Author Topic: Homeland Security, Border, sabotage of energy, transportation, environment  (Read 1062353 times)

DougMacG

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Border Insecurity, even the NYT can see it...
« Reply #3100 on: August 26, 2024, 10:49:29 AM »
https://archive.is/rCKtn

New Yok Times coverage, more at the link.

How a Migrant Accused of Rape Was Freed and Charged With Rape Again
A failure of cooperation between New York City and federal authorities allowed Daniel Davon-Bonilla, a 24-year-old from Nicaragua, to slip out of the grasp of law enforcement.

For 15 months, Daniel Davon-Bonilla sat in the Rikers Island jail complex in New York City, accused of raping a transgender woman in a migrant shelter.

Then, on June 24, Mr. Davon-Bonilla stood before a judge in a Brooklyn court. The victim in the case had refused to testify, and now prosecutors were offering him a deal: He could plead guilty to a felony assault charge and be released that day.

The judge, Donald Leo, warned Mr. Davon-Bonilla, a 24-year-old from Nicaragua, that he could be deported.

“Do you still wish to proceed with your plea of guilty?” asked Justice Leo, according to a transcript of the hearing.

“Of course,” Mr. Davon-Bonilla replied.

In fact, the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, known as ICE, had informed the city that it intended to deport Mr. Davon-Bonilla when he was first charged with rape, the agency said. But neither the city nor the Brooklyn district attorney notified federal officials when he was released that day in June.

Mr. Davon-Bonilla did not show up for his sentencing on Aug. 9. Two days later, the police say, he raped a homeless woman under the Coney Island boardwalk.

New York is a so-called sanctuary city, one of several across the United States that try to minimize the deportation of migrants. In practice, this means that local law enforcement officials limit their coordination with federal immigration authorities. Those policies infuriated Donald J. Trump when he was president. He painted sanctuary cities as crime-ridden dystopias and threatened to withhold federal money from them.

Now the Coney Island case has renewed attention on those policies and brought a fresh round of criticism — not just from Mr. Trump, who is running for his old office, but also from New York police officials and Mayor Eric Adams. They say the sanctuary system, enshrined in city law, safeguarded the rights of a violent criminal at the expense of a vulnerable woman. The mayor called Mr. Davon-Bonilla “the poster child of what’s wrong with not doing that coordination.”
(More at the link)

[Doug]  The details go on but the point is simple, the man shouldn't be in this country, and if here, he should be behind bars.

"Sanctuary City".  Sanctuary for WHAT?!  Why is it 'legal' to say the laws of the land won't be enforced here?  Maybe we should also say, federal checks won't be sent here.  Not social security, not federal payroll, not one dime until illegal sanctuary status is removed.
« Last Edit: August 26, 2024, 10:52:05 AM by DougMacG »



DougMacG

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Border Insecurity, Human traficking, Fentanyl
« Reply #3103 on: September 09, 2024, 08:44:15 AM »
Democrats (SNL) mocked the lady who put concern for rape at the border in her top concerns.
https://www.newsweek.com/snl-mocks-katie-britt-sotu-1877622
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But Democrats are losing support from the Fentanyl victims' families.  Some like Trump's tough talk on the border.

https://www.nbcnews.com/investigations/fentanyl-deaths-are-causing-grieving-parents-embrace-trump-rcna169921

As I've told Democrats on other issues, Trump (and Republicans) wouldn't have been necessary if Democrats had governed well.

Some do, but how come more Democrats don't care about this??


ccp

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Re: Homeland Security, Border, sabotage of energy, transportation, environment
« Reply #3105 on: September 09, 2024, 09:55:29 AM »
as predicted by MY

me - as well as everyone else.   :wink:

It seems to get worse by the month
Around here in NJ it is never ceases to astonish me at the OBVIOUS invasion of people from different countries.

https://brilliantmaps.com/number-of-unauthorized-illegal-immigrants-by-us-state/

I don't vouch for the above source, but I would think it could even be more in a this state with over 9 million residents.

One can tell if they look Dominican, Haitian, Columbian, Mexican/Guatemalan, though it is harder for me to tell Peruvian from Equadorian.  Northern Africans from Sub-Saharan Africans - for sure if they are dressed in Muslim garb.

Except for when they speak, and I hear accents or other languages Europeans of course are harder to tell if illegal or not, but I am sure they are blended into the US as well.

Hard to tell about Orientals if they are legal or illegal since of course so many are legal.
Though some seem like they are out of place walking around and thus hint they are illegal.

As for Indians many are legal so usually tough to guess, surmise which ones illegal.


Crafty_Dog

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Illegal Jordanians released after posting bail.
« Reply #3106 on: September 11, 2024, 04:07:29 PM »
Apologies if this is a duplicate:

Illegal Jordanian Aliens Who Tried to Breach Quantico Released After Posting Bail (legalinsurrection.com)

DougMacG

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Sorry, Springfield Ohio migrant issues are not fake news
« Reply #3107 on: September 12, 2024, 03:20:17 AM »
20,000 Haitian migrants invade a town of less than 60,000 is the story.

Whose idea was that?
« Last Edit: September 12, 2024, 04:21:07 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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DougMacG

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Homeland inSecurity, Border failure, organized crime
« Reply #3109 on: September 12, 2024, 05:06:29 AM »
Founded in a Venezuelan prison where it ran a zoo, swimming pool, disco, restaurant and bar, the Tren de Aragua has grown into a fearsome transnational criminal force in less than a decade—“MS-13 on steroids,” as one federal official put it, referring to the Central American gang that is entrenched in many U.S. communities. The specter of crime caused by immigrants has become a major theme in the presidential campaign, with former President Donald Trump calling out “migrant crime” repeatedly. Federal crime data show homicides and other crimes have dropped—and that the U.S. is far safer than it used to be. The gang isn’t a household name, but its activities are a source of fascination on social media. “I think the Tren de Aragua in the U.S. could help elect Trump,” said Michael Shifter, a senior fellow at the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington. (Source: wsj.com)

Body-by-Guinness

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Hamas Engineers Building Cartel Border Tunnels
« Reply #3110 on: September 15, 2024, 09:24:17 AM »
Like butter on toast or pretzels and beer, some things make an obvious match. In this instance it’s Hamas tunnel engineers with experience digging in sandy strata and Mexican cartels that need unbridled access to the American market:

https://x.com/kimwexlermajd/status/1834652302767988852?s=61




Crafty_Dog

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WT: Mexican Maffia approves killing TDA
« Reply #3114 on: September 19, 2024, 05:27:38 AM »


Mexican Mafia approves killings of gang rivals flowing into U.S.

Tren de Aragua lured by Biden’s generous ‘parole’

By Stephen Dinan THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Mexican Mafia, worried about the growing power and recklessness of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, has “greenlighted” killings of TdA members, said a homeland security expert who tracks cartel behavior.

Jarrod Sadulski said TdA has sent thousands of members across the border into the U.S. and has been encroaching on what the Mexican Mafia considers its territory. La Eme, as the mafia is known, has responded with the kill order.

“They’ve been greenlighted to murder them,” Mr. Sadulski said. His information comes from a former senior Sinaloa Cartel operative with ties to the Mexican Mafia, a coalition of Hispanic gangs that is primarily involved in drugs in the Southwest.

Tren de Aragua has become the face of crime amid the Biden border surge. Gang members have been implicated in some of the most high-profile cases over the past year. That includes a migrant mob attack on New York City police, the killing of university student Laken Riley in Georgia and the rape of a girl at a government-run migrant shelter in Massachusetts.

The gang has quickly expanded its reach into more mundane criminal enterprises, such as drug distribution and prostitution.

East Colfax Community Collective held a rally this month in Aurora, Colorado, to address chronic problems in the apartment buildings occupied by people displaced from their home countries in Central and South America.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The arrival of a new gang is always touchy on the streets as the old players try to figure out a new balance. They must decide whether to ignore the newcomer, try to co-opt it, take it over or go to war.

That La Eme chose war is not surprising, said John Fabbricatore, a gang expert and retired senior executive at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“You’re going to see a lot of brushback from gangs and cartels,” he said. “If this does spill over to the confrontations between these gangs, unfortunately, the normal civilian always gets caught in the middle.”

Former President Donald Trump threw a spotlight on TdA during the presidential debate this month when he pointed to a housing complex in Aurora, Colorado, where a viral video showed heavily armed young men walking through the hallways. Residents said they were TdA members.

Local authorities have disputed parts of that account.

Meanwhile, city officials in El Paso, Texas, moved to shut down the Gateway Hotel, a residential hotel, after TdA infiltrated the building. City police said criminal activity exploded once TdA took hold.

An officer said police had responded to hundreds of complaints at the Gateway over the past year. When officers were dispatched, they found drug paraphernalia and trash-strewn hallways with garbage piled high enough to block emergency exits, prostitution, and people with tattoos popular among TdA members.

Mr. Fabbricatore said TdA’s arrival reminds him of the cocaine gang wars of the 1980s, which were fueled by the arrival of tens of thousands of Cubans from the Mariel boat lift.

He noted similarities to TdA, except the U.S. government is making it even easier for the Venezuelans to gain a foothold thanks to the generous support to new arrivals under President Biden’s “parole” programs.

One program offers an iffy legal status to Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans if they secure a sponsor in the U.S. and fly directly into airports, skipping the southern border. Another, open to a broader range of nationalities, welcomes unauthorized migrants with the same iffy legal status as long as they preschedule their arrivals at border crossings.

None of them has a legal visa to enter, yet most are granted parole and given some transition assistance. Work permits are issued to those who want them.

“We are literally setting things up for TdA. We are funding NGO housing for them, we are providing three months of rent. We are providing food benefits. They don’t have to struggle. They can go right to crime,” said Mr. Fabbricatore, who is running as a Republican for a seat in Congress in Colorado.

Sniffing out gang members from among the broader Venezuelan migration is tricky because the U.S. doesn’t have access to data from Venezuela, an adversarial nation. Mr. Sadulski said TdA members often postpone their gang tattoos until after they are in the U.S., making it tough for Customs and Border Protection agents and officers to spot them.

TdA is strategic about where it goes. “TdA will study the state laws, study law enforcement. They find the weakness in the area of operation where they’re at,” Mr. Sadulski said.

The gang is the first from Venezuela to make it on the international scene. Its expansion largely tracks the broader exodus of Venezuelans escaping the calamity of the Maduro regime: in Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru and Chile.

More recently, it has gained footholds in the U.S.

Mr. Sadulski said TdA has indications of alignment with the Cartel of the Suns, a drug smuggling operation with ties to the Venezuelan government. Indeed, after the Venezuelan government deployed thousands of security forces to retake the TdA-controlled Tocoron prison last year, experts said it seemed staged and pointed out that the gang’s top leaders escaped.

TdA leader Hector Guerrero Flores, also known as Nino Guerrero, went on the run.

In July, the Treasury Department declared TdA a “deadly criminal threat” and slapped financial sanctions on the group’s assets. The State Department announced a $5 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Mr. Guerrero, $4 million for Yohan Jose Romero and $3 million for Giovanny San Vicente.

“Tren de Aragua leverages its transnational networks to traffic people, especially migrant women and girls, across borders for sex trafficking and debt bondage. When victims seek to escape this exploitation, Tren de Aragua members often kill them and publicize their deaths as a threat to others,” the Treasury Department said.