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Texas Border Crackdown: Three Arrested, Including Child Molesters, In Separate Operations

Texas Border Crackdown: Three Arrested, Including Child Molesters, In Separate Operations

Yahoo18-07-2025
Law enforcement on the U.S.-Mexico border arrested three sex offenders in separate busts earlier this week.
Border Patrol agents arrested illegal aliens, 39-year-old Mateo Pablo Martin, of Guatemala, and 45-year-old David Antonio Varcenas-Aguilar, of Mexico, according to a press release. Customs and Border Protection officers also busted 19-year-old Roberto Medina, an American wanted for sexual assault.
'These arrests demonstrate our Border Patrol agents' unwavering commitment to protecting our communities from dangerous individuals,' said Gloria Chavez, chief patrol agent of the Rio Grande Valley Sector, in the release.
Agents from the McAllen Border Patrol Station arrested Martin, in the country illegally, on July 14.
'Records indicate Pablo-Martin was convicted by the Riverside Sheriff's Office in February of 2018 for molesting a child under 18 years old,' the release said.
He was sentenced to 170 days in jail and 30 months' probation. Martin did not immediately appear in Texas or California's sex offender registries.
Separately, agents from the Fort Brown Border Patrol Station in Brownsville arrested illegal alien Varcenas-Aguilar on July 12.
'Varcenas-Aguilar was previously arrested in June of 2009 and charged with sexual assault of a child,' the release reads.
The illegal was convicted and sentenced to 12 years 'confinement.' According to court documents, his bond was set at $25,000, and he is in the custody of the U.S. Marshals.
In yet another bust, CBP officers at the Progreso Port of Entry – between Brownsville and McAllen – arrested Medina for sex assault in Austin.
Medina, a 19-year-old American, tried to cross the border at the Progreso International Bridge on July 14, according to the release. Officers sent him to 'secondary inspection.' They found through 'biometric verification' that he was wanted on a felony warrant from the Austin Police Department for sexual assault.
'Medina was turned over to Hidalgo County sheriff's deputies for transport to jail and adjudication of the warrant,' the release reads.
Officials cited the National Crime Information Center, a 'centralized automated database' to share law enforcement information. In the past, it has led border agents to capture fugitives wanted for 'homicide, escape, money laundering, robbery, narcotics distribution, sexual child abuse, fraud, larceny, and military desertion.'
'Criminal charges are merely allegations,' the release reads. 'Defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.'
As The Dallas Express previously reported, the database previously helped officers bust a suspect wanted in Dallas for soliciting a minor online.
Progreso Port Director Michael Martinez said in the release that traffic has been rising with the summer travel season.
'Our frontline CBP officers continue to maintain their vigilance and apprehended a pedestrian wanted for a sex-related offense,' Martinez said. 'Apprehensions like these exemplify what our officers do every day to secure our borders and keep our communities safe.'
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Vice President JD Vance is on the road again to sell the Republicans' big new tax law
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He lived an immigrant's nightmare. One problem: He's a citizen, got his arrest on video

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He lived an immigrant's nightmare. One problem: He's a citizen, got his arrest on video

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On the video, an agent recounted how Laynez said they didn't have the right to come in the door and says: 'I already told you to come out. If you don't come out, I'll pull you out.' 'God damn. Wow,' the officer cheered. 'Nice!' 'Just remember you can smell too with a $30,000 bonus,' another officer chimes in. It was not immediately clear to what bonus the officer referred. On the tape, an officer is heard saying that Laynez's coworker was resisting arrest, so he should be charged. 'He was being a d*** right now. That is why we tased,' an agent said. The phone recording stopped shortly after that exchange, its memory out of storage. The agents confirmed Laynez's mother had legal status and issued her a ticket for driving with a suspended license. Laynez said she told them he was a U.S. citizen and showed them a picture of his Social Security card. They still took Laynez into custody. 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The arrest report said Laynez was being charged with nonviolent police obstruction. In a copy of the report that Laynez provided to The Palm Beach Post, officers wrote that Esdras had resisted his arrest. Laynez is not mentioned. After six hours, Laynez said he walked out the door of the Riviera Beach building and ordered an Uber home. He had almost 100 missed calls from his mother. Laynez said the footage of the arrests haunts him, but he doesn't regret filming. "I would basically have nothing, no evidence,' Laynez said. 'And no one would believe what happened or how they escalated the situation. "There might be even more happening that is not being recorded." Email Valentina Palm at vpalm@ and follow her on X at @ValenPalmB. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: ICE raids Florida: Citizen lived immigrant nightmare of being arrested

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