logo
Police were investigating if migrant was set up for threatening Trump well ahead of Noem's tweet

Police were investigating if migrant was set up for threatening Trump well ahead of Noem's tweet

Yahooa day ago

Investigators were working to understand if an undocumented migrant, Ramon Morales-Reyes, had been set up by letters threatening President Donald Trump's life several days before Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem publicized the claim that has turned Morales-Reyes' life upside down.
According to Milwaukee Police Department records obtained by CNN, investigators had spoken with Morales-Reyes on May 22 – the day he was arrested – about the potential of someone trying to get him deported. Police began investigating jailhouse phone calls from an individual who allegedly attacked Morales-Reyes. Noem tweeted out her accusation that Morales-Reyes threatened Trump on May 28.
Morales-Reyes was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents after they received one letter purportedly from Morales-Reyes threatening Trump, according to the police records.
The records say that Morales-Reyes gave ICE officers a handwritten note when he was arrested with his family information. Local investigators compared that note to the letter threatening Trump, and found they didn't match.
'This note depicted completely different handwriting than what is on the letters and envelopes,' the police records say.
Shortly after his arrest, a local police investigator asked Morales-Reyes whether he knew of anyone who would want to have him deported. He said he only knew of one person who he had an issue with: the man who allegedly assaulted him in 2023, the records state.
On Monday, the Milwaukee police began looking into calls made by that person from prison, where he is being held pending a trial in the case.
Then, on Wednesday, Noem claimed on social media that Morales-Reyes sent a letter threatening to kill Trump, all while investigators already believed he had been set up. Despite this, the letter, alongside pictures of Morales-Reyes, were plastered over social media by Noem, DHS and several news outlets.
Attorneys and local organizers held a news conference Friday in Milwaukee to call on DHS to issue a correction, adding that the family of the migrant has received threats in wake of the report.
'This false claim has now had the consequence that the family feels that their lives are being threatened,' Christine Neumann-Ortiz, executive director of Voces de la Frontera – an organization that assists undocumented immigrants – said Friday.
'They want his name cleared,' Neumann-Ortiz said, adding that Morales-Reyes' daughter has told the organization her father cannot speak or write in English and only became of aware of the allegations against him after seeing social media posts.
'He's a very humble person. Soft spoken,' Morales-Reyes' attorney Kime Abduli said, adding that he washes dishes for a living and is a hard worker who is focused on supporting several children. 'That's really been his motive in being here' in the US.
DHS has not responded to CNN's questions Friday about the police records or the request from Morales-Reyes' attorneys to change the social media posts.
On Thursday, in a statement to CNN, a senior DHS official said the investigation 'into the threat is ongoing.'
'Over the course of the investigation, this individual was determined to be in the country illegally and that he had a criminal record. He will remain in custody,' the official said.
Prison calls pulled by investigators and detailed in the police records – a process that started on Monday – show how another person, accused of attacking Morales-Reyes, discussed sending letters to government offices, including ICE, and wanted to have him deported prior to the case going to trial in July, preventing Morales-Reyes from ever testifying against him.
The person allegedly cut Morales-Reyes with a box cutter before robbing him of his bike in September 2023 and while the case is set to go to trial, it is unclear now if Morales-Reyes will be able to testify or will be deported from the country beforehand.
The calls obtained by investigators allegedly detail how the person had others search for government addresses, including the ICE office where the letter was received, and had them mail letters.
'With my armed robbery case, he's an illegal immigrant. Soon as ICE makes contact with him, he's getting deported,' the individual allegedly said on a May 3 call transcribed by police.
In a call in early April, the person said that because Trump is now in office it would be easy to have Reyes – whom he described as an 'illegal immigrant' who didn't 'know a lick of English' – deported.
'He outta there,' the person said in a phone call on May 1, according to police records. 'Once he have a run in with any ICE law enforcement. When he came to court he was scared to testify but even if you an illegal immigrant you can still testify but Trump wasn't in office but now Trump came in office, they deported any motherf**ker. They going into court houses, all that.'
On other calls, the person allegedly asked for the local ICE office's phone number and tried to have someone set up a three-way call with the office. (That effort was unsuccessful.) The person also allegedly asked for the address for the ICE office and Attorney General Pam Bondi.
'I sent a big manila envelope to mama's house. It either got there yesterday or – so, um, it's either gonna be there tomorrow or it already got there,' the person allegedly said on a phone call in April. 'It's two letters in there that's already written up, I just need you to put them in the mailbox for me. I just need them to be mailed out from the street and not from here.'
On a phone call the following day, the person said he would call back using another inmate's pin 'because the DA be listening to my calls,' the alleged assailant said.
'I got a plan,' he said, according to the records. 'I got a hell of a plan.'
CNN has reached out to the attorney who represents the man that allegedly attacked Morales-Reyes. As of Friday, there have been no additional charges against the man. The Milwaukee Police Department told CNN it is investigating an identity theft and victim intimidation incident related to the case.
Jeffrey J. Altenburg, chief deputy district attorney for the Milwaukee district attorney's office, said in an email Thursday the matter is under investigation.
Morales-Reyes is scheduled for a June 4 hearing in front of an immigration judge, his immigration attorney, Cain Oulahan, told CNN.
He had applied for a visa meant to protect undocumented migrants who were victims in a crime, allowing them to remain in the US while they are cooperating with authorities, the attorney said. Those visas, however, take years to get approved and the government only allows a limited number.
'It's really sort of up in the air whether he's going to be released or not,' Oulahan said.
'If he had a removal order, he would not be going to court,' Oulahan added. 'The government is not alleging that he was deported previously.'
Oulahan said that Morales-Reyes' status in the US 'doesn't change the fact that he is a victim' of a violent crime.
'The District Attorney has certified that he was a victim and is cooperating,' Oulahan said of the DA in Milwaukee, adding that there is a strong desire to clear Morales-Reyes's name from what appears 'to be completely false and fraudulent accusation against him.'
The arrest and subsequent publicity in this case, the attorney said, could end up harming undocumented migrants who are crime victims.
'It's going to have a chilling effect if people are not willing to come forward,' Oulahan said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What White House reportedly said about the future of Mark Carney's daughter at Harvard
What White House reportedly said about the future of Mark Carney's daughter at Harvard

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

What White House reportedly said about the future of Mark Carney's daughter at Harvard

As Harvard University remains the focus of the Trump administration's ire, the fate of its international students hangs in balance, including Cleo Carney, the daughter of the Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. A little over a week ago, the Trump administration cancelled Harvard's ability to enroll international students, leaving current foreign students to transfer to other colleges or risk losing their visa status. 'They have lost their Student and Exchange Visitor Program certification as a result of their failure to adhere to the law,' Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posted on X on May 22. 'Let this serve as a warning to all universities and academic institutions across the country.' In return, the university sued the administration and won its initial court fight. The university on its website notes: 'The May 29 court decision allows the University to continue enrolling international students and scholars while the case moves forward. Harvard will continue to take steps to protect the rights of our international students and scholars, members of our community who are vital to the University's academic mission and community — and whose presence here benefits our country immeasurably.' For the academic year 2024-2025, the Ivy League university had 6,793 international students enrolled. As for the Canadians at Harvard, the unofficial statistics of scholars and students on its various campus roughly has ranged between 600 to under 800 over the years. A first-year student, Cleo is pursuing bachelor's in economics at the prestigious university, one her father graduated from in 1987. After Justin Trudeau stepped down as Prime Minister, Cleo introduced her father as the newly elected party leader in March at the Liberal Convention in Ottawa. A sustainability REP for Harvard's Resource Efficiency Program, Cleo also serves as a board member for Bluedot Institute, a climate-focused non-profit. 'When she is not cooking or running,' reads her Harvard bio, 'she is talking about the need for increased investment in the strategic mining industry.' 'The White House confirmed Carney, along with other international students, would get the boot if the administration gets its way,' Gabrielle Fahmy for the New York Post wrote on Saturday. 'The President's goal is clear: we will put America first, and that means our policies on everything from trade to immigration should benefit Americans, not other nations at the expense of our people,' a senior administration official told the New York Post. National Post has reached out to the Prime Minister's Office for comment. As Cleo's return to Harvard in September remains undecided, the academic future of her siblings — Tess, Amelia and Sasha — less so. Sasha graduated from Yale University in 2023, Amelia reportedly from the University of Edinburgh last year, and Tess has noticeably stayed out of the public eye. Inside Mark Carney's PMO where ministers get called out, punctuality matters and patience is on short supply 'It's done': Trump's 51st state comments are 'behind us,' says U.S. ambassador to Canada Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.

Johanna Marie Caruso
Johanna Marie Caruso

Dominion Post

time2 hours ago

  • Dominion Post

Johanna Marie Caruso

Johanna Marie Caruso, 72, of Morgantown, WV, unexpectedly passed away at home last fall, October 13, 2024, from cardiac was a daughter of the late John A. and Marie C. was a 1970 graduate of Morgantown High School, as well as a graduate of West Virginia University with a BA, in German and Spanish and an MA and Ed.D in language education. She devoted her life to teaching for which she had a life-long a teacher at St. Francis High School, she was instrumental in obtaining a Blue Ribbon School award for St. Francis in 1994, where she and Sisters Patricia and Dorothy travelled to Washington D.C. to receive this distinctive honor from the President. She continued to teach Spanish and English at St. Francis High school and then St. Francis Central Catholic School until her retirement in 2019, whereby she continued her interests in substitute teaching for schools in the area. She taught for over forty years in public and private addition to her teaching, she cared deeply for animals in the area often who were rescues or strays, even providing shelter for is survived by her sister, Camille and brother-in-law, James Weiss of Salem, MA and her many wonderful friends and neighbors of whom her survivors are most appreciative.A memorial celebration of her life will be held at Hastings Funeral Home, 153 Spruce St., Morgantown, on Saturday, June 7, 2025, from 1 until the time of the service at 2:30 lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to St. Francis de Sales Central Catholic School, 41 Guthrie lane, Morgantown, WV 26508 and/or Animal Friends of North Central West Virginia, Dellslow, WV 26531. Hastings Funeral Home has been entrusted with arrangements and online condolences may be made to the family at

City of Hampton rejects designation as ‘sanctuary jurisdiction' by DHS
City of Hampton rejects designation as ‘sanctuary jurisdiction' by DHS

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

City of Hampton rejects designation as ‘sanctuary jurisdiction' by DHS

HAMPTON, Va. (WAVY) — The City of Hampton released a statement Saturday rejecting its designation as a 'sanctuary jurisdiction' by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. In the statement, Hampton referred to the classification as 'inaccurate and unsupported by city policy or practice.' The city added it has contacted regional officials to request an explanation. The announcement listed several other Virginia localities as 'sanctuary jurisdictions,' including Newport News, Portsmouth, Virginia Beach and Gloucester County. According to the DHS website, a 'sanctuary jurisdiction' is a city, county or state that is 'deliberately and shamefully obstructing the enforcement of federal immigration laws endangering American communities.' The website says so-called sanctuary jurisdictions are determined by factors like compliance with federal law enforcement, information restrictions and legal protections for undocumented immigrants. The City of Hampton's statement clarified that it has not adopted any ordinance, policy, or resolution identifying or establishing itself as a 'sanctuary city.' It noted Hampton is part of a regional jail system that houses detainees from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store