From: coldrenkler on
On Wed, 28 Apr 2010 19:51:58 -0700 (PDT), Salty Stan
<wsjames123(a)gmail.com> wrote:

>
>
>� Eighteen-year-old Tricia Taylor of Detroit was in court in
>December 2002 to hear the plea of the illegal alien who caused her to
>lose both legs above the knees. Jose Carcamo was driving under the
>influence (.08 percent blood alcohol level) and speeding when he drove
>over a curb and smashed Taylor into a wall. One report stated that
>Carcamo has had 17 violations since 1995. Another noted that he was
>drag racing at the time of the crash. It is agreed that the car was
>travelling between 50 and 75 miles per hour on a street posted for 25
>mph. Taylor's companion Noah Menard suffered a fractured skull and
>collarbone, as well as requiring eight pins to reconstruct his mangled
>elbow. The INS had twice begun deportation proceeding against Carcamo
>to return him to El Salvador, but regrettably did not follow through.
>Carcamo will be out of jail in a few years, but Tricia Taylor faces a
>lifetime of pain and disability because of another failure of the INS
>to remove a dangerous alien. Incidentally, drinking to excess and then
>driving is celebrated in Hispanic cultures rather than condemned.
> Sentencing Update: On January 13, 2003 Jose Carcamo was sentenced
>to 3-5 years in prison. Four months after the crash, Tricia Taylor
>still must take pain medication, antibiotics, anti-depressants and
>sleeping pills. Chronic bone infection means she may yet lose more of
>her right leg. Carcamo sent a note of apology to Taylor and Menard,
>but misspelled the names. She responded, "It hurts me every time I see
>him. He acts like he's sorry, but you'd think he would know our
>names." She is not forgiving, either: "I have my whole life with no
>legs ... I'm only 18. He gets no forgiveness."
>
>Ron Cornell � Another American stymied in the pursuit of justice for
>a murdered child is Ron Cornell, shown here with a car-hood portrait
>of his murdered son Joey. His son's killer, Gonzalo Villalobos,
>escaped to Mexico and, like so many others, is being protected by the
>Mexican government's refusal to extradite. At one point, Villalobos'
>whereabouts in El Salvador were known precisely, but there is no
>extradition cooperation with that nation either. (After the
>devastation of Hurricane Mitch in 1998, the United States sent $110
>million in disaster relief aid to El Salvador.) This article includes
>a rogues gallery of mug shots of fugitives safe in Mexico.
>
>Whidbey Shooting Victims � In June 2002, these four residents of
>Whidbey Island in Washington were the shooting victims of a Jamaican
>national who was evidently frustrated that he had ruined his plans to
>get a green card through marriage to an American woman. Preston Dean
>"Hugh" Douglas angered his girlfriend Holly Swartz because he had
>sexually abused her seven-year-old daughter. When Holly moved herself
>and her child into her mother's house, Douglas reacted by shooting
>Holly, her mother Marjorie Monnett (the mother of eight children),
>Marjorie's son Bruce and Bruce's girlfriend Sierra Klug. Holly and
>Marjorie were killed, and Bruce and Sierra survived. Douglas shot and
>killed himself. Reportedly Douglas was in the country illegally,
>although he was working as a bouncer at a local Chinese restaurant.
>
>Jose Soto Jr. � On the day after New Years 2003, six-year-old Jose
>Soto was riding his bike around the parking lot near his parents'
>apartment house when he was struck and severely injured by a man
>backing out in a red truck. Witnesses were shocked when the man
>stopped and pulled the child from under the truck and roughly threw
>him aside before speeding off. At this writing, Jose is in critical
>condition in a Houston hospital and the perpetrator is believed to be
>on his way to Mexico, if not already there. The man's name was
>released a few days later: Jose Ines Morales. As noted above, once a
>criminal reaches Mexico, he has effectively eluded the law
>permanently, since America's southern neighbor refuses to extradite,
>as a matter of policy, criminals who may be punished according to the
>severity of their crimes.
>
>Sister Helen Chaska � Sister Helen Chaska was murdered in late
>summer 2002 by being strangled with her rosary beads � the beads were
>found imbedded in her neck. She was also raped, as was another nun who
>accompanied Sister Helen during walking prayers. Both women were in
>Klamath Falls, Oregon, doing missionary work when the crimes occurred.
>Her accused murderer is Maximiliano Esparza, who is in the United
>States illegally, and was convicted in 1988 of robbery and kidnapping
>in Los Angeles. He was sentenced to six years in prison, was released
>in 1992 and was on probation until 1995. By law, this man should have
>been deported to Mexico after his release in 1992. Instead, the INS
>allowed him to remain in the United States and commit even more
>heinous crimes. In this article, Michelle Malkin notes the Esparza
>crime and other examples of INS standard procedure of "catch and
>release" in violation of law.
> Sentencing Update: On April 8, 2003, Esparza was sentenced to life
>in prison without parole. The sentence was a deal worked out with the
>prosecution to avoid a trial with the possibility of the death
>penalty. Klamath County District Attorney Ed Caleb said that he wanted
>to avoid forcing the other nun who had been attacked to testify. In
>addition, Caleb sent a bill to the Mexican consulate for the cost of
>investigating and prosecuting the case. Not much chance of getting any
>money, but it is a reasonable gesture.
>
>Trooper Bret Clodfelter � It has been a decade since Oregon State
>Police Trooper Bret Clodfelter was murdered by an illegal alien, but
>the crime has not been forgotten. Trooper Clodfelter of Klamath Falls
>had arrested three Mexican men for being drunk and disorderly, then
>offered them a ride and was murdered for his generosity. The
>prosecuter sought the death penalty, but one dissenting juror meant
>Francisco Manzo-Hernandez got life in prison instead. To add to the
>tragedy, Clodfelter's widow Rene committed suicide a year after her
>husband was murdered. The couple had been married just over a month
>when the murder occurred.
>
>Officer Sheila Herring � Officer Sheila Herring was lost to a bullet
>from an illegal alien in an early morning altercation at a Norfolk bar
>on January 16. The accused man, Mario Roberto Keen, a citizen of
>Jamaica, had reportedly shot a man in the bar after which the police
>were called. When several officers arrived, Keen opened fire and shot
>Officer Herring who died later in surgery. Keen was shot and killed at
>the scene. He had been sentenced to five years in prison in 1990 for
>selling cocaine and was later deported. Keen attempted to re-enter the
>United States in New York in 1997, but was reportedly barred from
>entering. It is not known when Keen succeeded in entering the U.S. But
>back to Sheila Herring: from all accounts she was an excellent police
>officer and loved her job. She had been a cop in Detroit for ten years
>before moving to Virginia. She was 39 and had an 18-year-old daughter.
>
>Angie Morfin � Angie Morfin of Salinas, California, testified before
>the House Immigration Subcommittee in June of 1999 about the murder of
>her 13-year-old son by an illegal alien gangster. Her boy Ruben was
>simply in the wrong place at the wrong time and was shot down by a
>Mexican who escaped to Mexico. Her testimony also noted how the Latino
>community in her town wants immigration laws enforced, particularly to
>deal with the problem of illegal alien gangs that are responsible for
>a lot of violent criminal activity. Since her son's murder, Angie
>Morfin has spoken out about the need for more Border Patrol agents and
>other enforcement to make her community safer so that no other mothers
>must suffer the loss that she has.
>
>Laura Ayala � Thirteen-year-old Laura Ayala went missing in March
>2002, taken just a few feet from in her home in Houston. At this
>writing, there is no child and no body, although blood identified as
>being hers was identified in 2002 in the car of men believed to be
>connected with her abduction. Because of some evidence that she had
>been taken to Mexico, part of the search has been there. One
>complication was Houston's policy of "sanctuary" which disallows
>police from investigating a person's citizenship status. Illegal alien
>Walter Alexander Sorto was in police hands for traffic tickets but
>could not be deported because of the sanctuary policy: he is believed
>to be connected in Laura Ayala's disappearance which occurred several
>months after the ticket problem. Houston police office John Nickell
>testified before Congress (2/27/02) about how sanctuary laws inhibit
>the effectiveness of beat cops to deal with criminals and prevent
>crime.
>
>San Diego Crash Scene � The danger on the highways from truckloads
>of illegal aliens in border areas has been increasing drastically. It
>is not unusual for a van full of illegal aliens to speed down the road
>in the wrong direction to avoid American law enforcement, causing
>death and injury to both American citizens and foreigners. One of the
>worst examples (shown at the left) took place near San Diego June 25,
>2002, where seven people were killed and at least 31 were injured when
>a van tried to avoid a border checkpoint by turning the lights off and
>speeding against oncoming traffic in the wrong lane. Larry S. Baca of
>Albuquerque was killed when his Ford was smashed head-on by the
>immigrant van and knocked airborne. On March 10, 2003, two men were
>killed and 20 people were injured when a stolen truck loaded with
>illegal aliens tried to outrun American authorities.
>
>Dana Pevia - kidnap victim � Dana Pevia was kidnapped from her North
>Carolina school bus stop in 1999 when she was only 11. In March, 2003,
>she was able to escape her captivity in Mexico and visit the American
>Consulate in Guadalahara. The officials there contacted the National
>Center for Missing and Exploited Children and through them reached
>Dana's mother Wanda was contacted. Dana returned home a few days later
>with her two children. The apparent kidnapper Hector Frausto, a
>"Mexican construction worker," was arrested in North Carolina on March
>27. Dana was evidently forcibly kept captive by his family in Mexico
>for much of that time. She was only able to get away because she had
>the help of a sympathetic neighbor. The unasked question is why the
>obvious suspect's family in Mexico was not investigated four years

Time to rid America of these filthy invaders with their rodent-like
breeding habits. Low IQ (appx.85) bastards are a drain on society.
Deport them all. No exceptions, no quarter, no remorse.

cole

http://www.illegalaliens.us/
From: RoadRunner on
On Thu, 29 Apr 2010 10:08:25 -0700, coldrenkler(a)gmail.com wrote:

>On Wed, 28 Apr 2010 19:51:58 -0700 (PDT), Salty Stan
><wsjames123(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>� Eighteen-year-old Tricia Taylor of Detroit was in court in
>>December 2002 to hear the plea of the illegal alien who caused her to
>>lose both legs above the knees. Jose Carcamo was driving under the
>>influence (.08 percent blood alcohol level) and speeding when he drove
>>over a curb and smashed Taylor into a wall. One report stated that
>>Carcamo has had 17 violations since 1995. Another noted that he was
>>drag racing at the time of the crash. It is agreed that the car was
>>travelling between 50 and 75 miles per hour on a street posted for 25
>>mph. Taylor's companion Noah Menard suffered a fractured skull and
>>collarbone, as well as requiring eight pins to reconstruct his mangled
>>elbow. The INS had twice begun deportation proceeding against Carcamo
>>to return him to El Salvador, but regrettably did not follow through.
>>Carcamo will be out of jail in a few years, but Tricia Taylor faces a
>>lifetime of pain and disability because of another failure of the INS
>>to remove a dangerous alien. Incidentally, drinking to excess and then
>>driving is celebrated in Hispanic cultures rather than condemned.
>> Sentencing Update: On January 13, 2003 Jose Carcamo was sentenced
>>to 3-5 years in prison. Four months after the crash, Tricia Taylor
>>still must take pain medication, antibiotics, anti-depressants and
>>sleeping pills. Chronic bone infection means she may yet lose more of
>>her right leg. Carcamo sent a note of apology to Taylor and Menard,
>>but misspelled the names. She responded, "It hurts me every time I see
>>him. He acts like he's sorry, but you'd think he would know our
>>names." She is not forgiving, either: "I have my whole life with no
>>legs ... I'm only 18. He gets no forgiveness."
>>
>>Ron Cornell � Another American stymied in the pursuit of justice for
>>a murdered child is Ron Cornell, shown here with a car-hood portrait
>>of his murdered son Joey. His son's killer, Gonzalo Villalobos,
>>escaped to Mexico and, like so many others, is being protected by the
>>Mexican government's refusal to extradite. At one point, Villalobos'
>>whereabouts in El Salvador were known precisely, but there is no
>>extradition cooperation with that nation either. (After the
>>devastation of Hurricane Mitch in 1998, the United States sent $110
>>million in disaster relief aid to El Salvador.) This article includes
>>a rogues gallery of mug shots of fugitives safe in Mexico.
>>
>>Whidbey Shooting Victims � In June 2002, these four residents of
>>Whidbey Island in Washington were the shooting victims of a Jamaican
>>national who was evidently frustrated that he had ruined his plans to
>>get a green card through marriage to an American woman. Preston Dean
>>"Hugh" Douglas angered his girlfriend Holly Swartz because he had
>>sexually abused her seven-year-old daughter. When Holly moved herself
>>and her child into her mother's house, Douglas reacted by shooting
>>Holly, her mother Marjorie Monnett (the mother of eight children),
>>Marjorie's son Bruce and Bruce's girlfriend Sierra Klug. Holly and
>>Marjorie were killed, and Bruce and Sierra survived. Douglas shot and
>>killed himself. Reportedly Douglas was in the country illegally,
>>although he was working as a bouncer at a local Chinese restaurant.
>>
>>Jose Soto Jr. � On the day after New Years 2003, six-year-old Jose
>>Soto was riding his bike around the parking lot near his parents'
>>apartment house when he was struck and severely injured by a man
>>backing out in a red truck. Witnesses were shocked when the man
>>stopped and pulled the child from under the truck and roughly threw
>>him aside before speeding off. At this writing, Jose is in critical
>>condition in a Houston hospital and the perpetrator is believed to be
>>on his way to Mexico, if not already there. The man's name was
>>released a few days later: Jose Ines Morales. As noted above, once a
>>criminal reaches Mexico, he has effectively eluded the law
>>permanently, since America's southern neighbor refuses to extradite,
>>as a matter of policy, criminals who may be punished according to the
>>severity of their crimes.
>>
>>Sister Helen Chaska � Sister Helen Chaska was murdered in late
>>summer 2002 by being strangled with her rosary beads � the beads were
>>found imbedded in her neck. She was also raped, as was another nun who
>>accompanied Sister Helen during walking prayers. Both women were in
>>Klamath Falls, Oregon, doing missionary work when the crimes occurred.
>>Her accused murderer is Maximiliano Esparza, who is in the United
>>States illegally, and was convicted in 1988 of robbery and kidnapping
>>in Los Angeles. He was sentenced to six years in prison, was released
>>in 1992 and was on probation until 1995. By law, this man should have
>>been deported to Mexico after his release in 1992. Instead, the INS
>>allowed him to remain in the United States and commit even more
>>heinous crimes. In this article, Michelle Malkin notes the Esparza
>>crime and other examples of INS standard procedure of "catch and
>>release" in violation of law.
>> Sentencing Update: On April 8, 2003, Esparza was sentenced to life
>>in prison without parole. The sentence was a deal worked out with the
>>prosecution to avoid a trial with the possibility of the death
>>penalty. Klamath County District Attorney Ed Caleb said that he wanted
>>to avoid forcing the other nun who had been attacked to testify. In
>>addition, Caleb sent a bill to the Mexican consulate for the cost of
>>investigating and prosecuting the case. Not much chance of getting any
>>money, but it is a reasonable gesture.
>>
>>Trooper Bret Clodfelter � It has been a decade since Oregon State
>>Police Trooper Bret Clodfelter was murdered by an illegal alien, but
>>the crime has not been forgotten. Trooper Clodfelter of Klamath Falls
>>had arrested three Mexican men for being drunk and disorderly, then
>>offered them a ride and was murdered for his generosity. The
>>prosecuter sought the death penalty, but one dissenting juror meant
>>Francisco Manzo-Hernandez got life in prison instead. To add to the
>>tragedy, Clodfelter's widow Rene committed suicide a year after her
>>husband was murdered. The couple had been married just over a month
>>when the murder occurred.
>>
>>Officer Sheila Herring � Officer Sheila Herring was lost to a bullet
>>from an illegal alien in an early morning altercation at a Norfolk bar
>>on January 16. The accused man, Mario Roberto Keen, a citizen of
>>Jamaica, had reportedly shot a man in the bar after which the police
>>were called. When several officers arrived, Keen opened fire and shot
>>Officer Herring who died later in surgery. Keen was shot and killed at
>>the scene. He had been sentenced to five years in prison in 1990 for
>>selling cocaine and was later deported. Keen attempted to re-enter the
>>United States in New York in 1997, but was reportedly barred from
>>entering. It is not known when Keen succeeded in entering the U.S. But
>>back to Sheila Herring: from all accounts she was an excellent police
>>officer and loved her job. She had been a cop in Detroit for ten years
>>before moving to Virginia. She was 39 and had an 18-year-old daughter.
>>
>>Angie Morfin � Angie Morfin of Salinas, California, testified before
>>the House Immigration Subcommittee in June of 1999 about the murder of
>>her 13-year-old son by an illegal alien gangster. Her boy Ruben was
>>simply in the wrong place at the wrong time and was shot down by a
>>Mexican who escaped to Mexico. Her testimony also noted how the Latino
>>community in her town wants immigration laws enforced, particularly to
>>deal with the problem of illegal alien gangs that are responsible for
>>a lot of violent criminal activity. Since her son's murder, Angie
>>Morfin has spoken out about the need for more Border Patrol agents and
>>other enforcement to make her community safer so that no other mothers
>>must suffer the loss that she has.
>>
>>Laura Ayala � Thirteen-year-old Laura Ayala went missing in March
>>2002, taken just a few feet from in her home in Houston. At this
>>writing, there is no child and no body, although blood identified as
>>being hers was identified in 2002 in the car of men believed to be
>>connected with her abduction. Because of some evidence that she had
>>been taken to Mexico, part of the search has been there. One
>>complication was Houston's policy of "sanctuary" which disallows
>>police from investigating a person's citizenship status. Illegal alien
>>Walter Alexander Sorto was in police hands for traffic tickets but
>>could not be deported because of the sanctuary policy: he is believed
>>to be connected in Laura Ayala's disappearance which occurred several
>>months after the ticket problem. Houston police office John Nickell
>>testified before Congress (2/27/02) about how sanctuary laws inhibit
>>the effectiveness of beat cops to deal with criminals and prevent
>>crime.
>>
>>San Diego Crash Scene � The danger on the highways from truckloads
>>of illegal aliens in border areas has been increasing drastically. It
>>is not unusual for a van full of illegal aliens to speed down the road
>>in the wrong direction to avoid American law enforcement, causing
>>death and injury to both American citizens and foreigners. One of the
>>worst examples (shown at the left) took place near San Diego June 25,
>>2002, where seven people were killed and at least 31 were injured when
>>a van tried to avoid a border checkpoint by turning the lights off and
>>speeding against oncoming traffic in the wrong lane. Larry S. Baca of
>>Albuquerque was killed when his Ford was smashed head-on by the
>>immigrant van and knocked airborne. On March 10, 2003, two men were
>>killed and 20 people were injured when a stolen truck loaded with
>>illegal aliens tried to outrun American authorities.
>>
>>Dana Pevia - kidnap victim � Dana Pevia was kidnapped from her North
>>Carolina school bus stop in 1999 when she was only 11. In March, 2003,
>>she was able to escape her captivity in Mexico and visit the American
>>Consulate in Guadalahara. The officials there contacted the National
>>Center for Missing and Exploited Children and through them reached
>>Dana's mother Wanda was contacted. Dana returned home a few days later
>>with her two children. The apparent kidnapper Hector Frausto, a
>>"Mexican construction worker," was arrested in North Carolina on March
>>27. Dana was evidently forcibly kept captive by his family in Mexico
>>for much of that time. She was only able to get away because she had
>>the help of a sympathetic neighbor. The unasked question is why the
>>obvious suspect's family in Mexico was not investigated four years
>
>Time to rid America of these filthy invaders with their rodent-like
>breeding habits. Low IQ (appx.85) bastards are a drain on society.
>Deport them all. No exceptions, no quarter, no remorse.
>
>cole
>
>http://www.illegalaliens.us/


And now an illegal has apparently shot a sheriff's deputy while they
were trying to smuggle in some pot...

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gGgzImP2k9_40Sl_i3l7IX2Cn7bgD9FDQO6O1
From: Bill Steele on
>
> >>
> >>� Eighteen-year-old Tricia Taylor of Detroit was in court in
> >>December 2002 to hear the plea of the illegal alien who caused her to
> >>lose both legs above the knees. Jose Carcamo was driving under the
> >>influence (.08 percent blood alcohol level) and speeding when he drove
> >>over a curb and smashed Taylor into a wall. One report stated that
> >>Carcamo has had 17 violations since 1995. Another noted that he was
> >>drag racing at the time of the crash. It is agreed that the car was
> >>travelling between 50 and 75 miles per hour on a street posted for 25
> >>mph. Taylor's companion Noah Menard suffered a fractured skull and
> >>collarbone, as well as requiring eight pins to reconstruct his mangled
> >>elbow. The INS had twice begun deportation proceeding against Carcamo
> >>to return him to El Salvador, but regrettably did not follow through.
> >>Carcamo will be out of jail in a few years, but Tricia Taylor faces a
> >>lifetime of pain and disability because of another failure of the INS
> >>to remove a dangerous alien. Incidentally, drinking to excess and then
> >>driving is celebrated in Hispanic cultures rather than condemned.
> >> Sentencing Update: On January 13, 2003 Jose Carcamo was sentenced
> >>to 3-5 years in prison. Four months after the crash, Tricia Taylor
> >>still must take pain medication, antibiotics, anti-depressants and
> >>sleeping pills. Chronic bone infection means she may yet lose more of
> >>her right leg. Carcamo sent a note of apology to Taylor and Menard,
> >>but misspelled the names. She responded, "It hurts me every time I see
> >>him. He acts like he's sorry, but you'd think he would know our
> >>names." She is not forgiving, either: "I have my whole life with no
> >>legs ... I'm only 18. He gets no forgiveness."
> >>
> >>Ron Cornell � Another American stymied in the pursuit of justice for
> >>a murdered child is Ron Cornell, shown here with a car-hood portrait
> >>of his murdered son Joey. His son's killer, Gonzalo Villalobos,
> >>escaped to Mexico and, like so many others, is being protected by the
> >>Mexican government's refusal to extradite. At one point, Villalobos'
> >>whereabouts in El Salvador were known precisely, but there is no
> >>extradition cooperation with that nation either. (After the
> >>devastation of Hurricane Mitch in 1998, the United States sent $110
> >>million in disaster relief aid to El Salvador.) This article includes
> >>a rogues gallery of mug shots of fugitives safe in Mexico.
> >>
> >>Whidbey Shooting Victims � In June 2002, these four residents of
> >>Whidbey Island in Washington were the shooting victims of a Jamaican
> >>national who was evidently frustrated that he had ruined his plans to
> >>get a green card through marriage to an American woman. Preston Dean
> >>"Hugh" Douglas angered his girlfriend Holly Swartz because he had
> >>sexually abused her seven-year-old daughter. When Holly moved herself
> >>and her child into her mother's house, Douglas reacted by shooting
> >>Holly, her mother Marjorie Monnett (the mother of eight children),
> >>Marjorie's son Bruce and Bruce's girlfriend Sierra Klug. Holly and
> >>Marjorie were killed, and Bruce and Sierra survived. Douglas shot and
> >>killed himself. Reportedly Douglas was in the country illegally,
> >>although he was working as a bouncer at a local Chinese restaurant.
> >>
> >>Jose Soto Jr. � On the day after New Years 2003, six-year-old Jose
> >>Soto was riding his bike around the parking lot near his parents'
> >>apartment house when he was struck and severely injured by a man
> >>backing out in a red truck. Witnesses were shocked when the man
> >>stopped and pulled the child from under the truck and roughly threw
> >>him aside before speeding off. At this writing, Jose is in critical
> >>condition in a Houston hospital and the perpetrator is believed to be
> >>on his way to Mexico, if not already there. The man's name was
> >>released a few days later: Jose Ines Morales. As noted above, once a
> >>criminal reaches Mexico, he has effectively eluded the law
> >>permanently, since America's southern neighbor refuses to extradite,
> >>as a matter of policy, criminals who may be punished according to the
> >>severity of their crimes.
> >>
> >>Sister Helen Chaska � Sister Helen Chaska was murdered in late
> >>summer 2002 by being strangled with her rosary beads � the beads were
> >>found imbedded in her neck. She was also raped, as was another nun who
> >>accompanied Sister Helen during walking prayers. Both women were in
> >>Klamath Falls, Oregon, doing missionary work when the crimes occurred.
> >>Her accused murderer is Maximiliano Esparza, who is in the United
> >>States illegally, and was convicted in 1988 of robbery and kidnapping
> >>in Los Angeles. He was sentenced to six years in prison, was released
> >>in 1992 and was on probation until 1995. By law, this man should have
> >>been deported to Mexico after his release in 1992. Instead, the INS
> >>allowed him to remain in the United States and commit even more
> >>heinous crimes. In this article, Michelle Malkin notes the Esparza
> >>crime and other examples of INS standard procedure of "catch and
> >>release" in violation of law.
> >> Sentencing Update: On April 8, 2003, Esparza was sentenced to life
> >>in prison without parole. The sentence was a deal worked out with the
> >>prosecution to avoid a trial with the possibility of the death
> >>penalty. Klamath County District Attorney Ed Caleb said that he wanted
> >>to avoid forcing the other nun who had been attacked to testify. In
> >>addition, Caleb sent a bill to the Mexican consulate for the cost of
> >>investigating and prosecuting the case. Not much chance of getting any
> >>money, but it is a reasonable gesture.
> >>
> >>Trooper Bret Clodfelter � It has been a decade since Oregon State
> >>Police Trooper Bret Clodfelter was murdered by an illegal alien, but
> >>the crime has not been forgotten. Trooper Clodfelter of Klamath Falls
> >>had arrested three Mexican men for being drunk and disorderly, then
> >>offered them a ride and was murdered for his generosity. The
> >>prosecuter sought the death penalty, but one dissenting juror meant
> >>Francisco Manzo-Hernandez got life in prison instead. To add to the
> >>tragedy, Clodfelter's widow Rene committed suicide a year after her
> >>husband was murdered. The couple had been married just over a month
> >>when the murder occurred.
> >>
> >>Officer Sheila Herring � Officer Sheila Herring was lost to a bullet
> >>from an illegal alien in an early morning altercation at a Norfolk bar
> >>on January 16. The accused man, Mario Roberto Keen, a citizen of
> >>Jamaica, had reportedly shot a man in the bar after which the police
> >>were called. When several officers arrived, Keen opened fire and shot
> >>Officer Herring who died later in surgery. Keen was shot and killed at
> >>the scene. He had been sentenced to five years in prison in 1990 for
> >>selling cocaine and was later deported. Keen attempted to re-enter the
> >>United States in New York in 1997, but was reportedly barred from
> >>entering. It is not known when Keen succeeded in entering the U.S. But
> >>back to Sheila Herring: from all accounts she was an excellent police
> >>officer and loved her job. She had been a cop in Detroit for ten years
> >>before moving to Virginia. She was 39 and had an 18-year-old daughter.
> >>
> >>Angie Morfin � Angie Morfin of Salinas, California, testified before
> >>the House Immigration Subcommittee in June of 1999 about the murder of
> >>her 13-year-old son by an illegal alien gangster. Her boy Ruben was
> >>simply in the wrong place at the wrong time and was shot down by a
> >>Mexican who escaped to Mexico. Her testimony also noted how the Latino
> >>community in her town wants immigration laws enforced, particularly to
> >>deal with the problem of illegal alien gangs that are responsible for
> >>a lot of violent criminal activity. Since her son's murder, Angie
> >>Morfin has spoken out about the need for more Border Patrol agents and
> >>other enforcement to make her community safer so that no other mothers
> >>must suffer the loss that she has.
> >>
> >>Laura Ayala � Thirteen-year-old Laura Ayala went missing in March
> >>2002, taken just a few feet from in her home in Houston. At this
> >>writing, there is no child and no body, although blood identified as
> >>being hers was identified in 2002 in the car of men believed to be
> >>connected with her abduction. Because of some evidence that she had
> >>been taken to Mexico, part of the search has been there. One
> >>complication was Houston's policy of "sanctuary" which disallows
> >>police from investigating a person's citizenship status. Illegal alien
> >>Walter Alexander Sorto was in police hands for traffic tickets but
> >>could not be deported because of the sanctuary policy: he is believed
> >>to be connected in Laura Ayala's disappearance which occurred several
> >>months after the ticket problem. Houston police office John Nickell
> >>testified before Congress (2/27/02) about how sanctuary laws inhibit
> >>the effectiveness of beat cops to deal with criminals and prevent
> >>crime.
> >>
> >>San Diego Crash Scene � The danger on the highways from truckloads
> >>of illegal aliens in border areas has been increasing drastically. It
> >>is not unusual for a van full of illegal aliens to speed down the road
> >>in the wrong direction to avoid American law enforcement, causing
> >>death and injury to both American citizens and foreigners. One of the
> >>worst examples (shown at the left) took place near San Diego June 25,
> >>2002, where seven people were killed and at least 31 were injured when
> >>a van tried to avoid a border checkpoint by turning the lights off and
> >>speeding against oncoming traffic in the wrong lane. Larry S. Baca of
> >>Albuquerque was killed when his Ford was smashed head-on by the
> >>immigrant van and knocked airborne. On March 10, 2003, two men were
> >>killed and 20 people were injured when a stolen truck loaded with
> >>illegal aliens tried to outrun American authorities.
> >>
> >>Dana Pevia - kidnap victim � Dana Pevia was kidnapped from her North
> >>Carolina school bus stop in 1999 when she was only 11. In March, 2003,
> >>she was able to escape her captivity in Mexico and visit the American
> >>Consulate in Guadalahara. The officials there contacted the National
> >>Center for Missing and Exploited Children and through them reached
> >>Dana's mother Wanda was contacted. Dana returned home a few days later
> >>with her two children. The apparent kidnapper Hector Frausto, a
> >>"Mexican construction worker," was arrested in North Carolina on March
> >>27. Dana was evidently forcibly kept captive by his family in Mexico
> >>for much of that time. She was only able to get away because she had
> >>the help of a sympathetic neighbor. The unasked question is why the
> >>obvious suspect's family in Mexico was not investigated four years
> >
> >Time to rid America of these filthy invaders with their rodent-like
> >breeding habits. Low IQ (appx.85) bastards are a drain on society.
> >Deport them all. No exceptions, no quarter, no remorse.
> >
> >cole
> >
> >http://www.illegalaliens.us/
>
>
> And now an illegal has apparently shot a sheriff's deputy while they
> were trying to smuggle in some pot...
>
> http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gGgzImP2k9_40Sl_i3l7IX2Cn7bg
> D9FDQO6O1

How many hours a day do you spend scanning crime reports fo rthe ones
that fit your prejudices?