Texas gang members sentenced for human smuggling after high-speed border chases
A Monday statement by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said the two human smugglers, Juan Miguel Regalado, 28, and Samuel Grajeda Jr., 21, are members of "Puro Tango Blast," a local Texas gang.
The two were sentenced on May 15 after being convicted of conspiracy to transport undocumented immigrants, following an investigation by ICE, U.S. Border Patrol Laredo Sector and the Texas Department of Public Safety.
U.S. District Judge John Kazen imposed a 66-month sentence for Regalado, while Grajeda previously received a 30-month imprisonment as well as a consecutive six months for violating the terms of his supervised release for a previous alien transporting conviction. Both must also serve three years of supervised release.
Both men admitted to involvement in the human smuggling conspiracy.
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According to the ICE statement, the investigation began April 20, 2024, when a group of suspected illegal aliens entered a green Tahoe in a sector of the border just north of Laredo, Texas.
The statement said that Regalado was driving and led law enforcement on a high-speed chase, during which "multiple individuals jumped out of the vehicle."
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Driving up to 100 miles per hour, Regalado crashed the Tahoe into the Rio Grande and then proceeded to escape by swimming across the river to Mexico.
Authorities continued to monitor the area over the next several months. In November 2024, another group of illegal aliens entered a white Ford Taurus parked in the area. Authorities followed the vehicle until another vehicle, a black Mercedes, cut them off. ICE said that the two vehicles were driven by Grajeda and Regalado.
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A traffic stop of the Ford Taurus led to another vehicle pursuit in which Grajeda crashed into a bystander's vehicle. Law enforcement eventually discovered the Ford Taurus abandoned in a north Laredo neighborhood. Authorities then found four illegal aliens and Grajeda and Regalado within the vicinity of the abandoned vehicle.
Both gang members are currently in custody.
Craig Larrabee, ICE Homeland Security Investigations San Antonio Special Agent in Charge, said that "these sentences reflect the serious consequences awaiting those who engage in human smuggling and endanger public safety."
Larrabee said that "Tango Blast gang members put countless lives at risk during these reckless pursuits" and that "through strong collaboration with our federal and state law enforcement partners, we remain committed to dismantling violent criminal organizations and protecting our communities."Original article source: Texas gang members sentenced for human smuggling after high-speed border chases
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The Hill
42 minutes ago
- The Hill
DC officials say Trump crackdown is about immigration, power
Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) and other officials in Washington, D.C., say the Trump administration's crime crackdown is really about exerting power and elevating immigration enforcement — not making D.C. safer. While top Trump officials say the high-profile deployments have had the immediate effect of stifling crime in the District, local critics are raising questions about both the geographic placement of National Guard troops and federal officers — who have been most prominent in tourist hotspots and other wealthier parts of the city — and the focus of the criminal crackdown. Of the 556 arrests tallied by the White House since it began increasing federal law enforcement presence on Aug. 7, nearly half of the arrests,233, have been classified by the administration as illegal aliens, a White House official said Tuesday. 'I think it makes the point that this is not about D.C. crime,' Bowser said earlier in the week, adding that the administration should be transparent about its intent. 'Nobody is against focusing on driving down any level of violence,' Bowser said. 'And so if this is really about immigration enforcement, the administration should make that plain.' The list of those arrested includes immigrants with alleged criminal histories of assault, kidnapping, burglary and larceny, the White House official said. But it also includes delivery drivers arrested as they tried to pick up food from commercial venues, sparking a backlash from human rights advocates and some D.C. residents. Fueling the criticisms, the highest profile arrest to date was that of a Justice Department employee accused of throwing a sandwich at an agent of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection in a section of the city best known for its vibrant nightlife. Other high-profile or viral encounters have largely centered on immigration. Video captured at least five masked agents who refused to answer questions about what agency they were with as they used a stun gun on a delivery driver before placing the man in an unmarked vehicle. When an onlooker said the officers were ruining the country, one federal agent responded 'liberals already ruined it.' In another case, a man captured video of his delivery driver as he was detained just minutes away, arrested by officers after the Arabic speaker was apparently unable to answer questions posed by officers. The apparent focus on immigration has prompted protests around the city. In one high-profile example, video from Tuesday shows a crowd in the Columbia Heights neighborhood marching behind a group of ICE agents and chanting 'ICE go home' until the agents reach their vehicles and leave the area. The following day, the administration pushed back against the demonstrations, dispatching Vice President Vance, White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to Union Station, the transportation hub where National Guard troops have been stationed for days. Vance touted the National Guard presence as 'a great example of what's possible when you actually have the political willpower to bring law and order and common decency back to the public spaces of the United States of America,' while Miller railed against 'stupid white hippies' protesting the crackdown. Some Democrats say the president has launched the tough-on-crime effort merely to deflect attention away from the ongoing saga surrounding Jeffrey Epstein, the late financier and convicted sex offender who had past ties to Trump and his elite social circle in South Florida. 'Trump is using DC as a stage and DC residents as props in a political play to distract from his Epstein problem,' Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) posted on X. 'This is unacceptable.' Charles Allen, a D.C. councilmember, cast the takeover as a way to assert control and distract from problems within the Trump presidency. 'Authoritarianism, power, and control — what this has all been about — made plain,' he wrote on X last week. 'It might make sense if he's trying to create compelling TV and distract folks from the real scandals he's facing, but it doesn't make our city safer & it's a dangerous abuse of power and authority,' he added later. Announcing his D.C.-crime crackdown earlier in the month, Trump said it was necessary to combat levels of crime in Washington he portrayed as dystopian. The surge in federal forces would 'rescue our nation's capital from crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor, and worse,' he said. But during that announcement, Trump repeatedly turned to the topic of immigration. 'This city will no longer be a sanctuary for illegal alien criminals,' he said. 'We will have full, seamless, integrated cooperation at all levels of law enforcement, and we'll deploy officers across the district with an overwhelming presence.' Initially, the administration deployed 800 unarmed National Guard troops, on top of hundreds of other officers across a host of agencies like the FBI, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Since then, the numbers have grown dramatically, with six GOP-led states sending their National Guard forces to D.C. at the request of the administration, bringing the total to nearly 2,000 various law enforcement officers patrolling D.C. Additionally, the Guard members will begin carrying weapons, according to numerous reports. During a press briefing on Wednesday, Bowser made clear that she doesn't support the surge of military troops. 'I don't think the National Guard should be used for law enforcement,' she said. 'Calling women from their homes and their jobs and their families — they have to be used on mission-specific items that benefit the nation. I don't think you have an armed militia in the nation's capital.' The D.C. Police Union, which says it represents 3,000 of the city's law enforcement officers, has hailed the arrival of the federal reinforcements as a necessary step in combating violent crime in the nation's capital. The union posted numbers on Monday indicating that crime in D.C. plummeted in the first week after Trump announced the law enforcement surge, versus the week prior. Violent crimes, the group said, were down 22 percent over that span, while all crimes were down 8 percent. Carjackings saw the greatest change, down 83 percent. 'At the direction of @POTUS, our nation's capital is a SAFER place — and we are just getting started,' U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi posted Tuesday on X. Bondi said the surge has led to the seizure of 76 guns, including nine on Monday night alone. On Wednesday, Bondi promoted a new campaign from the U.S. Marshals Office offering a $500 reward for information leading to an arrest during the federal surge. 'Together, we will make DC safe again!' she wrote. Violent crime in D.C., which saw a large spike during the COVID pandemic, has since plummeted even long before Trump's policing campaign, however, raising questions about the true effectiveness of the federal surge. Offenses related to carjackings, for example, fell from 319 through the first eight months of 2024 to 190 over the same span this year, according to D.C.'s Metropolitan Police Department. Given those trends, Trump's critics see a more menacing campaign, warning that the militarization of Washington's streets brings with it an authoritarian air that's quickly damaged certain businesses. That includes restaurants, which saw a plunge in reservations in the days after the administration's law enforcement takeover. 'The whole region understands that oppression of people in Washington hurts everybody who lives in our region,' Rep. Jamie Raskin (Md.), the senior Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, told MSNBC on Tuesday. 'We don't want to see people's rights being trampled there.' The crackdown comes as D.C. Police officers have been under pressure to do more to assist federal officers with immigration enforcement. D.C. police have traditionally sought to bar its officers from taking actions based solely on immigration status if someone doesn't otherwise have a criminal warrant out for their arrest. But in a move that was later shifted under court scrutiny, Bondi sought to appoint a new D.C. police commissioner while also seeking to unwind D.C. laws limiting police involvement in immigration enforcement. Immigration advocates in D.C. say now any brush with law enforcement could be disastrous for migrants. 'This disturbing policy strips away the rights and safety of our communities. Even the most common police interactions—such as a traffic violation or reporting a crime—can have life-altering consequences for immigrants, including detention and deportation,' Amica Center for Immigrant Rights said in a statement before Bondi's order was tamed by the courts. 'This policy adds to the atmosphere of fear and distrust, perpetuates racial profiling, and criminalizes innocent people.'


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
ICE goes high-profile in DC as it seeks recruits amid mass expansion
ICE has typically operated with a significantly lower profile, and its agents have been heavily criticized nationwide for operating in plainclothes as they detain people in unmarked vehicles. ICE is going high-profile as the rapidly expanding immigration enforcement agency invests millions of dollars to buy eye-catching new vehicles to help "Defend the Homeland" and attract new recruits. Contractors have already begun applying paint and vinyl wraps to SUVS, pickups and a pair of $60,000 Ford Mustangs, some of which will be deployed in Washington, DC, as part of President Donald Trump's crackdown on street crime and homelessness, along with targeting illegal immigrants. "We will have our country back," Homeland Security officials said in a Aug. 14 social media post unveiling the new designs. Some of the vehicles bear the words "Defend the Homeland." Immigrations and Customs Enforcement is getting 10,000 new agents over the next four years to help carry out Trump's ongoing mass deportations, and is spending millions to equip them. Homeland Security officials are also bringing on new police dogs and buying vast tranches of new equipment and gear to support the new officers, according to a USA TODAY review of federal purchasing data. For recruiting purposes, the White House specifically ordered ICE to buy two Mustangs, which are joining 25 new Chevrolet Tahoes, along with Ford Raptor pickups and top-end GMC SUVs as part of the fleet, according to purchasing data. ICE has typically operated with a significantly lower profile, and its agents have been heavily criticized nationwide for operating in plainclothes as they detain people in unmarked vehicles. The moves to both expand ICE and deploy federal agents and National Guard troops on DC streets has drawn criticism over what many liberals see as misplaced priorities when it comes to federal spending. While Trump and Congress have slashed spending and staffing, ICE is getting significantly larger. "Why can Trump always find money for things he wants to, like half a million dollars for an ICE music video or to deploy federal agents to occupy DC, but not to invest in the housing and support that people really need and actually keep people safe?" asked Jesse Rabinowitz, a social worker and spokesperson for the National Homelessness Law Center. "We need housing and healthcare, not handcuffs and federal agents terrorizing DC." ICE hiring efforts include an aggressive social media campaign, and recruiting from other law enforcement agencies, which has angered some sheriffs.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Man in ICE custody awaits extradition to Indiana in connection with 2013 double murder
Clarksville Police Department officials have reopened a 2013 murder investigation after a man whose DNA profile matched a person of interest in the case was located in an Immigration Customs and Enforcement facility in Georgia, officials said in an Aug. 20 news release. Salvadoran national Carlos Alberto Bonilla-Canenguez, 46, is set to be extradited to Indiana and faces murder charges in connection with the 2013 double homicide. Clarksville police spokesperson Justice Kraft said it is unclear when ICE will complete the extradition. Officials opened an investigation into the murders in October 2013 after officers were called to a house fire in the 400 block of North Randolph Avenue in Clarksville. Investigators found two men stabbed to death inside the home, later identified as Amando 'Miguel' Rodriguez Solis and Julio Caesar Ventura Monzon, as they worked to extinguish the fire, officials said. Investigators collected DNA samples at the scene during the initial investigation and searched for a third man who lived at the home, officials said. Investigators were able to identify the resident as Bonilla-Canenguez and attempted searching for him for questioning, but he was never found, officials said. ICE arrested Bonilla-Canenguez in July for an unknown reason and lodged him in a federal facility in Folkston, Georgia. Officials flagged his name and notified Clarksville police after learning he was a person of interest in the 2013 case, Kraft said. A Clarksville police detective then traveled to the Georgia facility to collect a DNA sample from Bonilla-Canenguez, which matched the sample gathered in 2013, Kraft said. Officials said current technology was a large part of being able to reopen the case. "The Clarksville Police Department would like to remind the public that with the rapid advancements in modern technology, no case is ever truly cold," officials said in the release. Contact reporter Killian Baarlaer at kbaarlaer@ or @bkillian72 on X. This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: ICE in custody of man charged for 2013 Clarksville, Indiana murders