Monday, August 31, 2015

244 of 1,000,000,000 undocumented immigrants arrested in L.A. sweep, most had a criminal record

PLEASE SHARE THIS , THIS MEANS That 5,000 MORE CROSSED THE BORDER 244 OF !,000,000,000 WERE ARRESTED & THEY WILL HAVE A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE ,FOOD, HEALTHCARE,SPENDING MONEY,TV & A BASEBALL GAME & AFTER THE SO CALLED LAW IS TIRED OF HOSTING THEM ,THEY WILL BE TURNED LOOSE ON THE STREET AGAIN!

According to ICE, It Was Really Nice To do Something Other Than Serve food & Change Diapers!

More than 240 undocumented immigrants from 21 countries were arrested by federal officials during a four-day sweep by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the Los Angeles area.
Officials announced Monday that the sweep ended Thursday with the arrest of 244 people — with the majority having at least one criminal conviction to their name.
ICE officials said 56 percent had criminal records that included felony convictions such as child sex crimes, weapons charges and drug violations. The rest had “significant or multiple misdemeanors.”
“This operation exemplifies ICE’s ongoing commitment to prioritizing convicted criminals and public safety threats for apprehension and removal,” said David Jennings, field office director for Enforcement and Removal Operations in a press release. “By taking these individuals off our streets and removing them from the country, we are making our communities safer for everyone.”
According to ICE, 191 of those arrested were originally from Mexico; there were also immigrants from Peru, Thailand, France, Ghana and many more countries from all over the globe.
Among those detained during the sweep was Vincente Onofre-Ramirez, a Mexican national convicted in 2002 for sexual abuse with force. After serving his sentence, he was deported back to his home country; however Onofre-Ramirez, 35, was found living in a home in Santa Ana, California.
The sweep was led by ICE’s National Fugitive Operations Program, which was originally formed to locate immigrants who failed to comply with a judge’s deportation order. Increasingly the program has been used to find immigrants with criminal convictions who have recently been let out of jail.
Not all of those arrested in the sweep were a violent felons, ICE said. Those who have deportations orders in place and those who re-entered the country after being deported will be immediately removed, while the rest will have the opportunity to plead their case before a judge.

1 comment:

  1. Some how I feel these number are way toooo low as this state is about 54% illegals.

    ReplyDelete