Saturday, April 20, 2024

DANGEROUS GANG MEMBERS SNEAK ACROSS THE BORDER EMBEDDED WITH MIGRANTS

Border state lawmaker sounds alarm on bloodthirsty Venezuelan gang entering US: ‘They have no rules’

Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-Texas, has compared the gang to a cancer

 


Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas) addresses reporters during a press conference on Monday, April 4, 2022 to discuss a recent virtual meeting with border patrol officers over Title 42 and current conditions on the ground. 
Rep. Tony Gonzales 
 

A congressman whose district is along the southern border is warning about the dangers posed by a bloodthirsty Venezuelan street gang whose presence has grown in the United States amid the ongoing migrant crisis.

"This gang in several years is going to be the dominant transnational criminal organization throughout the United States. There's no doubt in my mind," Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-Texas, told Fox News Digital in an interview.

Last month, a CBP source provided Fox with an internal intelligence bulletin revealing tattoos and identifiers for Tren de Aragua (TdA), a Venezuelan street gang. Members of that gang have been entering the U.S. illegally through the southern border.

The gang drew additional attention when it emerged that the brother of the suspect in the killing of Georgia student Laken Riley had ties to the gang. Both are Venezuelan illegal immigrants. 

TdA is said to specialize in extortion, kidnapping, murder and sex trafficking. Federal authorities have been warning that the gang is trying to establish itself in the U.S., where police are already linking it to organized crime. The FBI has also warned that the gang could team up with the bloodthirsty MS-13.

"They're very vicious. They have no rules. They gobble up territory almost like a cancer," Gonzales said.

 

Wanted poster in Spanish seeking Hector Guerrero, leader of Tren de Aragua gangHector Guerrero, the leader of Tren de Aragua, is believed to have escaped to the US after the Venezuelan military raid on its headquarters inside the Tocoron prison.

 

Gonzales, who represents a majority Hispanic district, says the arrivals are part of a change in the flow of immigration across the border.

"Immigration isn't new to us. We've lived it for decades, but it's no longer Mexican nationals coming over looking for work," Gonzales said. "It's no longer passive people just trying to kind of mosey about their business. It is a different element of people.

"They're more aggressive, they're demanding and they're culturally not the same. And that's why, once again, a district 70% Hispanic, the people in my district had enough. They're like, 'To hell with these people. They're coming over. I don't feel safe. They're very aggressive.’ And you know what? If someone knocked on my door and they had face tattoos with teardrops … I probably wouldn't feel safe either."

 

Venezuelan gang members sit on ground after a military raid at the Tocoron prison in state of Aragua last yearTren de Aragua gang members after a raid at the Tocoron prison in Venezuela last year. Dozens of gang members escaped and made their way north to the US, embedded with groups of migrants. 
 
 
Tren de Aragua gang tattoos.
 Tattooed members of MS-13 gang
The FBI is warning that MS-13 gang members, such as leader Ãlmer Canales (center), could team up with Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan gang that has embedded itself with the surge of migrants crossing the southern border.
 

On visits to the border in the El Paso Sector, he said, officials had told him migrants will be afraid of TdA members when in detention. He also pointed to oil thefts in other parts of the border.

He said the response should be "immediate repercussions."

"So Border Patrol has to have the tools where they can vet some of these people far more than what is happening," Gonzales said, warning that people are just "cycling through."

He also said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has to be strong and nationally present.

"You have to have ICE have the ability to go around and actively hunt these criminal aliens that have committed crimes, hunt them down and deport them," Gonzales said. "That has to happen. And when it does happen, it can't happen in a vacuum. People have to know what's happening. And it can't just happen in one part of the country. It has to happen throughout the country."

He also called for a "seamless" mission and cooperation between local, state and federal officials.

"And I think the communities that do that, I think Texas will be at the forefront of this," Gonzales said. "The communities that do that will be the ones that do not have this issue years from now."

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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