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ICE nabs migrant in Va. after officials drop child-abduction charges against him: ‘Calamitous hazard'
ICE nabs migrant in Va. after officials drop child-abduction charges against him: ‘Calamitous hazard'

New York Post

time06-05-2025

  • New York Post

ICE nabs migrant in Va. after officials drop child-abduction charges against him: ‘Calamitous hazard'

A criminal migrant who illegally crossed into the US from Honduras was nabbed by ICE agents last week when Virginian authorities abruptly dropped attempted-child-abduction charges against him. Hyrum Baquedano-Rodriguez, 26, was taken into federal custody Friday — soon after a Fairfax County judge refused to sign off on his guilty-plea deal tied to the June 2023 kiddie-abduction ordeal, with the jurist citing evidence issues. The doomed deal forced prosecutors to ultimately dismiss the charges against the previously accused flasher and convicted violent thief. Advertisement 'Though the court saw fit to drop his most recent charges, Hyrum Baquedano-Rodriguez has been convicted of numerous crimes in Virginia and represents a calamitous hazard to our Virginia residents,' said Russell Hott, director of the ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations' Washington, DC, field office, in a statement. Hyrum Baquedano-Rodriguez, 26, was taken into federal custody Friday after Virginian authorities abruptly dropped attempted-child-abduction charges against him. I.C.E. Baquedano-Rodriguez, who already has a lengthy rap sheet in the US, had been accused of trying to snatch a 4-year-old girl from her bed in a violent home invasion. Advertisement He was hit with charges of abduction of a person with intent to defile and burglary: entering a house to murder, rape, after prints found of the little girl's window matched his. Still, the Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney Office dropped the charges late last week after a judge declined to accept a plea deal, which would have seen Baquedano-Rodriguez cop to the crime in exchange for a two-year sentence, NBC4 reported. Baquedano-Rodriguez, who already has a lengthy rap sheet in the US, had been accused of trying to snatch a 4-year-old girl from her bed in a violent home invasion. AP 'The allegations in this case are deeply concerning,' a rep for the attorney's office said. Advertisement 'Unfortunately, there were multiple evidentiary issues with this case, and when the judge was presented with these facts, she declined to accept the plea agreement, which we viewed as the best opportunity for accountability. We are disappointed in the judge's decision.' Baquedano-Rodriguez was first nabbed by Border Patrol agents in August 2018 when he illegally crossed into the US near Yuma, Ariz., ICE said. A federal judge in Arizona eventually released him on an immigration bond in January 2019, which kickstarted his crime spree in the US. It is unclear what his immigration status was over the years, but in 2021, Baquedano-Rodriguez was arrested and charged with three counts of indecent liberties: expose genitals to child and indecent exposure. Advertisement The next year, he was arrested and convicted in Fairfax County of entering property with intent to damage, petit larceny: less than $1,000 and entering property with intent to damage. He landed an 18-month prison sentence for the crimes. In 2022, he also was convicted of disorderly conduct and contributing to the delinquency of a minor and sentenced to 12 months behind bars for each crime. In 2023, the migrant was convicted of entering property with intent to damage and sentenced to 12 months in prison. That same year, he was charged and convicted in the June 2023 attempted child abduction. 'Every one of his convictions represents another one of our neighbors that Baquedano-Rodriguez has victimized,' Hott said. After the migrant's arrest over the alleged attempted abduction, an immigration judge ordered he be booted back to his native Honduras. He remains in ICE custody pending his removal, the feds said. Advertisement 'Protecting Virginians has been a top priority of our administration since day one, and it should be a priority for every leader at the federal, state and local level,' Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin said. 'That's exactly why the Virginia Homeland Security Task Force is so important. I'm grateful to our law enforcement officers at every level for working hard to keep Virginians and Americans safe, and I'll always stand with them.'

Man charged in rape on W&OD trail breaks cell door open
Man charged in rape on W&OD trail breaks cell door open

Washington Post

time03-04-2025

  • Washington Post

Man charged in rape on W&OD trail breaks cell door open

A man charged with raping a woman on the Washington & Old Dominion trail escaped his jail cell at the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center last month and tried to enter a nurse's station while someone was inside, according to court documents. Denis Humberto Navarette Romero, 32, 'freed himself by banging hard on his cell from the inside to the point that the cell came open,' according to a criminal complaint, and entered the jail for an unspecified amount of time before he was pepper sprayed and restrained in the March 17 incident. The damage left the cell inoperable, the records state. It was not clear exactly how Navarette Romero was able to disable the locked door. He 'damaged the fastening of the cell,' according to the complaint. Kathryn Pavluchuk, general counsel at the Fairfax County Sheriff's Office, which runs the facility, said in an email that the security measures 'worked as they should' after his escape and prevented him from leaving the facility. She declined to answer additional questions about the incident, including whether security protocol will change as a result. The escape resulted in an additional felony charge for Navarette Romero, whose arrest in connection with a rape on the popular walkway in November came just four days after he finished a jail term for exposing himself to a woman walking her dog along the same trail. His lawyer, Thomas F. Koerner Jr., declined to comment. His arrest in November drew criticism from local leaders who questioned whether he should have served more time for his exposure conviction given his extensive criminal history. Officials in response said that history was difficult to piece together, in part due to his status as an undocumented immigrant and varied spellings of his name. A review of records in the region showed at least three versions of his name, which authorities confirmed connect back to Navarette Romero based on a matching FBI number and fingerprints. He has incurred more than a dozen convictions across Northern Virginia and D.C. in recent years, including for sex-based offenses, the records show. 'What is disturbing is the number of times this individual has been arrested and released,' then-Herndon Police Chief Maggie DeBoard said at a news conference in November. 'He has continued to reoffend and his behavior has escalated to a rape in a very public area.' Republican state leaders held up his arrest on the rape charge as proof that so-called sanctuary policies preventing local law enforcement from cooperating with immigration authorities are harmful, with Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares (R) calling on Fairfax County Commonwealth's Attorney Steve Descano (D) to resign. Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) cited the Navarette Romero case in proposing state budget language that would have required local police and jailers across the state to comply with federal immigration authorities and withheld funding from those who refused. The language was not approved by the General Assembly. In February, he signed an executive order instructing state police and prison officers to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement. Pavluchuk of the Fairfax County Sheriff's Office said in November that federal immigration authorities are notified every time an undocumented person is arrested and then fingerprinted at the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center. But in the four times Navarette Romero had been incarcerated at the jail, Pavluchuk said, the sheriff's office never received a detainer or judicial immigration warrant from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. A spokesperson for ICE's office in the D.C. area said agents interviewed Navarette Romero and filed a detainer with the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center on Nov. 26, after he was charged for rape. They did not say whether they had sought past detainers for Navarette Romero. Navarette Romero is a Honduran national who worked in construction and has lived in the Fairfax community for 11 years. Court and Herndon police records appear to document bouts of homelessness and challenges with mental health and substance use. Police found him drinking outside a 7-Eleven, smoking marijuana behind a McDonald's and sleeping in baseball dugouts and parking garages, records show. Once, an officer reported approaching him as he lay facedown in Bready Park, sober but distraught that he had nowhere to go and asking to be deported. Navarette Romero is next scheduled to appear in Fairfax County General District Court for a preliminary hearing on June 11.

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