308 down…
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 01:34 last edited by
Light up the scoreboard!
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:02 last edited by
I want to hear more about this guy.
He was already here at 10?
ERO busted Miguel Andres-Mateo, 20, from Guatemala, in Cornelia, Georgia, outside Atlanta. Andres-Mateo had previously been convicted for driving under the influence and was previously ordered removed from the US in 2014 by an immigration judge. He, too, will remain in ICE custody pending removal from the country.
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:03 last edited by
Well, it's a start ...
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:04 last edited by jon-nyc
This one also left me with questions. What are the mechanics involved in deporting someone to a country we don’t have relations with? It’s not like you put him on the next American Airlines flight with Marshall assigned to him. Do we rely on third-nation help?
Jose Barco-Chirino, a Venezuelan national, was taken into custody at Colorado State Prison in Canon City, Colo., where he was serving time after being convicted of attempted murder, extreme indifference and felony menacing with a real or simulated weapon.
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I want to hear more about this guy.
He was already here at 10?
ERO busted Miguel Andres-Mateo, 20, from Guatemala, in Cornelia, Georgia, outside Atlanta. Andres-Mateo had previously been convicted for driving under the influence and was previously ordered removed from the US in 2014 by an immigration judge. He, too, will remain in ICE custody pending removal from the country.
wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:07 last edited byI want to hear more about this guy.
He was already here at 10?
ERO busted Miguel Andres-Mateo, 20, from Guatemala, in Cornelia, Georgia, outside Atlanta. Andres-Mateo had previously been convicted for driving under the influence and was previously ordered removed from the US in 2014 by an immigration judge. He, too, will remain in ICE custody pending removal from the country.
Possible, I suppose. Regardless, he was ordered out of the country 10 years ago.
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:09 last edited by
Well he’s 20 now, so yeah he was 10 when ordered out. I’m curious when he came. And when was the DUI?
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Well he’s 20 now, so yeah he was 10 when ordered out. I’m curious when he came. And when was the DUI?
wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:16 last edited by -
wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:17 last edited by
When was the last time you interacted with a 10 year old? They usually don’t initiate international travel on their own.
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This one also left me with questions. What are the mechanics involved in deporting someone to a country we don’t have relations with? It’s not like you put him on the next American Airlines flight with Marshall assigned to him. Do we rely on third-nation help?
Jose Barco-Chirino, a Venezuelan national, was taken into custody at Colorado State Prison in Canon City, Colo., where he was serving time after being convicted of attempted murder, extreme indifference and felony menacing with a real or simulated weapon.
wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:21 last edited byWhat are the mechanics involved in deporting someone to a country we don’t have relations with? It’s not like you put him on the next American Airlines flight with Marshall assigned to him. Do we rely on third-nation help?
I ws thinking the same thing. You have to clear with the ingoing country that it is okay. What if they refuse? "We dont want a murder back in our country!!"
or maybe someone will not say where they are from? What do you do with them?
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:23 last edited by
Most of the people would have applied for some kind of asylum and therefore would have had to give info and documentation of some sort.
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 02:35 last edited by
Teach em to skydive and out they go.
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 15:21 last edited by
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 16:04 last edited by
@taiwan_girl said in 308 down…:
What you’re missing is that these were specifically 308 charged with criminal cases beyond being illegally in the country. Your chart includes them but is not limited to them. As roughly 8-10% of migrant encounters are with criminals, that means the average is 24-30 per day. I’d say a 10X increase is significant…
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 17:00 last edited by
Seen on X...
"Took no time at all for ICE to locate illegal aliens wanted for armed robbery, assault with a deadly weapon, and those who have committed rape.
Allowing them to be out on the streets was a policy choice."
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 19:02 last edited by
I wonder how much low hanging fruit there is. How many do the feds know about and know their location? At some point they’ll exhaust those and it’ll get harder. But I don’t know if that number is 1000 or 100,000
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I wonder how much low hanging fruit there is. How many do the feds know about and know their location? At some point they’ll exhaust those and it’ll get harder. But I don’t know if that number is 1000 or 100,000
wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 19:25 last edited byI wonder how much low hanging fruit there is. How many do the feds know about and know their location? At some point they’ll exhaust those and it’ll get harder. But I don’t know if that number is 1000 or 100,000
I think you’ll also find ancillary pickups. When you go into a house and arrest an MS13 member, you’ll likely find 2-3 more.
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wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 19:35 last edited by
They just raided an Immigration Attorney’s office in Providence…
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They just raided an Immigration Attorney’s office in Providence…
wrote on 23 Jan 2025, 19:39 last edited by@LuFins-Dad said in 308 down…:
They just raided an Immigration Attorney’s office in Providence…
Uh oh