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From the border to Baltimore: ICE agents arrest violent fugitives illegally in US

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ICE-ERO Baltimore Fugitive Operations agents arrested and removed 19-year-old Guatemalan national Henry Argueta-Tobar, who was illegally in the country and convicted of raping a Maryland resident.

From The Center Square

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Columbian arms trafficker arrested in college town of College Park, Maryland

After illegally entering the country at the southwest border and being released by Border Patrol agents, violent criminals continue to be arrested thousands of miles north near Baltimore.

One of them was a 19-year-old Guatemalan national in the country illegally convicted of raping a Maryland resident.

Henry Argueta-Tobar illegally entered the country in El Paso, Texas, on May 21, 2019, as an unaccompanied minor. Under the Trump and other administrations, federal policy is to release into the country those claiming to be minors. Border Patrol agents transferred his custody to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which released him “on an order of recognizance.”

By Dec. 23, 2023, he was arrested by the Charles County Sheriff’s Office in Maryland and charged with rape in the second degree. ICE lodged a detainer request with the Charles County Detention Center in La Plata, Maryland, which refused to comply and instead released him.

In February, a federal judge ordered him to be removed to Guatemala. In July, a Charles County court convicted him of rape and sentenced him to 20 years in prison but then suspended all but 190 days of his prison sentence.

ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Baltimore Fugitive Operations agents then arrested him in Waldorf, Maryland.

“After unlawfully entering our country, Henry Argueta-Tobar made his way to Maryland and victimized one of our residents,” ICE ERO Baltimore acting Deputy Field Office Director Vernon Liggins said. “We could not allow him to continue to threaten our communities.”

His case represents a common pattern The Center Square has reported: ICE lodges an immigration detainer with a local jurisdiction, which denies the request and releases the offender. Not soon after, another jurisdiction arrests the offender for allegedly committing another crime. The pattern continues until ICE detains and removes the offender.

Last month, ICE-ERO Baltimore agents also apprehended a validated leader of the Las Colinas criminal organization based in Santa Marta, Colombia. The 29-year-old fugitive was wanted by Columbian authorities on homicide, arms trafficking and aggravated theft charges. He was hiding out in a residence in College Park, Maryland, home to the University of Maryland, with an undergraduate and graduate enrollment of over 40,000.

The Columbian fugitive “attempted to hide from justice in Maryland, and we simply cannot allow that to happen,” Liggins said. “Our officers are the best in the world at finding people who don’t want to be found, and we will not allow our Maryland communities to become safe havens for the world’s bad actors.”

He illegally entered the U.S. near San Ysidro, California, and was apprehended by Border Patrol agents on Sept. 14, 2023. Instead of vetting and identifying him as a wanted arms trafficker, he was given a notice to appear before an immigration judge and transferred into ICE-ERO San Diego custody. Instead of vetting and identifying him as a wanted arms trafficker, ICE agents released him “on recognizance.”

Colombian authorities were “actively seeking custody of the fugitive, citing charges of arms trafficking, aggravated theft and homicide,” ICE said.

It would take 10 months for ICE-ERO Baltimore agents to learn that he was illegally living in Maryland. He was arrested on July 31 “at his residence in College Park” and remains in ICE custody.

ICE-ERO Baltimore agents also recently arrested a Salvadoran who fled to the U.S. to avoid a prison sentence “stemming from his conviction for attempted aggravated femicide and culpable injury.” The 57-year-old Salvadoran fugitive was arrested June 20 near his residence in Gaithersburg, Maryland. He remains in ICE custody.

His criminal record predates his illegal entry into the U.S. He was arrested and charged by Salvadoran authorities in February 2022, convicted by a court in June 2023 and sentenced to 21 years in prison. He then fled the country and illegally entered the U.S. near Rio Grande, Texas. He was then arrested by Border Patrol agents on July 1, 2023, and transferred into ICE. Roughly one month later, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services gave him a notice to appear before an immigration judge and ICE released him.

Due to a failed vetting system, Border Patrol, ICE and USCIS “had no knowledge of the Salvadoran national’s conviction at the time of their interactions with him,” ICE claims. It would take another year for ICE agents to learn of his whereabouts in Maryland.

In another case, Border Patrol agents arrested a Columbian fugitive near San Luis, Arizona, after he illegally entered the U.S. and also released him. He had a criminal record: arrested and charged with attempted aggravated homicide and sentenced to 17 years in prison. He also fled to the U.S. to avoid going to prison.

Instead of being vetted and processed for removal, he was enrolled in a Biden-Harris “Alternatives to Detention” program. Within less than a month, he violated the program terms and was removed from the country in December 2023. He illegally reentered at an unknown date, time and location, avoiding capture as one of at least two million gotaways under the Biden-Harris administration. In June, ICE agents became aware that he was illegally living in Laurel, Maryland, and arrested him. He remains in ICE custody.

An extensive pattern exists for similar ICE arrests nationwide.

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Crime

Biden-Harris Admin Adds China To Illicit Drug Watchlist After Touting Cooperation In Fighting Fentanyl Crisis

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation 

By Jason Hopkins

 

The Biden administration added China to its illicit drug watchlist on Monday, despite previously touting cooperation with Beijing on countering the growing fentanyl epidemic in the U.S.

To deal with the fentanyl epidemic in the U.S. — which China has historically played a significant role in — the Biden administration created a “working group” with Beijing earlier this year, building on an agreement between President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in November. But China still needs to do more to keep its end of the bargain, adding the country to its “Major Drug Transit or Major Illicit Drug Producing Countries for Fiscal Year 2025″ list released Monday.

Though the list is not a “sanction or penalty,” it is meant to designate countries that act as “major drug transit or major illicit drug-producing countries,” which include “countries that are a significant direct source of precursor chemicals used in the production of certain drugs and substances significantly affecting the United States,” according to the White House. Other countries named in the 2025 list include Afghanistan, Venezuela, Mexico and India.

China has been responsible for producing a substantial amount of the fentanyl ingredients that are trafficked overseas, including to Mexico and Central America, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Those ingredients are packaged into a final product and smuggled over the U.S. southern border.

While claiming that some “significant steps” have been taken by China to stem the flow of ingredients out of its mainland, “sustained enforcement and regulatory action will be necessary to significantly reduce the [People’s Republic of China’s] role as a source of precursor chemicals used in the production, sale, and trafficking of illicit synthetic drugs significantly impacting the United States,” a statement from the White House reads.

Prior to designating China as an illicit drug trafficker and producer, the Biden administration has at several points  promoted its new “working group” with Beijing and claimed that progress was being made in countering the fentanyl epidemic. But an investigation by the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) earlier this year found that there was “no evidence” that China was cracking down on illegal fentanyl production or trafficking inside the mainland.

Instead, China is an active enabler in the crisis because it “directly subsidizes” the production and export of ingredients and fails to prosecute those responsible, according to the investigation.

“This failure — when combined with new evidence establishing that the [People’s Republic of China] incentivizes the export of illegal drugs abroad and holds ownership stake in companies doing the same — casts doubt on the veracity of the PRC’s claims that it will act to stem the massive export of illicit fentanyl materials and other dangerous synthetic narcotics,” the investigation report reads.

Some Republican lawmakers feel the administration could also do more by preventing the flow of fentanyl over the southern border.

“If President Biden were actually taking the problem of fentanyl trafficking seriously, he would have already shut down the border and with it, points of entry for drug smuggling,” Republican California Rep. Michelle Steel previously told The Daily Caller. “The Biden Administration’s border crisis has been a key catalyst in the explosion of fentanyl into the U.S.”

“We continue to press for the [People’s Republic of China] to schedule all precursor chemicals that are controlled at the international level, in line with their treaty obligations,” A State Department spokesman told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “Our cooperation is laser-focused on driving action that save lives. This work will continue as we press for continued enforcement action and regulation to halt this deadly flow.”

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Crime

ICE Nabs Illegal Migrant ‘Gotaway’ Charged With Raping Child On Ritzy Island In ‘Sanctuary’ State

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Harold Hutchison

 

Federal immigration authorities on Tuesday successfully apprehended an illegal migrant charged with raping a minor on a wealthy Massachusetts island.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Nantucket nabbed Bryan Daniel Aldana-Arevalo, a 28-year-old Salvadoran national living unlawfully in the country, according to a press release from the agency published Monday. Aldana was charged earlier this year with two counts of indecent assault and battery of a child under 14 and one count of rape of a child with a 10-year age difference.

“Bryan Daniel Aldana-Arevalo stands accused of some detestable and disturbing crimes against a Nantucket child,” Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Boston Field Office Director Todd Lyons stated on Monday in the press release. “He represents a significant danger to the children of our Massachusetts communities.”

Aldana illegally crossed into the U.S. at an unknown date and unknown location, according to ICE. Such illegal migrants in the country are categorized as “gotaways,” as they were not stopped by Border Patrol or other federal immigration officials before entering the interior of the U.S.

ICE arrest of Bryan Daniel Aldana-Arevalo

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrest of Bryan Daniel Aldana-Arevalo. (Photo by ICE)

The Salvadoran national was arraigned in Nantucket District Court for the multiple sex crime charges on July 26, according to ICE. He was later released on bail by the Nantucket District Court on July 29.

“ERO Boston will not tolerate such a threat to the most vulnerable of our population,” Lyons stated. “We will continue to prioritize the safety of our public by arresting and removing egregious noncitizen offenders from our New England neighborhoods.”

Since his ICE apprehension, Aldana has been served with a notice to appear before an immigration judge, and he remains in ICE custody, according to the agency.

“The Nantucket Police Department, specifically the Detective Unit did assist with identifying requested addresses provided to them by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency,” reads a Thursday press statement from the police department. Deportation officers made an unknown number of arrests on the island last week, which specifically targeted “violent offenders.”

The Nantucket population in 2022 had a median household income of more than $131,000, according to Data USA, far surpassing the median household income of the country that same year, which was slightly less than $75,000. Housing has become so expensive on the island, that some homes costing as much as $1 million have been offered via a lottery system as a part of a subsidized housing program, according to The New York Post.

President Joe Biden won more than 70% of the vote in Nantucket County in the 2020 presidential election, according to county election results compiled by CNN.

Aldana is one of the countless gotaways who enter the country illegally and undetected by federal immigration authorities. Around two million known gotaways have crossed into the U.S. since the beginning of the Biden-Harris administration, a congressional source confirmed to the Daily Caller News Foundation earlier this year.

Over seven million migrants have illegally crossed the U.S. southern border since the beginning of the Biden-Harris administration, according to the latest Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data.

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