The recent murder committed by a twice-deported illegal immigrant
gangbanger in a Maryland sanctuary county makes the following
information both enraging and unbelievable; nearly 12,000 illegal
immigrants with criminal histories were protected from federal
authorities by sanctuary jurisdictions in the U.S. during a 19-month
period, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) figures
obtained by the Washington D.C.-based Center for Immigration Studies
(CIS).
A few weeks ago CIS published a map identifying
about 300 jurisdictions that have official policies shielding illegal
aliens from federal authorities. During a 19-month stretch from January
1, 2014, to September 30, 2015, more than 17,000 federal detainers were
rejected by these sanctuary jurisdictions, CIS found. Around 11,800 of
the detainers, or 68%, were issued for individuals with a prior criminal
history. “According to ICE statistics, since the Obama administration
implemented the new Priority Enforcement Program in July 2015
restricting ICE use of detainers, the number of rejected detainers has
declined,” CIS writes in a report accompanying the map. “However, the
number of detainers issued by ICE also has declined in 2016, so it is
not clear if the new policies are a factor.”
The bottom line is that hundreds of local governments across the
nation shield illegal immigrants from the feds, even when they have
engaged in criminal activity. In some cases they go on to commit heinous
crimes that receive widespread media attention. Judicial Watch has
reported many of them and launched investigations, obtaining public
records from the jurisdictions that protected the criminal aliens. Back
in 2008 Judicial Watch obtained records from
the San Francisco Sheriff’s Department—an agency long renowned for
offering sanctuary—related to Edwin Ramos, an illegal alien from El
Salvador who murdered three innocent American citizens. Ramos was a
member of a famously violent street gang and had been convicted of two
felonies as a juvenile (a gang-related assault on a bus passenger and
the attempted robbery of a pregnant woman) yet he was allowed to remain
in the country.
Judicial Watch also investigated
the 2010 case of a drunken illegal alien who killed a nun in Virginia
and we sued the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to obtain records.
The Bolivian national, Carlos Montano, had a substantial criminal
history but federal authorities released him on his own recognizance
after two previous arrests. Virginia doesn’t have a statewide sanctuary
policy, but Arlington and Chesterfield County do, according to the CIS
database. Judicial Watch’s probe determined that Montano had a revoked
license and had previously been arrested on drunk-driving charges when
his car crossed a median and slammed into a vehicle carrying three nuns.
The two survivors were critically injured. The number of serious crimes
committed by illegal aliens who have benefitted from sanctuary policies
is undoubtedly on the rise.
Just last summer a case in a small sanctuary town of 40,000 received
global media attention over the gruesome nature of the crime. A Haitian illegal immigrant
who had spent 17 years in prison for attempted murder, savagely stabbed
a young woman in Norwich, Connecticut then stuffed her body in a
closet. At least three deportation orders had been issued for the
killer, Jean Jacques, dating back to 2002. Connecticut has long
protected illegal immigrants with sanctuary policies and even offers
them special drivers’ licenses, known as Drive Only. The state also
gives illegal aliens discounted tuition at public colleges and
universities and authorities work hard to restrict the feds from
deporting illegal immigrants. In fact, despite President Obama’s amnesty
and open-borders policies, Connecticut is always a step ahead when it
comes to protecting illegal immigrants and granting them rights.
Undoubtedly, this attracts a large population of undocumented aliens
like the murderer in this case.
Last week an illegal immigrant member of the notoriously violent
MS-13 street gang murdered a teenager in Gaithersburg, Maryland. The
28-year-old gangbanger from El Salvador, Oscar Delgado-Perez, had been deported twice
in the last two years, according to a mainstream newspaper.
Nevertheless Delgado-Perez was never removed and, along with two fellow
gangbangers, he brutally stabbed an 18-year-old more than 40 times in a
Gaithersburg park as the teen begged for his life. Gaithersburg is in
Montgomery County, which proudly offers illegal aliens sanctuary. In
fact, earlier this year Montgomery County officials publicly reassured illegal aliens
that police would play no role in a federal government operation to
deport recent undocumented aliens from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras
and Mexico.
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