If the Trump administration had its way, Ramon Arevalo Lopez and Oscar Canales Molina would have been either in detention or deported.
Instead, they were out on the streets — thanks to judges’ orders — where, according to police, they and another illegal immigrant delivered an MS-13 gang beat-down to two high school students in New York.
All three of the illegal immigrants entered the U.S. in 2016 as unaccompanied alien children, meaning they crossed the border without parents — a status that earned them a quick release into the country, where they were quickly reunited with their family and began to live while awaiting deportations that never came.
For Homeland Security Department officials, it’s the latest sign of a legal system that stymies their efforts to oust dangerous figures.
“One of the loopholes we are imploring Congress to close could have prevented this gruesome attack,” said Katie Waldman, a Homeland Security spokeswoman.
Authorities didn’t have a specific motive for the attack but said the victims were inside eating, saw the boys they knew from high school giving them menacing looks, and decided to leave.
The three illegal immigrants were found with bloodstained hands and clothes, and their names popped up as MS-13 members in a check of a gang-records database.
Why they were in the country and out on the streets that day is one of the more bizarre twists of U.S. legal policy on illegal immigrants.
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2 comments:
Simple solution, fix the loophole. We have elected , paid hired hands to deal with it. Just do it.
We should reverse this border dispute and start exporting ineffectual Americans.
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