Jun 21

On Tuesday evening, police in Lakewood, NJ took illegal alien Cirilo Cholula, 18, into custody and charged him with nine counts of aggravated sexual assault and child endangerment

On June 13, the family of one of the little girls notified police that the Mexican national had molested their daughter.

The children range from 4-to-7-years-old, authorities said.

Incredibly, Ocean County Prosecutor Marlene Lynch Ford told reporters that her office believes the illegal alien has molested even more girls, and is asking parents to contact police if their child has had any contact with Cholula.

Cholula is currently being held in the Ocean County Jail on $1 million bail. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement have also filed a detainer against Cholula.

It should be noted that in Mexico, the crime of child molestation is almost never prosecuted, in fact if a rapist (even a child rapist) proposes marriage to his victim before a judge, all charges are usually dropped.

The reason so many Mexican nationals are committing horrendous crimes against children in this country is due in large measure to the vast cultural differences between the two countries. The fact is that the lives of little girls, and women in general are simply not valued in Mexico.

The most glaring example of the sad aforementioned fact is the age of sexual consent throughout most of Mexico is only 12 years of age!

If this nation does not soon begin to defend our border with Mexico, as well as begin mass deportations of illegal aliens, the United States will become just as inhospitable to children as is Mexico.

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 10

LAS VEGAS — A federal prosecutor says an illegal immigrant with two previous convictions in California for drug trafficking has been sentenced in Nevada to life in federal prison after being found guilty of methamphetamine trafficking and firearms possession.

U.S. Attorney Gregory Brower says 28-year-old Martin Alvarez-Rodriquez was sentenced Tuesday by U.S. District Court Judge Philip M. Pro in Las Vegas.

Alvarez-Rodriguez also uses the name Delfino Sotelo-Ortega.
A jury found him guilty in November of conspiracy, drug possession and firearms charges stemming from a May 2006 undercover drug buy in Las Vegas.

Brower says federal law calls for a sentence of life without parole for defendants with two prior felony drug convictions and a new conviction for selling 50 grams or more of methamphetamine.

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 08

SAN DIEGO — A Mexican man is in federal custody Monday after Border Patrol agents found 73 illegal immigrants inside the semi-truck he was driving.

The man stopped at the Interstate 8 checkpoint in Pine Valley Saturday about 5:45 p.m. and agents decided to inspect his truck after observing the that driver seemed nervous, Border Patrol officials said.

Agents found a plastic container inside the cab which the driver said was methamphetamine. They then opened the doors of the trailer and discovered 50 men and 23 women inside, officials said.

The 50-year-old truck driver was arrested and is in federal custody on suspicion of alien smuggling.

This is the third similar arrest in the last three months. On March 6 agents found 25 people from Mexico inside the cargo area of a tractor-trailer and on April 29, 11 people were found being smuggled inside a modified compartment of a truck.

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 08

SONOITA, Ariz. Authorities say a sports utility vehicle crammed with 22 people rolled over in a remote area near Tucson, Ariz., killing 10 and injuring the others.

Arizona Department of Public Safety Joy Craig said Sunday there was no rear seat in the Ford Excursion and most of the passengers were ejected when the SUV crashed just before midnight Saturday. She says all the victims are believed to be undocumented aliens from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and perhaps Mexico.

She said, “They stack live people, as many as they can, like stacking wood.”

The dozen who were injured were taken to hospitals.

The department is investigating what caused the SUV to roll over.

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 06

Police in Ariz. may stop accepting Mexican ID card

A recent legal review revealed a Mexican identification card issued to more than 231,000 people in the Valley fails to meet Arizona traffic law, leaving some illegal alien motorists subject to arrest during routine stops.

While the Mexican government billed the matricula consular card as a secure document for U.S. transplants, police agencies said the card is invalid – the difference between a civil citation and a criminal charge in some cases.

Phoenix city attorneys reviewed the details of the matricula card after Mexican diplomats pushed for a police department policy that would require officers to accept the ID, which appears like a driver’s license.

Attorneys said officers are unable to read biometric information – such as height, weight and eye color – encoded on the back of the card. According to Arizona state law, a driver who fails to provide evidence of their identity could be charged with a Class 2 misdemeanor.

Tucson police Sgt. Fabian Pacheco said officers have the discretion to make an arrest if they feel they cannot identify a subject based on the matricula card alone.

“It serves very little purpose,” Pacheco said. “I can see the Mexican government’s and Mexican Consulate’s attempt to provide something for their citizens… but you have to be careful not to interpret it as a legal document.”

Carlos Flores Vizcarra, the consul general of Mexico in Phoenix, said officers in the past routinely ticketed and released drivers stopped for minor traffic violations who showed a matricula card in lieu of a driver’s license.

But as public pressure to crack down on illegal aliens has intensified, officers have become less inclined to accept the card, Flores Vizcarra said. As a result, more Mexican drivers stopped for minor traffic infractions are being arrested, booked into Maricopa County jails and deported, he said.

In 2003, an FBI official told a congressional panel that the matricula card is primarily used by illegal aliens. The FBI also concluded applicants could forge birth certificates and other documents to obtain one.

Phoenix police Cmdr. Glen Gardner said even though the Mexican government updated the matricula card in September, patrol officers were never provided with devices to scan or read the encoded material on the back – something that would require U.S. law enforcement agencies access to the Mexican government databases, he said.

“I would venture that they’re frustrated that the card isn’t being accepted in Arizona the way they would like,” said Gardner, who helped design Operations Order 1.4 aliens enforcement policy one year ago, which gave Phoenix officers discretion to contact federal authorities when they encounter people they suspect are in the country illegally.

Gardner said Phoenix officials agreed to accept the matricula card as a form of ID after it was introduced in 2002, though officers have always had the discretion to judge a person’s identification.

The argument frustrated some advocates, who feared that officers could unfairly target undocumented aliens even though they provide a form of government-approved ID.

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 06

In a ruling that could have national implications, Valley Park’s controversial and long-debated ordinance prohibiting city employers from hiring illegal immigrants was unanimously upheld today by a three-judge panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The decision affirms a lower court ruling in favor of Valley Park, where Hispanics represent barely 2 percent of the city’s population.

The issue has sharply divided Valley Park’s 6,500 residents, ever since the ordinance was adopted in 2006, thanks largely to the efforts of Jeffery Whitteaker, then the city’s outspoken mayor.

A St. Louis County judge struck down the original ordinance, which would have imposed $500 fines on landlords and employers who rented homes or offered jobs to illegals. Following that setback, the city revised the law again, this time to repeal the rental prohibition, but keeping the provision in regards to employing them.

In a RFT feature story in 2007 that dealt largely with Whitteaker’s anti-illegal immigrant vision for Valley Park, Whitteaker, who last year lost his bid for reelection, explained his rationale for spearheading passage of the ordinance.

“My main issue is overcrowding,” he said. “You got one guy and his wife that settle down here, have a couple of kids, and before long you have Cousin Puerto Rico and Taco Whoever from moving in.

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 06

Many people are calling for comprehensive national immigration reform, the states appear to be fed up and are taking matters into their own hands. In California, majority rules, and given the current make up of this state and political climate, I have no doubt that this amendment will pass; whether it will hold up in federal court remains another matter.

A CA statewide initiative is now being circulated would create two kinds of birth certificates: one for the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants and one for everyone else.

Currently, children born in the U.S. are considered citizens under the Constitution’s 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868. However, those who oppose birthright citizenship for the children of illegal immigrants say the amendment does not apply.

Section 1 of the amendment, drafted with freed slaves in mind, says: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States.”

Some people feel that treating children differently on the basis of their parents’ immigration status is a violation of the equal-protection clause of the U.S. Constitution by creating different kinds of classes of people, and therfore different kinds of citizenships in this country.

The initiative, which was drafted by anti-illegal immigration activists, was endorsed by several former officials, including former state Sen. Bill Morrow, R-Oceanside, and former U.S. Attorney Peter Nunez.

By taking aim at the children of illegal immigrants, the initiative raises the specter of the controversial Proposition 187, a 1994 measure that would have denied a public education to illegal immigrant children. It was approved by the state’s voters, but declared largely unconstitutional in federal court.

This measure would deny publicly funded health benefits to the children of illegal immigrants, by ending illegal aliens use of all public funded benefits including pre-natal and non-emergency medical care. In addition it terminates all child welfare for illegal aliens.

There is a huge meed for national comprehensive immigration reform.

Is this statewide measure the right thing to do?

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 06

A 48-year-old Mexican national has been indicted by a Tyler federal grand jury for being in the country illegally.

Jesus Manuel Diaz-Orozco, also known as Manuel Ortega, was indicted Wednesday for being a criminal alien found in the United States. According to the indictment, the defendant was arrested by Tyler police officers April 29.

On May 18, Immigration and Custom Enforcement officers went to the Smith County Jail and determined he was in the country illegally after being deported back to Mexico in 2000 following a conviction for aggravated felony for a residential burglary in Conway, Ark.

If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in prison.

posted by USA Citizen

Jun 04

A Posen man accused killing a toddler smothered the child’s face in her own excrement, authorities said.

Bail has been denied for Juan Melendez-Reynoso, 31, of 14331 Division St., who was charged Friday with first-degree murder in the suffocation of 22-month-old Ivette Palacios on May 24, the Cook County state’s attorney’s office said Wednesday.

A judge denied bail because authorities consider Melendez-Reynoso, who is an illegal resident from Mexico, a flight risk, Posen Deputy Police Chief Vickie Paggi said.

Police say Melendez-Reynoso was baby-sitting Ivette with his girlfriend, who for years has been watching the toddler and her two brothers, when the baby soiled herself.

“She started crying,” Paggi said. “He became angry and took the diaper that the baby soiled on and suffocated her.”

Ivette’s family has said they had problems recently with the sitter, who refused to answer the door for the toddler’s family while she was watching the girl at least once.

But none of the children ever had been harmed before, they said.

Ivette’s paternal grandfather, Refugio Palacios, said his son Usvaldo always was suspicious of Melendez-Reynoso and his girlfriend – the baby sitter – and that he argued with Ivette’s mom about it.

“But the mom was the boss,” Palacios said in Spanish.

Paggi said authorities do not expect to charge anyone else, but Refugio Palacios doesn’t think that’s right. He said the baby sitter should be held responsible.

“She should be charged as well – she was there, she’s an accomplice” he said. “Why didn’t she call the police right away?”

Palacios also said the toddler’s mom should be charged because she wasn’t there. Instead, mother Maria Martinez was out dancing, he said.

Palacios’ other grandkids, who are 3 and 4, are scared they’ll be back in the care of Melendez-Reynoso, he said.

“They probably saw everything that happened or he treated them badly,” he said.

Melendez-Reynoso is in custody at the Cook County Jail. He is due in court June 23.

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Sounds like a swell illegal alien family with typical Mexican values. Viva Mexico!

posted by USA Citizen