logo
Officials arrest 1 of 2 detainees still missing from New Jersey immigration facility

Officials arrest 1 of 2 detainees still missing from New Jersey immigration facility

Independent8 hours ago

One of the two detainees still missing after escaping from a New Jersey federal immigration detention center has been arrested, the FBI said Tuesday.
Franklin Norberto Bautista-Reyes, from Honduras, has been taken into custody, FBI spokesperson Amy Thoreson said in an email. Andres Felipe Pineda-Mogollon, from Colombia, is still missing from Thursday night's escape, the bureau said.
Bautista-Reyes and Pineda-Mogollon and two other men busted out of the Delaney Hall detention center in Newark during reports of disorder there by breaking through a wall and escaping from a parking lot, according to U.S. Sen. Andy Kim, a New Jersey Democrat, and Homeland Security officials.
All four men were in the country illegally and had been charged by local police in New Jersey and New York City, federal officials said.
Bautista-Reyes was charged in May with aggravated assault, attempt to cause bodily injury, terroristic threats and a weapon crime. Pineda-Mogollon, from Colombia, was charged with minor larceny and burglary crimes.
The details surrounding Bautista-Reyes' capture were not immediately clear. Messages seeking information were sent to the FBI and the Homeland Security Department, which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The FBI on Monday had increased the reward for information leading to their arrest to $25,000 from $10,000.
Joel Enrique Sandoval-Lopez, one of the other fugitives, was taken into custody in Passaic, New Jersey, on Friday, the day after the escape in nearby Newark. Then, on Sunday, Joan Sebastian Castaneda-Lozada surrendered to federal authorities in Milleville, New Jersey. Sandoval-Lopez, from Honduras, was charged with unlawful possession of a handgun in October and aggravated assault in February, officials said. Castaneda-Lozada, from Colombia, was charged with burglary, theft and conspiracy, authorities said.
A message seeking comment on behalf of the men was left Tuesday with the New Jersey public defender's office. It's unclear who may be representing the men.
Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, a Democrat who's been critical of President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown, cited reports of a possible uprising and escape after disorder broke out at the facility Thursday night and protesters outside the center locked arms and pushed against barricades as vehicles passed through gates. Much is still unclear about what unfolded there.
But GEO Group, the company that owns and operates the detention facility for the federal government, said in a statement that there was 'no widespread unrest' at the facility.
Delaney Hall has been the site of clashes this year between Democratic officials who say the facility needs more oversight and the Trump administration and those who run the facility.
Baraka was arrested May 9, handcuffed and charged with trespassing. The charge was later dropped and U.S. Democratic Rep. LaMonica McIver was later charged with assaulting federal officers stemming from a skirmish that happened outside the facility. She has denied the charges.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

FBI Director Kash Patel feeds 2020 election conspiracy theories with documents about unverified tip
FBI Director Kash Patel feeds 2020 election conspiracy theories with documents about unverified tip

NBC News

time2 hours ago

  • NBC News

FBI Director Kash Patel feeds 2020 election conspiracy theories with documents about unverified tip

WASHINGTON — FBI Director Kash Patel said this week the bureau had shared "alarming" — but unsubstantiated — allegations about manipulation of the 2020 election with a Republican member of Congress. "The FBI has located documents which detail alarming allegations related to the 2020 U.S. election, including allegations of interference by the CCP," Patel wrote, referring to the Chinese Communist Party. "I have immediately declassified the material and turned the documents over to the Chairman Grassley for further review." Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The unsubstantiated claim promoted by Patel, which an unidentified confidential human source gave to the FBI in 2020, during President Donald Trump's first term, asserts that the Chinese mass-produced driver's licenses to be used in a mail-in ballot scheme. Patel linked to an article written by John Solomon, whom Trump appointed alongside Patel in 2022 to represent him before the National Archives and Records Administration on matters related to his presidential records. The article Patel promoted mentioned that U.S. Customs and Border Protection has seized fake licenses that were arriving mostly from China and Hong Kong around the time the FBI received the tip about the election plot. According to a 2020 news release from CBP, most of the seized licenses 'were for college-age students,' a population that has historically sought licenses with fake birthdays so underage students can get into bars and purchase alcohol. No evidence of widespread or systemic voter fraud affecting the 2020 election has been found, despite allegations promoted by Trump and his allies since he lost that year's presidential race. The FBI did not comment beyond Patel's post, referring questions to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Grassley sent a letter Tuesday asking Patel for additional information about how the intelligence information report was handled. Patel and Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino have faced increased pressure from the online right to bring more drastic change to the bureau — and at a time when they have been debunking some of the conspiracy theories they promoted when they were conservative commentators. A former senior FBI official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the bureau produces hundreds of reports every day based on such tips, which do not always pan out. Sometimes they are recalled or edited for a number of reasons, the former FBI official said. Those reasons could be that agents found the information to be false or that the sources of the information had been discredited. A second former senior FBI official, who also asked not to be named, said they were not familiar with the report but said both the Chinese and the Russian governments have spread false claims about fake ballots to aggravate divisions between Americans. The second former FBI official suggested that Patel share 'the information with both Republicans and Democrats so there can be a balanced look and heal the country instead of causing more distrust and discontent playing into the hands of our foreign enemies.' Rick Hasen, an election law expert, said that Patel's post "might feed the MAGA base" but that what he was promoting was an uncorroborated story of unknown origin "with no evidence that anything actually happened, and certainly no evidence that any ballots were cast or illegal voters were even registered to vote using state identifications." Hasen said there has long been a "cottage industry of people" making false or vastly exaggerated claims of election fraud or portraying administrative errors as acts of malice. While there are occasionally instances of voting fraud, Hasen added, they tend to be isolated and small.

‘It's time to wake up': Padilla recounts being handcuffed at Noem briefing in emotional speech
‘It's time to wake up': Padilla recounts being handcuffed at Noem briefing in emotional speech

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘It's time to wake up': Padilla recounts being handcuffed at Noem briefing in emotional speech

Alex Padilla took to the Senate floor on Tuesday to deliver a deeply personal speech, formally entering into the congressional record his account of being restrained and forcibly removed as he attempted to ask a question at a press conference held by the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, in Los Angeles last week. In emotional remarks, Padilla described the encounter that he hoped would serve as a 'wake up call' for Americans – a warning, he said, of how quickly democratic norms can slip away when dissent is silenced and power is unchecked. 'If that is what the administration is willing to do to a United States senator for having the authority to simply ask a question,' Padilla said, 'imagine what they'll do to any American who dares to speak up'. In his floor speech, Padilla said he was in Los Angeles to conduct congressional oversight of the administration's escalating immigration operations in the city. He was at the federal building that morning for a scheduled briefing with US northern command's General Gregory Guillot about the president's order to deploy US marines to the city as part of its response to protests against immigration raids that left Latino communities shaken and afraid. When he arrived, Padilla said that he was met at the building's entrance by a national guardsman and an FBI agent. He was then escorted through a security screening and into the conference room where the briefing would take place. When he learned Noem was holding a press conference 'literally down the hall' – and that it was the reason his own briefing was delayed – Padilla said he asked to attend. He and his colleagues had many outstanding information requests about the department's immigration enforcement tactics, and he said he hoped he might learn something from the secretary. 'I didn't just stand up and go – I asked,' he said. According to Padilla, the guardsman and FBI agent then 'escorted' him into the room where Noem was giving remarks to reporters. 'They opened the door for me. They accompanied me into the press briefing room, and they stood next to me as I stood there for a while listening,' he said. When Noem declared that the federal law enforcement and military personnel would 'liberate' Los Angeles from its Democratic governor and mayor – what Padilla called an 'un-American mission statement' – he said he could no longer remain silent. 'I was compelled, both as a senator and as an American, to speak up,' the senator said. 'But before I could even get out my question, I was physically and aggressively forced out of the room, even as I repeatedly announced I was a United States senator, and I had a question for the secretary, and even as the national guardsmen and the FBI agent who served as my escorts brought me into that press briefing room, stood by silently, knowing full well who I was.' He was dragged into a hallway and forced onto the ground, Padilla recalled, his voice catching as he described being forced onto his knees and then his chest pressed into the ground. 'I was handcuffed and marched down a hallway repeatedly asking, 'Why am I being detained?' Not once did they tell me why?' he said. 'I pray you never have a moment like this.' As this was happening, Padilla said his thoughts turned to his family: 'What will my wife think? What will our boys think?' And then to his constituents – those in a city already on edge, militarized against the wishes of the governor and local enforcement – how would they react when they saw the images of their US senator – the first Latino elected to the chamber from California – in handcuffs. When asked about Padilla's removal during the press conference, Noem said she didn't recognize the two-term senator and said he hadn't requested a meeting. Noem and Padilla met for for 15 minutes following the incident, according to DHS. The FBI has said its agents believed Padilla was an attacker and responded appropriately. They blamed the senator for not wearing a pin identifying him as a member of Congress. The Guardian's requests for comment from the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Defense, the National Guard and the Secret Service were not immediately returned. In a statement on Tuesday, the White House dismissed Padilla's floor speech as a 'temper tantrum'. 'Alex 'Pay Attention to Me' Padilla is bouncing from one desperate ploy for attention to the next,' said White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson, adding: 'Whether or not Democrats like it, the American people support President Trump's agenda to deport illegal aliens.' But Padilla, who noted he has never had a reputation as a 'flame-thrower', challenged his colleagues in both parties to consider what the episode revealed about the state of American democracy. 'If you watched what unfolded last week and thought what happened is just about one politician and one press conference you're missing the point,' he said. Democrats and some Republicans condemned the incident. But administration officials – and many Republicans – blamed Padilla, with the House speaker Mike Johnson suggesting he should be censured for his actions. Padilla accused Trump of being a 'tyrant' who had ordered National Guard troops and US marines into Los Angeles to 'justify his undemocratic crackdowns and his authoritarian power grabs'. He said Trump was surrounded by 'yes men' and a pliant Congress who refused to reign in the president tries everything to 'test the boundaries of his power'. 'If Donald Trump can bypass the governor and activate the National Guard to put down protests on immigrant rights, he can do it to suppress your rights too,' he continued. 'If he can deploy the Marines to Los Angeles without justification, he can deploy them to your state too. And if you can ignore due process, strip away first amendment rights and disappear people to foreign prisons without their day in court, he can do it to you too.' Padilla, the 'proud' son of Mexican immigrants, warned that what is happening in his state could spread nationwide. 'I refuse to let immigrants be political pawns on his path towards fascism,' he said. He described the situation in California as a 'test case' for what could happen to 'any American anywhere in the country'. As Padilla spoke in Washington, images emerged from New York where Brad Lander, the city's comptroller and a candidate for mayor, had been arrested by masked federal agents as he visited an immigration court. 'It's time to wake up,' Padilla said, urging Americans to continue to peacefully protest the administration. 'If this administration is this afraid of just one senator with a question … imagine what the voices of tens of billions of Americans peacefully protesting can do.' The Democrats in the chamber erupted in applause.

EXCLUSIVE Brit mum, 32, thrown in Turkish jail 'with hundreds of men' and hit with £15k bill after smashing hotel shower screen while drunkenly celebrating boyfriend's new veneers
EXCLUSIVE Brit mum, 32, thrown in Turkish jail 'with hundreds of men' and hit with £15k bill after smashing hotel shower screen while drunkenly celebrating boyfriend's new veneers

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Brit mum, 32, thrown in Turkish jail 'with hundreds of men' and hit with £15k bill after smashing hotel shower screen while drunkenly celebrating boyfriend's new veneers

A British mum has been held in Turkey for the last six weeks and hit with a £15,000 bill after smashing a hotel shower screen following a drunken night out to celebrate her boyfriend's new teeth. Georgia Harrison, 32, was arrested alongside partner Arron Tighe, 32, after trying to leave the Lexia Hotel in Antalya, Turkey, on May 7. The day before Georgia and Arron, from Rochdale, Greater Manchester, had downed cocktails and vodka and lemonades during a boozy night out to toast his new £2,000 full veneers. Cleaner Georgia says she made 'the worst mistake of my life' that night by mixing booze with antipsychotic medication which caused her to black out and 'throw things around' in the room, shattering a full length glass bathroom screen. She said: 'It's driving me insane, I feel like I have got no way out of here. 'I know I did wrong and I regret being so stupid to have damaged the hotel, but I need to get home to my daughter. 'I just feel so weak and I'm getting nowhere, it's killing me. 'I understand I have done wrong but I'm not a bank robber or a drug smuggler - I made a stupid mistake, I don't even remember doing it, but I have done all I can to fix it.' When they woke up after breaking the glass the couple panicked and tried to catch a taxi to the airport but the car was chased by hotel staff and surrounded before they were arrested by the police. They were held in a police cell for several days, questioned without a lawyer, accused of resisting arrest because she refused to answer questions. They were later hauled before a judge and banned from leaving the country until they pay the hotel £15,000 - a sum she doesn't have. They contacted the British Embassy who said they couldn't help lift the ban and advised them to find a lawyer. They paid £2,500 to one who promised to get the ban lifted but six weeks later they are still unable to leave. Mum-of-one Georgia says she is heartbroken when daughter Poppy, 12, keeps calling to ask her when she is coming home and has launched a GoFundMe appeal to help pay the bill so she can fly home. She estimates she has had to spend a further £7,000 on hotels, taxis and living expenses while detained in Turkey and is close to running out of money. In desperation to get back to her daughter she has even tried to book another flight and catch a boat to Greece to escape but was stopped each time when her passport was checked. She said: 'It's heartbreaking, she doesn't understand why I can't come home. Sometimes I think I'm never going to get back to her.' On the GoFundMe page, Georgia wrote: 'I feel so ashamed writing this but my daughter needs me and this is my only hope. 'I feel like giving up but that's not me, yet I also feel so lucky to be alive. 'I put all faith in my lawyer giving him my power of attorney but l'm getting nowhere. I'm losing everything slowly, even my will to live. 'I just need to get home to my baby and my dog. I don't understand how such a stupid mistake has led me here. 'It is illegal for them to keep me here and I've no option but to start telling my story.'

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