Connect with us

Crime

‘Total Failure’: Shocking Data On Criminal Migrants In US Highlight Harris’ Border Hypocrisy, Former ICE Official Says

Published

3 minute read

From the Daily Caller News Foundation 

 

By Katelynn Richardson

You’re not enforcing the laws now, but if you pass a new bill, then you’ll enforce the laws? This, quite frankly, is all bullshit.

Shocking data revealing thousands of illegal migrants with serious criminal histories are roaming free in the U.S. demonstrates everything Vice President Kamala Harris says about immigration “is a lie,” former Director of New York ICE Removals Tom Feeley said Saturday on Fox and Friends.

Federal data released Friday revealed there are 13,099 non-citizens in the U.S. convicted of homicide, along with 15,811 convicted of sexual assault, who have not been detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Feeley outlined how the data, which dropped the same day Harris unveiled a supposedly stricter immigration stance in a trip to the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona, highlights Harris’ hypocrisy.

You’ve already said you won’t enforce the law in the future. You’ve called ICE the KKK. You’ve already told us that you’re going to close all the detention centers,” Feeley said. “So, let me get this right, Kamala. You’re not enforcing the laws now, but if you pass a new bill, then you’ll enforce the laws? This, quite frankly, is all bullshit. Every American should be pissed and disgusted because this is all crap.”

WATCH:

Feeley said the real numbers are probably “double” what was released by ICE. There are currently over 662,566 non-citizens with criminal histories on ICE’s national docket, which includes both those detained and not detained, according to a letter delivered Wednesday to Republican Texas Rep. Tony Gonzales.

“This is a total failure from the ICE director up,” Feeley said. “Nobody will be held accountable, and we’ll just go on with our day.”

Feeley said the border was the “most secure it’s ever been” under former President Donald Trump. He pointed to Biden-Harris administration policies as the reason he retired.

“When they come in, they undid everything,” he said. “They ordered us not to enforce the laws. I’m one of those guys that believes in my country. I believe in the Constitution. I took an oath, and I’m not going to do that stuff.”

Todayville is a digital media and technology company. We profile unique stories and events in our community. Register and promote your community event for free.

Follow Author

Crime

While Canadian police remain hesitant, U.S. Targets Cartels Abroad as Sinaloa’s Reach Spans 40 Nations

Published on

Sam Cooper's avatar Sam Cooper

DEA leader tells The Bureau that while Trump’s cartel extraditions with Mexico demonstrate significant collaboration, Canadian police remain hesitant partners in the fight against fentanyl networks

The Drug Enforcement Administration says it has dealt a sharp blow to the Sinaloa Cartel — which is embedded in about 40 nations outside Mexico — after a week-long surge of operations across the United States and abroad that netted more than 600 arrests and the seizure of massive quantities of fentanyl, methamphetamine, cocaine, and cash.

From August 25 through August 29, DEA agents in 23 domestic divisions and seven international regions coordinated what officials described as one of the most significant enforcement pushes against the cartel in recent years, the agency announced yesterday.

The operation comes six months after the Trump administration designated the Sinaloa Cartel and seven other groups as foreign terrorist organizations, a move that heightened both legal pressure and political attention on the networks blamed for fueling the U.S. fentanyl crisis.

The crackdown produced 617 arrests, more than $11 million in currency seizures, and 420 firearms, alongside a cache of synthetic and traditional narcotics that investigators say could have fueled untold overdoses nationwide.

The seizures included 480 kilograms of fentanyl powder, more than 714,000 counterfeit pills, 2,200 kilograms of methamphetamine, nearly 7,500 kilograms of cocaine, and over 16 kilograms of heroin.

“Every kilogram of poison seized, every dollar stripped from the cartels, and every arrest we make represents lives saved and communities defended,” Administrator Terrance Cole said. His agency’s statement asserted there are tens of thousands of Sinaloa members, associates, and facilitators operating worldwide — in at least 40 countries — who are responsible for the production, manufacturing, distribution, and operations related to trafficking deadly synthetic drugs.

His predecessor, former DEA chief Derek Maltz, told The Bureau in an exclusive interview that President Trump has achieved unprecedented extraditions from Mexico, bringing dozens of senior cartel leaders into U.S. custody.

Maltz recounted being at Dulles Airport as military flights delivered figures such as Los Zetas bosses Miguel and Omar Treviño and the Sinaloa kingpin Rafael Caro Quintero, wanted for the murder of DEA agent Kiki Camarena. “We’ve never seen that kind of result,” Maltz said, adding: “What’s happening is that we are seeing a drastic reduction in fentanyl seizures at the U.S. southern border. They’re pretty much cut in half over the last several months, which to me is a strong indicator of, number one, the production has gone down. And the cartels are clearly concerned about the optics and the deaths of Americans.”

But alongside the successes on extradition and southern border clampdowns, Maltz said, cartels are adapting. They are now pushing mass shipments of cocaine and synthetic drugs into and through other regions — notably Canada, which retains a geographic advantage for traffickers. Product moves by sea from China and Mexico up the coast into Vancouver, and via Canadian commercial trucks that collect cocaine and methamphetamine shipments from Mexican suppliers in California while also delivering fentanyl precursors from Vancouver to Los Angeles, according to a recent indictment targeting Indo-Canadian Vancouver gangs and Chinese suppliers.

“The cartels are definitely concerned about the optics and the deaths of Americans,” Maltz said. “But they’re not out of business — they’re pivoting to the global cocaine market, and they’re still producing meth in industrial labs.”

On the controversy in Canada — whether superlabs run by Mexican cartels are sending significant amounts of fentanyl or its precursors across the northern border, and whether Canadian police have failed to cooperate with U.S. enforcement, as President Donald Trump has charged — Maltz said Canadian denials ignore the reality of the networks involved.

“First of all, you don’t know what you don’t know. There’s so much wide-open border between Canada and the United States,” he told The Bureau. “I was the guy around 2006 when I ran the Special Operations Division. I invited the RCMP to come in and operate with us because at that time we started seeing massive cocaine movements up the West Coast of the United States into Canada. And we saw at that time gangs like the Hells Angels and others that were doing a lot of the distribution of mass amounts of cocaine for cartels. So we wanted to collaborate with the Mounties.”

Maltz recalled embedding Canadian officers in what became a growing international hub for cross-border enforcement. “We put somebody right in the middle of our synchronization center.”

But progress, he said, has remained halting. “Even when — I think it was February or March with the commissioner of the RCMP and his executive staff — I mean, they were very nice and they were trying to establish relationships again with the DEA. But it’s almost like Groundhog Day. They have to produce results. They have to demonstrate that commitment by action, not by words, not by get-togethers in one of these countries in the embassies and drinking tea or coffee. It’s about action to shut down these cartels. And I haven’t seen a lot of that.”

The Bureau is a reader-supported publication.

To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

 

Continue Reading

Crime

Former NYPD Inspector Shares What Family Of Alleged Charlie Kirk Assassin Feared Before Turning Him In

Published on

 

From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Mariane Angela

Former NYPD Inspector Paul Mauro said on Fox Business Friday that the family of Charlie Kirk’s alleged assassin feared a violent raid and ultimately chose to turn the suspect in to avoid a potential tragedy.

Authorities identified the suspected shooter in Kirk’s assassination as 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, after a family friend tipped off law enforcement Thursday evening. In an appearance on “Kudlow,” Mauro laid out what he called the timeline of the suspect’s escape and subsequent surrender.

“By the end of 9-11, the father has called a retired U.S. Marshal. This town down south, St. George, has a lot of retirees. It’s kind of a retirement community. He knew this guy. He calls that guy and tells him, ‘My son is the perpetrator,’” Mauro told Larry Kudlow. “Unclear if the son had admitted it or not. But apparently what was going on is that the family was concerned that if they didn’t turn him in, somebody else was going to, and it was a fear that they could be, as the police call it, a kinetic entry.”

Mauro said the family of the alleged Kirk assassin feared a violent confrontation if authorities discovered his location first, prompting them to arrange a peaceful surrender.

WATCH: 

“That is to say, the cops come booming the doors, taking them in a rougher way, and maybe something goes sideways. The kid could get hurt or worse. So they wanted to prevent that. The family wanted to make sure that this was done orderly. They knew that the gig was up and that he was going to get arrested. They then went with either this second person, the retiree, or a minister. And a minister in Latter-day Saints is different from ministers that you and I think about.”

Mauro said the suspect’s family bypassed traditional law enforcement channels and brought him directly to the Washington County Jail.

“It’s a much more immediate relationship. Some sort of crew like this went to the sheriff’s office. And that’s why he was in the custody of the Washington County Sheriff’s Office. That’s a jail. They run the jails,” Mauro said. “They went right to the jail, gave them up to the Washington County Sheriff. There must have been some connection there. Somebody knew somebody. They took him in. The sheriff notifies the task force, and you know the rest.”

Authorities say Robinson fatally shot Kirk as he spoke to students at Utah Valley University. After recognizing his son in photos released by investigators, Robinson’s father confronted the 22-year-old and alerted law enforcement, according to sources cited by the New York Post.

Robinson reportedly told his father he’d rather take his own life than surrender, according to the outlet. His father urged him to speak with their youth pastor, who happened to be affiliated with the U.S. Marshals fugitive task force.

Republican Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said Friday that investigators discovered taunting and vulgar phrases etched onto the shell casings used in the shooting such as “Hey fascist! Catch!” and “If you read this you are gay LMAO.” Another inscription referenced “bella ciao,” a wartime Italian folk song later adopted by leftist resistance movements, according to George Mason University.

Continue Reading

Trending

X