logo
Illegal alien charged in sandwich shop owner's murder caught and released into US under Biden: ICE

Illegal alien charged in sandwich shop owner's murder caught and released into US under Biden: ICE

Fox News10-02-2025

The suspect in the grisly murder of a Massachusetts sandwich shop owner is a 25-year-old illegal alien from the Dominican Republic who was released into the U.S. after he was stopped near the border in Texas under then-President Joe Biden in September 2022, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Eric Dionida German-Pena is charged with the murder of Ilias Mavros, better known as Louie and the owner of Crazy Buzzy's Roast Beef and Seafood in Lynn.
"Eric Dionida German-Pena will have his day in court, but he stands accused of a very serious and disturbing crime against a member of our Massachusetts community," Patricia Hyde, the acting field director of ICE's Boston Enforcement and Removal Operations office, said in a statement. "ICE Boston takes its public safety mission extremely seriously — which is why we've lodged an immigration detainer against him with Lynn police."
German-Pena was ordered held without bail pending trial.
"The Commonwealth of Massachusetts has charged him with murder, and with the cooperation of the Lynn District Court, we intend to take him into ICE custody after he has paid his debt to society," Hyde added. "ICE Boston will continue our mission of arresting and removing egregious alien offenders from New England."
Along with his father, Mavros had also previously owned Christina's Pizza in Salem, according to an online obituary.
Mavros was an American citizen who police found tied up in his own basement – with his skull bashed in, in an apparent home invasion robbery, according to a federal law enforcement source.
An online obituary described Mavros as a lifelong Lynn resident who graduated from the local high school in 1994 and had a "heart of gold," caring for his sick mother for nearly a decade until her death last year.
"Louie was an extraordinary individual, and his absence will be profoundly felt," reads a post on Crazy Buzzy's Facebook page. "In tribute to his legacy, Crazy Buzzy's will remain open."
The slaying comes amid a crackdown on thousands of known criminal aliens across the U.S. ordered late last month when President Donald Trump returned to office.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Families scramble to pay for lawyers after ICE raid in Florida
Families scramble to pay for lawyers after ICE raid in Florida

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Families scramble to pay for lawyers after ICE raid in Florida

Britney Padron hadn't spoken to her father in four days. But on Friday, she finally had three minutes to make sure he was OK. The last time her father, Jose Padron, spoke to her was on Monday from a detention center in El Paso. Days before, he was grabbed and detained by ICE in an immigration raid at a Tallahassee construction site. "He would always give us a hug and kiss our cheeks every time we left and returned home and I miss that so deeply right now," Britney said. She and other family members of those who were detained in Florida's largest immigration raid of the year are trying to raise money for lawyers to advocate for their loved ones, who can only call every so often for a few minutes at a time. They've set up GoFundMe online fundraisers, hoping others can help with the costly fees associated with the immigration process. Britney and her sister have tried to find lawyers who offer free consultations, but some immigration firms have asked $300 to $900 for a initial talk. As for taking on her father's case, she's been quoted $3,500 from one firm and $3,800 at another. Hilda Castro, whose husband was also detained, said a lawyer quoted her $5,500. Currently, her GoFundMe has raised none of the $1,600 she is asking for. Some of the detained laborers were on their way to Texas as soon as the day after the raid. Others were sent to Miami's Krome Detention Center. But not everyone could find their friends and family; ICE's Online Detainee Locator System has been unreliable in recent months. While Britney's father was in El Paso on Monday, the ICE Online Detainee Locator System only said "Texas" when she put in his information. Now, he's in the Rio Grande Detention Center in Laredo, Texas, with other laborers from Tallahassee. She was finally able to put money on his commissary tab on Friday. When Britney speaks to her dad on the phone, the call is always brief. Just three minutes, enough to check in and say "I love you." She was relieved to hear his voice on Friday. "Thank God," she said. It's a heartbreaking game of telephone to try to locate loved ones who haven't been able to update family on their removal status. Family members of her father's friends have given her information, but it's been hard to verify, which makes it even more difficult to relay that information to lawyers. Amanda Parrish said she hadn't spoken to her husband in four days, but he finally called Friday morning to say he was also at the Rio Grande Processing Center. In a public post on Facebook, Parrish shared a text-message conversation she had with his bond lawyer. "We haven't heard from him in four days. We're just really worried," Parrish wrote. "Hi, he hasn't been assigned to a judge yet. I'll see what I can do today to find out some information," the bond lawyer replied. Parrish and her husband got married in 2018, and he's been in the process of applying for citizenship since 2019. He was approved for his I-130, a "petition for alien relative," and was waiting for approval for permanent residency, also known as a Green Card. "This is unfair. This should not have happened," Parrish said. "He should not have made it all the way to Texas. He said he is fine but I know he's only telling me that because he does not want me to worry." On May 29, the day of the raid, she was outside of the chain-link fence when she saw her husband, Tino, walk onto a white school bus, hands bound. "I love you so much, and I will always fight for you. I hope you're doing OK and just know that we are doing everything possible for you," Parrish wrote in a Facebook post. Castro hasn't heard from her husband, Ramiro, since Saturday, when he called and said he was in El Paso. The Quincy resident said when her husband was detained by ICE, he was in the process of getting his I-130 as well. Castro is a citizen, and the two are married. Federal officials at the detention facility offered her husband paperwork to self-deport, but Castro told her husband not to sign anything. She's now trying to raise money for his defense. 'I found a lawyer in El Paso, but I need to figure out how I'm going to get the money to pay," she said. "I can't leave him there.' Help this family reunite NOW! ICE Raid, May 29 Tallahassee Support Legal Aid for Detained Husband Fighting for Jose Padron While Holding Our Family Together Ana Goñi-Lessan, state watchdog reporter for the USA TODAY Network – Florida, can be reached at agonilessan@ This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: GoFundMe pleas rise as ICE detainees await legal help

Cop cars, Waymos lit on fire amid anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles, San Francisco
Cop cars, Waymos lit on fire amid anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles, San Francisco

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Cop cars, Waymos lit on fire amid anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles, San Francisco

Multiple Waymos were vandalized and set on fire during protests against ICE enforcement in downtown Los Angeles Sunday evening. Around five Waymos were set on fire and destroyed during the demonstrations on the third day of the "LA ICE protests" at around 5:20 p.m. Minutes later, the California Highway Patrol dispersed the crowd of protesters from the 101 Freeway. A few hours later, however, agitators tossed fireworks and rocks at parked CHP patrol cars parked on the 101 Freeway. Video at the scene shows one CHP car engulfed in flames shortly before 8 p.m. It's unclear what sparked the patrol car fire. Additionally, video of the San Francisco protest showed a Waymo and SFPD cruiser damaged as well. The cruiser, parked near Union Square, had several windows smashed in. The Waymo was tagged with anti-ICE graffiti. Regarding the vandalism to their cars, a Waymo spokesperson said the company is "in touch with law enforcement." Some protesters were arrested for their alleged actions in San Francisco Sunday evening. It's unclear at this time what possible charges they could face. Several buildings were vandalized in San Francisco's Financial District among the protests. Earlier Sunday, clashes between demonstrators and San Francisco police ensued, with participants and officers pressing against each other when officers tried to disperse the crowd. BART briefly closed their Embarcadero Station due to a "civil disturbance" shortly before 9 p.m. before reopening an hour later amid the rising tension. A demonstration against ICE is also scheduled for Monday evening near the BART plaza in the Mission District. Organizers are calling for a "mass mobilization." "We stand with LA," organizers said. KTVU has reached out to the San Francisco Police Department regarding comment on the destruction of their car but did not hear in time for publication.

This is what an ICE arrest in Boston immigration court looks like.
This is what an ICE arrest in Boston immigration court looks like.

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

This is what an ICE arrest in Boston immigration court looks like.

As Diaz Martinez left the courtroom, the five officers approached. Most of the other petitioners — men, women, families with children — had walked in and out of their hearings without issue that day. But she was not so lucky. As agents arrested the mother of two, she had a medical episode. Advertisement She pleaded not to be separated from her husband, Wiliz de Leon, whom she had just married the previous Saturday. And she had two children, 10 and 7 years old, who were back in the Dominican Republic. A lawyer standing nearby interjected. 'You don't have to take her into custody,' Sarah Sherman-Stokes, a clinical associate professor of law and associate director of the Immigrants' Rights and Human Trafficking Clinic at Boston University School of Law, told the ICE officials. Sherman-Stokes was there to observe Advertisement 'We're doing our job,' one of the agents said. Diaz Martinez, 29, had been in the US for a little over a year, after crossing the southern border unlawfully and being apprehended by immigration officials. She was fleeing domestic violence in her home country, Sherman-Stokes said, and is seeking asylum. Diaz Martinez's arrest was the result of a new immigration enforcement tactic that has played out across the nation: Department of Homeland Security lawyers have paired this tactic with a new legal strategy: pressing immigration court judges to dismiss pending cases or issue deportation orders against petitioners who have been in the country for less than two years, at their initial hearings. Dismissals and deportation orders leave immigrants more vulnerable to deportation. In Massachusetts, the immigration court arrests began in the last two weeks. Last Tuesday, at least three people were arrested at the Boston court, including a man who said he was a political torture survivor from Angola, according to Sherman-Stokes. Wiliz de Leon left the John F. Kennedy Federal Building in Boston on June 3 after his wife suffered a medical emergency while being arrested by ICE, while she was in the building for an immigration court appearance. He is a U.S. citizen. Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff de Leon, Diaz Martinez's husband, is a US citizen. The couple met in the Dominican Republic about four and a half years ago, and have been together since. They live together in Providence. de Leon told the Globe that the couple had seen reports of arrests at Advertisement 'She was really scared to be deported,' de Leon said in Spanish. Now, de Leon said, the couple felt 'betrayed.' 'We always want to follow the rules,' de Leon said the morning after his wife's arrest, sounding defeated in a phone call. 'I don't understand what the motive for this is.' In a statement to the Globe, a Homeland Security spokesperson said most immigrants who entered the country illegally within the past two years are subject to expedited removals, and blamed the Biden administration for allowing 'millions of illegal aliens' into the United States. 'If they have a valid credible fear claim, they will continue in immigration proceedings, but if no valid claim is found, aliens will be subject to a swift deportation,' the spokesperson said. ICE did not respond to a request for comment on Diaz Martinez's case. Last Tuesday, as she was taken into custody, she seemed to need medical attention. She was struggling to breathe, had chest pain, and was having trouble standing upright. ICE called Emergency Medical Services, who examined her and eventually brought a gurney. 'I just don't understand. She's doing exactly what she's supposed to do,' Sherman-Stokes said, appealing again to the ICE agents to allow Diaz Martinez to return home. But it didn't sway the officials. An ICE agent accompanied her to the hospital because she was in custody. Her husband was not allowed to enter the ambulance, or, later, her hospital room. 'You have to let him go,' an EMS worker told Diaz Martinez in Spanish, gently, as she lay on the gurney in the hallway of the court. Advertisement Diaz Martinez reluctantly released her husband's hand. That night, she was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital, and then to the ICE field office in Burlington, where she has been sleeping on a concrete floor in a holding cell with about 12 other women, and using a foil blanket to cover herself, Sherman-Stokes said. Derege B. Demissie, a criminal defense attorney, filed a habeas petition for Diaz Martinez not to be moved out of state, in collaboration with Sherman-Stokes. A Massachusetts federal judge temporarily granted the motion last week. Sherman-Stokes filed a motion for Diaz Martinez to be released on bond. 'She hasn't stopped crying,' de Leon, 40, said in an interview. He followed up in a text: 'I don't know what to do.' Sherman-Stokes, who has been practicing immigration law for more than a decade, said she had seen asylum seekers enduring agonizing conditions at the US-Mexico border, in detention facilities, and elsewhere. But watching someone get arrested at court, where they were trying to follow the law and request asylum, was uniquely distressing. 'I just can't shake what just happened,' Sherman-Stokes said. 'These are folks trying their very best to comply with the law, and instead they're taken away in handcuffs.' Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio can be reached at

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