DHS Reveals Troubling Deportation Details
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has disclosed alarming information regarding individuals deemed “wild and dangerous” who were deported to South Sudan.
This revelation comes in the context of actions taken during the Trump administration, which reportedly contravened federal orders by sending illegal immigrants to conflict-ridden Sudan. Recently, the government provided specifics related to these deportation activities.
“Their crimes are so monstrous and wild that nations across the globe didn’t want to accept them.”
DHS reiterated this sentiment in a statement, emphasizing that it has arranged deportation flights from Texas, targeting some of the most violent criminals in the U.S. The statement highlighted that the nature of their crimes was so severe that no country would take them in.
Included in the deportees was Cuban national Enrique Arias Hiero, whose criminal record, according to DHS, involved serious charges like murder and armed robbery.
Another case is that of Laos citizen Tonksai Niraku, who received a sentence for first-degree murder and robbery.
From Mexico, Jesus Munoz Gutierrez was also a subject of these deportations, facing life imprisonment for second-degree murder, noted by a prominent tattoo on his neck.
Further, South Sudanese citizen Diane Peter Domach was convicted of a range of offenses, including robbery and firearm possession.
Burmese citizen Kyaw Mya was convicted for crimes against a child, receiving a ten-year sentence, while another Burmese national, NYO Myint, faced a twelve-year confinement for sexual assault involving victims unable to resist.
Interestingly, U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy previously halted deportations to Libya due to its humanitarian crisis, raising questions about similar conditions in South Sudan.

