
ICE Arrests Cuban Man Convicted of Hijacking Plane in 2003
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
A man who hijacked a Cubana Airlines plane is among those recently taken into custody by federal immigration agents, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Adermis Wilson-Gonzalez, a 56-year-old Cuban national, hijacked a Cubana Airlines Antonov 24 aircraft carrying passengers from Cuba to Key West, Florida in 2003. He was convicted in the United States that year for the crime and spent nearly two decades in jail before being released in 2021.
Why It Matters
The arrest comes as President Donald Trump directs immigration authorities to arrests migrants without legal status as he looks to fulfill his promise of mass deportations. The White House has said anyone living in the country unlawfully is a "criminal."
What To Know
In the spring of 2003, Wilson-Gonzalez, armed with a grenade, attempted to direct the pilot to fly the plane from Cuba's Isle of Youth to Miami. Due to insufficient fuel to cross the Florida Straits, the pilot made an emergency landing at Jose Marti International Airport in Havana. After a 14-hour negotiation, Wilson-Gonzalez was detained and 22 passengers were permitted to disembark.
The aircraft resumed its flight to Key West, Florida, with 25 passengers and six crew members aboard, accompanied by U.S. fighter jets. No one was injured in the incident.
File photo shows ICE agent conducting enforcement operations. Inset shows Adermis Wilson-Gonzalez, a 56-year-old Cuban national, who hijacked a Cubana Airlines Antonov 24 aircraft carrying passengers from Cuba to Key West, Florida in 2003. He...
File photo shows ICE agent conducting enforcement operations. Inset shows Adermis Wilson-Gonzalez, a 56-year-old Cuban national, who hijacked a Cubana Airlines Antonov 24 aircraft carrying passengers from Cuba to Key West, Florida in 2003. He was convicted in the United States in 2003 for the crime and spent nearly two days in jail before being released in 2021. More
ICE/AP
Wilson-Gonzalez was one of 1,361 individuals arrested in the Houston area last month who had entered the United States illegally and are either facing criminal charges or have prior criminal convictions, ICE said.
Among those arrested were 32 individuals convicted of child sex offenses, nine convicted of homicide-related crimes, and 16 identified as members of transnational gangs or drug cartels, according to ICE.
ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Houston field office also apprehended Arnulfo Olivares Cervantes, a 47-year-old Mexican national and former member of the Mexicles gang who was arrested on June 13.
According to ICE, Olivares Cervantes has entered the United States illegally six times and has multiple convictions, including two for trafficking cocaine, as well as convictions for attempted murder, evading arrest, illegal entry, and drug possession.
Luis Pablo Vasquez-Estolano, 29, a Mexican national who has been deported six times, was arrested on June 10. Vasquez-Estolano has previous convictions for homicide, aggravated robbery, burglary of a vehicle, and drug possession, ICE said.
Jose Meza, a 40-year-old Mexican national, was arrested on June 24. ICE reported that Meza has illegally entered the U.S. four times and has been convicted of sexual assault of a minor and theft.
Javier Escobar Gonzalez, 51, also from Mexico, was arrested on June 23. According to ICE, Escobar Gonzalez has been convicted of sexual indecency with a minor, criminal trespass with a deadly weapon, driving while intoxicated, and unauthorized use of a firearm.
Police surround the hijacked AN-24 Cuban Airlines aircraft as it is refuelled Tuesday, April 1, 2003 at the Jose Marti Airport in Havana, Cuba. (AP Photo/Jose Goitia)
Police surround the hijacked AN-24 Cuban Airlines aircraft as it is refuelled Tuesday, April 1, 2003 at the Jose Marti Airport in Havana, Cuba. (AP Photo/Jose Goitia)
AP Photo/Jose Goitia
What People Are Saying
ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Houston acting Field Office Director Gabriel Martinez said in a statement: "Despite attempts by some to undermine our mission by spreading false and malicious rumors, the brave men and women of ICE continue to work tirelessly around the clock targeting dangerous criminal aliens to restore integrity to our nation's immigration system and bolster public safety in our communities."
"The number of dangerous criminal aliens that they removed from local communities across Southeast Texas last month is just another example of their selfless and unyielding efforts to return our local communities to places where we can all raise our families without having to worry about child predators, gang members, or other violent criminal aliens preying on our loved ones."
Adermis Wilson-Gonzalez, speaking after he completed his prison sentence for the hijacking, according to the Havana Times: "I have nothing to reproach the US government for, because I don't think their punishment was unjust. I committed a crime, they found me guilty of breaking the laws, and I served my time right up to the last day, with respect for this country. For the first time since I was born, I'm a free person, because in Cuba I was never free."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump officials vow to intensify immigration raids despite legal challenges, bad polls, public backlash
The Trump administration immigration sweeps that have roiled Southern California have shown no signs of slowing despite lawsuits, a court order and growing signs the aggressive actions are not popular with the public. The operations, which began in early June in the Los Angeles area, largely focused on small-scale targets like car washes, strip malls and Home Depot parking lots before authorities hit their biggest target last week — two farms for one of the largest cannabis companies in California. One worker died after falling from a greenhouse roof during the raid, while 361 others were arrested. Responding to the death, President Trump's chief border policy advisor Tom Homan called the situation "sad." "It's obviously unfortunate when there's deaths," he told CNN. "No one wants to see people die." "He wasn't in ICE custody," Homan said. "ICE did not have hands on this person." Read more: Details emerge about pot-farm immigration raid as worker dies Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said authorities plan to intensify immigration crackdowns thanks to more funding from the recently passed "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" spending plan from Congress. The budget bill infuses roughly $150 billion into Trump's immigration and border enforcement plans, including funding for ICE and Border Patrol staffing, building and operating immigrant detention facilities, and reimbursing states and local governments for immigration-related costs. "We're going to come harder and faster, and we're going to take these criminals down with even more strength than we ever have before," Noem said at a news conference over the weekend. Trump, she added, 'has a mandate from the American people to clean up our streets, to help make our communities safer.' But there are some signs that support might be slipping. A Gallup poll published this month shows that fewer Americans than in June 2024 back strict border enforcement measures and more now favor offering undocumented immigrants living in the country pathways to citizenship. The percentage of respondents who want immigration reduced dropped from 55% in 2024 to 30% in the current poll, reversing a years-long trend of rising immigration concerns. While the desire for less immigration has declined among all major political parties, the decrease among Republicans was significant — down 40% from last year. Among independents, the preference for less immigration is down 21%, and among Democrats it's down 12%, according to the poll. The poll also showed that a record-high 79% of adults consider immigration beneficial to the country and only 17% believe it is a negative, a record-low for the poll. Meanwhile, a Quinnipac University poll published in June indicate that 38% of voters approve of the way Trump is handling the presidency, while 54% disapprove. On immigration, 54% of those polled disapproved of Trump's handling of the issue and 56% disapprove of deportations. At the same time, growing legal challenges have threatened to hamper the Trump administration's efforts. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong, an appointee of President Biden, temporarily blocked federal agents in the Southland from using racial profiling to carry out immigration arrests after she found sufficient evidence that agents were using race, a person's job or their location, and their language to form "reasonable suspicion" — the legal standard needed to detain an individual. But the White House said it would appeal the ruling. "No federal judge has the authority to dictate immigration policy — that authority rests with Congress and the president," said Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman. "Enforcement operations require careful planning and execution; skills far beyond the purview or jurisdiction of any judge. We expect this gross overstep of judicial authority to be corrected on appeal." The sweeps have resulted in a wave of other lawsuits challenging the Trump administration. Amid the legal battles, there are also signs of upheaval within the federal government. Reuters reported on Monday that the Justice Department unit charged with defending legal challenges to the administration's policies, including restricting birthright citizenship, has lost nearly two-thirds of its staff. The administration has also faced scrutiny from Democrats and activists over its handling of last week's raids at the marijuana cultivation farms, which were part of a legal and highly regulated industry in California. 'It was disproportionate, overkill,' said Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Santa Barbara) of the operation. Read more: Central Coast pot operation becomes site of massive immigration spectacle Rep. Jimmy Gomez (D-Los Angeles) criticized Trump for targeting immigrant farmworkers as the administration continues to publicly state that their targets are those with criminal records. "How many MS-13 gang members are waking up at 3 a.m. to pick strawberries? O'yeah, zero! Trump said he'd go after 'bad hombres,' but he's targeting the immigrant farm workers who feed America. Either he lied — or he can't tell the difference," Gomez wrote on X. The White House clapped back in a post on X: "That ain't produce, holmes. THAT'S PRODUCT." Over the weekend, Jaime Alanís Garcia, 57, the cannabis farmworker who was gravely injured after he fell off a roof amid the mayhem of the Camarillo raid, was taken off life support, according to his family. Alanís' family said he was fleeing immigration agents at the Glass House Farms cannabis operation in Camarillo on Thursday when he climbed atop a greenhouse and accidentally fell 30 feet, suffering catastrophic injury. The Department of Homeland Security said Alanís was not among those being pursued. His niece announced his death Saturday on a GoFundMe page, which described him as a husband and father and the family's sole provider. The page had raised more than $158,000 by Monday morning, well over its initial $50,000 goal. 'They took one of our family members. We need justice,' the niece wrote. Times staff writers Brittny Mejia, Rachel Uranga, Dakota Smith and Jeanette Marantos contributed to this report. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
ICE employee brought to emergency room after alleged doxxing in California
FIRST ON FOX: The Immigration and Customs Enforcement employee DHS says was doxxed by Rep. Salud Carbajal was taken to the emergency room on Thursday for stitches after a rock was thrown at him, causing his hand to bleed, according to new pictures from the department. The ICE Public Affairs specialist, who DHS said had his business card shown to the mob protesting the raid by the congressman, had a rock thrown at him, which caused injury to his left hand. Images show the bloodied hand before and after the incident. The farm was the subject of a criminal search warrant by federal immigration authorities. "The actions by Representative Carbajal are downright un-American. He dares to claim that his actions were simply congressional oversight, but doxxing ICE personnel and inciting a mob of rioters to attack law enforcement is NOT oversight—it's abominable," Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement. "His actions sent an ICE employee to the emergency room. It's no wonder that ICE agents are facing a 700% increase in assaults when radical members of Congress like Salud Carbajal and Monica McIver are openly encouraging and leading their supporters in assaulting law enforcement," McLaughlin continued. The incident took place at a massive riot that broke out as ICE conducted operations at a California marijuana farm in Carpinteria, which resulted in 361 arrests of those in the country illegally. DHS said it rescued 14 migrant children who may have been victims of trafficking, forced labor and exploitation. A child labor investigation is ongoing at the federal level. DHS said there were 500 rioters at the incident, as operations in the Golden State have been subject to major protests and riots in recent weeks. Meanwhile, Carbajal slammed the doxxing allegations in an X post on Sunday. "This is a blatant attempt to distort what occurred in Carpinteria. DHS and ICE conducted their raid using a disturbing and disproportionate level of force, both on the farm workers they were targeting and the peaceful protesters who gathered to defend their neighbors," he posted to X. "I witnessed agents, in full military gear, fire smoke canisters and other projectiles into a crowd of peaceful civilians. Just before I arrived at the scene, witnesses told me the agents threw a stun grenade into the crowd. Several civilians were injured, including a child," the congressman continued. "This aggressive behavior in a normally quiet part of the Central Coast sparked alarm across our community, prompting a flood of calls and messages to my office from concerned citizens. I went to the scene to seek answers and represent my constituents. ICE's claims of 'doxxing' and 'violent mobs' are familiar deflection tactics designed to distort public perception and to evade accountability for their aggressive actions in our community," he added. The company that operates the facility, Glass House Farms, said they "never knowingly violated applicable hiring practices and does not and has never employed minors." Two of the company's leaders, Kyle Kazan and Graham Farrar, previously donated to Carbajal's congressional campaign, as recently as 2022 in Farrar's case, according to Federal Election Commission records.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
LI fire chief allegedly storms pol's office, dares staff to ‘call ICE' after being accused of helping feds target migrants
The fire chief in Long Island's largest Latino community allegedly stormed into a local lawmaker's office and dared his staff to 'call ICE' — days after the pol accused him of aiding migrant crackdowns. Democratic state Assemblyman Phil Ramos apparently sparked the showdown when he accused Brentwood's fire officials last week of aiding the feds in their local immigration raids, with ICE spotted setting up a makeshift base in the parking lot of one of the department's fire stations. 5 Phil Ramos sparked the showdown when he accused Brentwood's fire officials last week of aiding the feds in their local immigration raids. Assemblyman Phil Ramos/Facebook Advertisement Ramos' public chastising then allegedly led Brentwood Fire Chief Bryant Figueroa to storm the politician's office Thursday night. The pol said Figueroa was 'trespassing' and trying to intimidate him by barging into his private office uninvited and daring staff to call law enforcement and the feds as they tried to stop him. 'Chief Bryant Figueroa stormed into my office unannounced, ignoring repeated instructions from my staff not to go beyond the public space — instead, he trespassed and entered my private office,' Ramos said in a statement. Advertisement 5 Ramos' public chastising then allegedly led Brentwood Fire Chief Bryant Figueroa to storm the politician's office Thursday night. Assemblyman Phil Ramos/Facebook 'When asked to leave and told again that he was not allowed in that part of the office, he responded defiantly with the words: 'Then call the police. Call ICE.' ' Ramos said Figueroa 'forcibly entered' his private office and slammed an envelope on his desk containing the department's revocation of the lawmaker's honorary 'chief' title along with notice that his name will be removed from the walls of the East Brentwood Fire House in Suffolk County. 5 The pol said Figueroa was 'trespassing' and trying to intimidate him by barging into his private office uninvited and daring staff to call law enforcement. East Brentwood Fire Department Advertisement 'Rather than standing with us during a difficult time, your words and actions have fueled public mistrust and endangered the safety and reputation of those who serve selflessly and without political motive,' said the fire chief's letter, which was obtained by The Post. 'We expect our community leaders, especially those we have honored with the title of Honorary Chief, to stand shoulder to shoulder with us in times of crisis and controversy–not to cast blame or sow division. Your recent conduct does not reflect the values we uphold or the brotherhood and sisterhood we share in the fire service.' 5 The press release from the East Brentwood Fire Department addressing accusations of helping federal agents target immigrants. East Brentwood Fire Department Brentwood Fire did not respond to a request for comment on the chief's alleged storming of Ramos' office. Advertisement The department previously denied any knowledge or allowance of ICE's operations to take place in its parking lot. A now-viral video shows masked agents and unmarked cars recently setting up shop at the fire house. Despite the department's and firefighters' denial, Ramos has remained unconvinced and insisted that leaders such as Figueroa gave ICE the green light to operate out of the parking lot. 5 Brentwood Fire did not respond to a request for comment on the chief's alleged storming of Ramos' office. Assemblyman Phil Ramos/Facebook Just days before the chief's alleged office storming, Ramos led a protest outside the fire house that ICE was spotted at. Ramos, a former police officer who once sued his own department for civil-rights violations, said the fire department's leadership is 'out of touch with the diverse community it serves' — and accused Figueroa of crossing the line from professional disagreement into personal retaliation. He's now calling for accountability and warning that the fight is far from over. 'I will not be intimidated, I will not be silenced, nor will our community stand for gestapo-like tactics from a fire department that is in urgent need of volunteers,' Ramos said. 'I'll continue to stand up for my community and shine the light of justice wherever it may lead.'