CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — The Department of Justice filed nearly 200 new federal criminal cases involving immigration and border security last week in connection with weeks of intense deportation raids in Houston and other South Texas cities.
Immigration lawsuits included Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE), Homeland Security Investigation (HIS), and other federal agencies.
Of the nearly 200 newly filed cases, almost 100 will be accompanied by illegal foreigners who have been charged with re-entering the state after removal. Most of these cases involve defendants convicted of previous felony, including drug crimes, violent crimes and previous immigration crimes, according to the US attorney's office for the Southern District of Texas. More than 80 defendants are charged with illegal entry. Twelve cases include human smuggling, while the rest are related to other immigrant crimes.
Multiple defendants will be charged with new ones Appeal It is related to the assault by a law enforcement officer. The latest indictment charges 12 illegal aliens involving attacks against two corrections officers at the East Hidalgo Detention Center in LaVilla, Texas. If convicted, the defendant will face up to eight years in federal prison.
Also charged this week was the owners of two South Texas bakers who were charged with harboring illegal aliens. At the time of the agreement-based workplace enforcement action at Abbey's Bakery and Dulce's Cafe in mid-February, law enforcement officers who fulfilled their immigration-related duties are said to be a few employees, or employees who were illegally or in the country, or in the country. According to the US Law Office, the bakery owners allegedly housed these illegal foreign workers in an adjacent room with six mattresses on the floor.
Some individuals have also been declared in a variety of other border-related crimes against the United States, including organisational leaders. Smuggling Aliens Through Corpus ChristiTexas, and was ordered to confiscate $1 million in revenue from his illegal foreign smuggling scheme, which lasted more than three years.
The smuggling case includes Marvin Reyes, who claims that authorities are leading a Houston-based human smuggling organization. The investigation reveals that he and others have adjusted illegal alien movements through planes through border patrol checkpoints near Sarita and Falfurias. Reyes also arranged private flights for illegal aliens from Weslaco to Houston. He was ordered to serve in prison for 108 months.
As reported by Breitbart in Texas, the Texas immigration raids included operations at Colony Ridge, a well-known immigrant colony in Liberty County. Colony Ridge is a residential development of over 30,000 acres located less than 40 miles north of Houston. The plot is the subject of many media stories that link numerous media stories to the developer's suspicious land sales tactics in illegal positions, primarily targeting Hispanic consumers, due to their illegal status and the developer's suspicious land sales tactics.
The region has been frequently attracting attention for criminal activity related to foreigners that exist illegally in the United States. As reported by Breitbart Texas, three previously deported illegal aliens were arrested in mid-February for a targeted traffic stop that led to the seizure of nearly 350 pounds of methamphetamine. A multi-agency law enforcement task force from Liberty County developed information from three previously deported migrants who led to the discovery of methamphetamine in a trailer in Colony Ridge after the vehicle was stopped.
The US Attorney's Southern Texas District is one of the busiest in the country. It represents 43 counties and over 9 million people, covering 44,000 square miles. U.S. attorney aides in all seven departments, including Houston, Galveston, Victoria, Corpus Christi, Brownsville, McAllen and Laredo, work directly with law enforcement officers at the federal, state and local levels to prosecute federal crimes within their districts.
Randy Clark He is a 32-year veteran of the US Border Patrol. Before retiring, he served as Chief of Law Enforcement Business and oversaw the operations of nine Border Patrol Bureaus in Del Rio, Texas. Follow him on X (formerly Twitter) @randyclarkbbtx.
