back of his head, likely with a metal pole. Leyva, who also went by the name Diego Juan Mateo, was found a few days later in northern Georgia.

Prosecutors said robbery was a possible motive because Leyva apparently knew that Ramirez had $250 in his wallet that he intended to use to rent a truck.

Leyva, who was in the United States illegally at the time of Ramirez’s murder, was sentenced to 35 years in prison and is expected to be deported to Guatemala as soon as he is released from state prison.http://www.ocala.com/article/20090406/ARTICLES/904069953/1001/news01?Title=Undocumented-alien-gets-35-years-for-killing-Ocala-man
A man riding a motorcycle was killed Sunday afternoon in a wreck in downtown Burlington.

The wreck happened at the intersection of South Church Street and Davis streets.

William Bryan Barber, 43, died at the scene of the wreck, police said. An unidentified juvenile passenger riding on the motorcycle was hurt and was taken by helicopter to Duke University Medical Center. The juvenile passenger was reported to be in stable condition.

Police said the accident happened about 3 p.m.

Police accounts say the wreck happened when Lidia Monica Lopez, 41, was traveling east on South Church Street and the 1995 Dodge pickup truck she was driving collided with a 1990 Dodge driven by Pamela Coble and with the motorcycle driven by Barber.

Lopez was charged with misdemeanor death by motor vehicle, driving with no operator’s license and running a red light. She was released from Alamance Regional Medical Center after being treated there.

Coble, 60, was driven to Alamance Regional Medical Center and treated at the hospital.

Assistant Chief Greg Seel said he had limited information on the wreck. He wasn’t sure where Barber lived.

Bond for Lopez was set at $10,000, according to records at the county jail. Jail records also indicate she can’t be released if she posts bond because she is in the country illegally.http://www.ocala.com/article/20090406/ARTICLES/904069953/1001/news01?Title=Undocumented-alien-gets-35-years-for-killing-Ocala-man
U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez Supporters of granting amnesty to illegal aliens saw their fortunes dissolve in 2007 as Congress failed to pass it, but an Illinois congressman tried reviving the issue during a local appearance Saturday as part of his national campaign for legalization.

Speaking at the Iglesia International chapel on Hunting Park Avenue, U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., urged congregants to support granting amnesty to all illegal aliens.

“We’ll go from church to church, city to city,” he said. “I know one thing: I’ll keep working on it until we get it right.”

Mr. Gutierrez already had visited 13 other cities across the nation seeking to foment support before arriving in the city.
Hater Police WHAT DO YOU THINK urged congregants to support granting amnesty to all illegal aliens NOT JUST SOME BUT ALL

What’s the difference between one criminal and another? None according to Gutierrez as long as the criminal is Hispanic! He would include the 87,500 illegal alien child molesters in his "reward criminals" scheme!
NOTE: Amnesty would be if thy returned to their country. He wants rewards for criminals! This is like;
Giving more ammo to a murderer
OR
Giving a pharmacist license to a drug dealer
OR
giving the victim of a child molester to the child molester!

Report, Deport, Repeat!

These illegals here for better life what went wrong Marshals arrest illegal suspected in Hargill slaying?

February 7th, 2010 5 comments

EDINBURG — Federal marshals arrested a man Wednesday accused of kidnapping and beating his ex-girlfriend to death with a stone.

Jose Juan Sanchez, 33, had evaded authorities since the body of Laura Isabel Reyes was found in a field near Hargill on July 13.

The U.S. Marshals Service located Sanchez outside a relative’s house in Cicero, Ill., near Chicago, where he was arrested without incident, Hidalgo County Sheriff Lupe Treviño said.

The search for Sanchez led authorities to Houston, Dallas, across Indiana and finally to Greater Chicago, where a cross-check of his relatives’ phone records led authorities to the fugitive.

Sheriff’s deputies are on their way to interrogate him in Illinois, where he awaits a hearing on his extradition to the Rio Grande Valley. Authorities plan to arraign him on one count of capital murder once he is brought back here.

Deputies believe Sanchez kidnapped Reyes, 35, from the McAllen baseball park on North Ware Road on July 12. She managed to dial 9-1-1 before Sanchez and an alleged accomplice, Ernesto Castillo Rodriguez, tied her up and loaded her in the back of her Dodge Caravan.

On the recording of that phone call, Reyes can be heard pleading for her life and asking Sanchez not to kill her, the sheriff said. A male voice on the recording tells someone to stay down. The phone cuts out about four minutes into the call.

McAllen police have said attempts to contact the 9-1-1 caller after the phone conversation ended were unsuccessful.

Investigators said Castillo and Sanchez took the woman to a field near the intersection of M. Davila Road and Farm-to-Market Road 490 near Hargill, where she was beaten to death with a large stone.

Castillo, a Mexican national and illegal immigrant living in Mission, confessed to helping with the kidnapping and slaying, court records state. He told investigators he acted as a lookout for Sanchez and restrained the woman.
http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/news/slaying-100246-arrest-suspected.html

More Americans are killed by illegal aliens than were in Viet Nam, Iraq and Afghanistan.

WHAT is with these illegals???? ANOTHER death by another illegal!!!?

January 11th, 2010 24 comments

Sept. 22, 2006, 7:41PM
Slain officer missed suspect’s gun in search

By MELANIE MARKLEY, JENNIFER LEAHY and ROSANNA RUIZ
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle

The Houston police officer who was gunned down by a suspect Thursday after a routine traffic stop apparently missed the man’s weapon in a pat-down search, Capt. Dale Brown told reporters today.

Juan Leonardo Quintero, a 32-year-old illegal immigrant, has been charged with capital murder in the shooting death of Houston Police Officer Rodney Johnson.

Brown said Quintero apparently was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol at the time of his arrest.

Brown said that Quintero had a criminal history from 1995 to 1999, convicted for DWI, failure to stop and give information and indecency with a child. His driver’s license was suspended and he was deported to Mexico by immigration officials in 1999, Brown said.

Quintero has been working for a landscaping company in the Deer Park area and was driving a company Ford double-cab pickup when Johnson stopped him for speeding, Brown said.

Quintero, who apparently in the pickup with a co-worker and the two daughters of his common-law wife, was traveling 50 miles per hour in a 30-mile-per-hour zone, he said. He had picked up the two girls from school and was taking them home, he said.

Johnson decided to arrest Quintero because he did not have any identification, Brown said. Although Johnson patted him down before handcuffing him, he apparently missed the 9-mm handgun he concealed under his waistband, he said.

Although Quintero was handcuffed behind his back, Brown said he apparently manipulated his handcuffed hands under his legs to the front of his body so he could fire his weapon. His hands were again behind his back when officers arrived, he said.

The suspect also fired at a wrecker driver who had been called to the scene by Johnson at the time of the arrest. The wrecker driver had spotted Johnson in apparent distress in the front seat of the car and was approaching the police car when the shot was fired. He retreated until officers arrived.

His wife, Theresa Quintero, said he has expressed concern about immigration officials and whether he should return to Mexico.

Theresa Quintero said in an interview today at their home near Hobby Airport that the couple has been married since 1997.

HPD’s Brown said records reflect no arrests for the suspect since 1999, but he said officers were still researching records.

Chief Harold Hurtt defended his policy against enforcing immigration laws, saying the situation points to the need for stronger enforcement at the border since Quintero had been deported.

“If the government would fulfill their responsibility of protecting the border, we probably would not be standing here today,” Hurtt said.

A Harris County prosecutor said in court this morning that, while seated in the back seat, the suspect pulled a 9 mm handgun from his waistband and shot Johnson in the face. The officer was able to push an emergency response button, alerting dispatch of a problem.

When other police arrived at the scene, Quintero remained in the back seat with the gun in his hand, the prosecutor said. Police found bullet casings inside the car.

Quintero kept his head down while waiting to be called before the judge. During a brief hearing, he answered "Yes” when asked whether he understood the charge against him.

Quintero has been charged with capital murder in the 248th District Court, said HPD spokesman John Cannon.

Cannon said the suspect gave "a full confession" to the shooting.

A source familiar with the scene said Johnson was shot four times through the plastic shield separating the front and rear seats. Johnson managed to push his emergency button before collapsing. The 12-year veteran of the department was taken to Ben Taub General Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The suspect reportedly struggled as officers tried to move him to a different vehicle.

"They finally got him in the other car, but he was scratching and fighting and acting crazy, like he could win in a fight like that," said Clara Rodriguez, who lives nearby.

Johnson, 40, was the first HPD officer killed in more than two years.

"He was very personable," Hurtt said. "We will miss one of our true soldiers in Rodney Johnson."

At least a dozen law enforcement vehicles cordoned off a large area at Randolph and Braniff where the light bar atop Johnson’s patrol car continued to flash long after the shooting. Temporary spotlights illuminated the scene into the evening as evidence technicians scoured the area. The owner of a nearby machine shop was called to the scene because bullets apparently pierced the wall of his building and investigators needed to get inside.

Before the suspect was taken to HPD headquarters, he was stripped of his clothes, which were placed in evidence bags, and dressed in a white jumpsuit. He was then taken downtown in the second of three patrol cars that left the scene shortly after 7 p.m.

‘It just breaks my heart’
As news of Johnson’s death spread, police officers gathered in small groups but said little. One HPD sergeant walked to a patrol car, took out his cell phone and made a quick phone call, taking a long drink of cold water from a bottle.

"Something real bad has happened by the airport," he said.

Rodriguez said that she and her neighbors in the small subdivision between Telephone Road and Almeda Genoa knew Johnson well and that he was well-liked.

"He would always wave and smile when he saw me," Rodriguez said. "He was a real nice guy. All he was trying to do was enforce the rules."

Rodriguez said Johnson stopped her once for speeding when the speed limit was lowered on Telephone Road. She said he politely asked her to slow down and did not ticket her.

"He was just so very nice," she said. "He was not ever mean. It just breaks my heart. I feel so very bad for his wife. He got up and went to work this morning, and this is what happened. This is what happened to one of the people who protects us, who truly took care of us."

Johnson graduated from high school in Oakland, Calif., then enlisted in the Army, serving as an MP until he was honorably discharged in 1990. He served as a corrections officer for the Texas Department of Corrections (now the Texas Department of Criminal Justice) and as a Houston police jailer before attending the police academy and graduating in 1994.

Johnson was assigned to the southeast division that year and to the southeast gang task force in 1996. While on the task force he received two Lifesaving Awards from the department and one Medal of Valor from the state. He was married to Houston police officer Joslyn Johnson. They have three daughters and two sons between the ages of 14 and 19..

i feel for u lady.
i am not american, but i worked very hard to come here legally. spent 9 months to do it. and i pay my taxes,. contribute to social security. and because of my visa i will leave the US.
so im a good guy.
but the illegals? they dont pay taxes, they commit crime, they give us legals a hard time at immigration, while they just waltz in thru the border. and they use up social resources.
and the have the audacity to march for rights? they have no rights! they’re illegals.
anyway, im proud to be in america and contributing to the economy. and unlike the illegals, im leaving.

so, gimme 10 points? please? pleeeease?