Five topics in this article:
1. Texas Governor Greg Abbott Making Deals with Mexican Governors
2. Mexican Breaks Up Caravan But Giving Participants Permits
3. Mexicans Dying on Border
4. An Incident in Spain on Palm Sunday
5. Nicaragua: Swimming Lessons for Border Crashers
For the entire article, click here.
Article by Allan Wall, published April 19th, 2022, on VDARE.COM.
Tags: Central American "Caravans", Chihuahua state, Coahuila, Constitution, Constitution Article I, Death on the Border, Donald Trump, Francisco Cabeza de Vaca, Greg Abbott, Holy Week, Immigration Through Mexico, Joe Biden, Maru Campos, Miguel Riquelme, Muslim Immigration to Europe, Nicaragua, Nuevo Leon state, Said in Spanish Series, Samuel Garcia, Spain, Tamaulipas, Tapachula, Tarragona Province in Spain, Texas, The Border, Vox Party (Spain), Washington D.C.
The Biden Border Rush continues and looks to get even worse with the scheduled termination of Title 42 on May 23 (as if it’s not bad enough already).
The administration of Texas Governor Greg Abbott is fighting back with Operation Lone Star and is creating Texas’ own border policy.
Drastic times call for drastic measures.
Let’s look at six parts of the policy.
For the entire blog entry, click here.
Blog entry by Allan Wall, published April 14th, 2022 on US Incorporated.
Tags: "Operation Lone Star", Colombia Bridge, Constitution, Constitution Article I, Greg Abbott, Illegal Aliens, Illegal Immigration, Laredo, Nuevo Leon state, Rio Grande, Samuel Garcia, Texas, The Border, Washington D.C.
In 2011, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick expressed his opposition to “Secure Communities”, a program designed to further cooperation between federal immigration authorities and state and local governments.
Governor Patrick’s objection: “What you get on the downside is a whole lot of folks who are worried about being targeted.”
Not long after, on August 20, 2011, one of those illegal aliens Governor Patrick didn’t want to be “worried about being targeted” killed a young Massachusetts man by running him over and dragging him under a vehicle.
The victim was 23-year old Matthew Denice, recent graduate from Framingham State University, who had just started a new job.
Matthew was riding his motorcycle, returning from helping a friend fix a car.
Suddenly, a pickup truck driven by Ecuadorian illegal alien Nicholas Dutan Guaman, driving drunk, without a license and registration, crashed into Matthew, who wound up stuck in the wheel well and was dragged screaming about a quarter of a mile.
There were witnesses, some of whom banged on the moving vehicle to get the driver’s attention, but to no avail.
Eventually, Guaman shifted to reverse and drove away. This action released Matthew, who died shortly thereafter.
Meanwhile, Guaman was pursued and apprehended by police.
Guaman had been living illegally in the United States since 2002, but still didn’t speak English, so was provided with a Spanish-speaking court interpreter.
The problem is, Guaman apparently didn’t understand Spanish very well either. His native language was Quechua, a South American Indian language spoken in the Andes region.
The court found a Quechua speaker, but one who didn’t speak the same dialect of Quechua.
They finally settled on a translator who spoke a dialect of Spanish highly influenced by Quechua.
Eventually (in 2014) Guaman was convicted and sentenced to 12-14 years.
As for Governor Deval Patrick, did this tragedy change his mind about Secure Communities?
Not at all. Patrick’s response: “You know, illegal immigration didn’t kill this person [Matthew], a drunk driver killed this person.”
Yes, but he was a drunk driver who shouldn’t have been in the country.
But as Maureen Maloney, Matthew’s mother, put it, “This person was an illegal immigrant, and if we had the Secure Communities Act in place, this person may not have had the opportunity to get drunk that day, to get behind the wheel of a car, to kill my child.”
(Note: This selection is an article in my 2021 booklet The Victims of Illegal Immigration, Third Edition, published by US Incorporated. That booklet contains true accounts of victims of illegal aliens. It’s a big problem in our country, which the Mainstream Media does not publicize. )
Tags: Deval Patrick, Drunk Driving, Ecuador, Illegal Aliens, Illegal Immigration, Massachusetts, Matthew Denice, Nicolas Dutan Guaman, Quechua, The Victims of Illegal Immigration - Third Edition, Victims of Illegal Immigration
If the Biden Administration’s immigration policy is to be opposed, more senators and representatives who oppose it are needed in Congress.
Here are some of the immigration issues discussed in Ohio and Alabama GOP primaries.
For the entire blog entry, click here.
Blog entry by Allan Wall. Published April 7th, 2022, on US Incorporated.
Tags: "Racism", 2022 Election, Alabama, Automatic Birthright Citizenship, Black Hawk Down, Demographics, Illegal Immigration, Immigration Policy, J.D. Vance, Joe Biden, Josh Mandel, Katie Britt, Legal Immigration, Michael Durant, Mo Brooks, Numbers USA, Ohio, Policy Proposals, U.S. Congress
Immigrants themselves are victims of our country’s dangerous tolerance of illegal immigration.
Maria Fuertes was a 92-year old immigrant from the Dominican Republic who lived in Queens, New York City.

She had moved to the U.S. legally in the 1960s, and was well-known among her neighbors, among whom were immigrants from Guyana, a country in northern South America.
Neighbors called Maria “Our Abuela”(Spanish for grandmother).
She was also called “the Cat Lady” as she kept 10 cats. To finance her cat project, Maria collected cans and bottles, to turn them in and collect the recycling fee.
Maria felt so safe in her neighborhood that she had no fear of walking about at night to collect cans and bottles.
In the early a.m. of January 6, 2020, Maria was walking in the neighborhood and was attacked by 21-year old Reeaz Khan, an illegal immigrant from Guyana.
Khan sexually assaulted and strangled Maria, leaving her still alive on the sidewalk.
She lay there with various injuries, partially unclothed in the freezing temperature, for about two hours.
Eventually discovered, Maria was taken to the hospital, but it was too late to help her and she died there.
Part of Khan’s attack was actually filmed on a surveillance camera, and he was soon apprehended.
Not only was Khan an illegal alien, he’d had a recent run-in with the law, after an attack on his own father with a broken ceramic coffee mug, after which Khan was released.
That was less than two months before the murder of Maria Fuertes.
What was the motive for the attack on Maria?
According to Khan himself, he hated his own mother, was angry at his father, felt disliked by his brothers, and was angry that he’d been brought to the United States.
Was Khan brought to the United States as a minor? If so, wouldn’t that make him a “DREAMer”?
New York City is a “sanctuary city”, protecting illegal aliens. Does its government bear part of the responsibility for this?
Maria’s granddaughter Daria Ortiz certainly believes so.
Daria put it this way: “The tragedy in all of this is that this could have been avoided had there been no sanctuary law.”
“Sanctuary” policy is dangerous for both native-born Americans and legal immigrants.
As Daria said, “The system not only failed our family but it failed our city.”
(Note: This selection is an article in my 2021 booklet The Victims of Illegal Immigration, Third Edition, published by US Incorporated. That booklet contains true accounts of victims of illegal aliens. It’s a big problem in our country, which the Mainstream Media does not publicize. )
Tags: "Sanctuary Cities", "Sanctuary" Policies, Crime and Immigration, Crime in the U.S.A., Dominican Republic, Guyana, Illegal Aliens, Illegal Immigration, Maria Fuertes, New York City, Queens in New York City, Reeaz Khan, The Victims of Illegal Immigration - Third Edition, Victims of Illegal Immigration
A Mexican non-governmental organization recently released its annual list of the world’s fifty most murderous cities in calendar year 2021.
Of those 50 cities, 46 were in the Western Hemisphere, 18 were in Mexico, and 8 were in the United States.
For the entire blog entry, click here.
Blog entry by Allan Wall, published March 29th, 2022, on US Incorporated.
Tags: AMLO, Brazil, Crime in Latin America, Crime in Mexico, Crime in the U.S.A., Mexican Crime Statistics, Puerto Rico, Violence, World's Most Murderous Cities List, Zamora in Michoacan
Kill Devil Hills is an area (now a municipality) on North Carolina’s Outer Banks where the Wright Brothers made their first airplane flights.
It’s also where Joe Storie, 51, was killed by a drunk driver who shouldn’t even have been in the country, and who is still at large ten years later.
Joe Storie, resident of Lenoir, North Carolina, was a brickmason by trade and co-owner of a construction company. He had a wife and three sons.
On October 5th, 2011, on a vacation in Kill Devil Hills, Joe was traveling in a pickup along with his wife Alicia, his sister Chris, and driver Paul Davis.
Suddenly their car was hit by a Chevy Lumina driven by drunk Honduran illegal alien Luis Alberto Rodriguez-Castro, 44, who had entered the country illegally in 1998.
Rodriguez-Castro ran a flashing red light, a universal symbol (even in Honduras) to stop and proceed with caution.
Two months previously, Rodriguez-Castro had been ticketed for running a red light.
On October 5th, the force of the collision flipped the vacationers’ car over. Joe Storie died.
Alicia, Chris and Rodriguez-Castro all had injuries and were airlifted to Norfolk, Virginia.
But days later Rodriguez-Castro had recovered enough to simply walk out of the hospital, making his way to the sanctuary city of Raleigh, North Carolina.
The Kill Devil Hills police went there, apprehended Rodriguez-Castro and brought him back to the Outer Banks where he was indicted.
In 2012, Rodriguez-Castro got out on bail, and was told to report for his trial on the scheduled date. Unsurprisingly, he disappeared and has never been tried for this case.
Under the previous administration, the case had not been forgotten.
In 2019, VOICE (Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement) put Rodriguez-Castro on its Most Wanted Fugitives list. (VOICE was a government office in the Trump administration providing support to families of immigrant crime victims. VOICE was abolished by the Biden administration.)
In December of 2020, ICE announced it would display electronic billboards in the Asheville, North Carolina area “to alert the public of at-large immigration violators who may pose a public safety threat.” Rodriguez-Castro was included.
It’s unlikely, however, that Rodriguez-Castro will ever be tried in North Carolina for Joe Storie’s death.
We can only hope that in the future, the U.S. can do a better job of controlling its borders and thus preventing such preventable tragedies.
(Note: This selection is an article in my 2021 booklet The Victims of Illegal Immigration, Third Edition, published by US Incorporated. That booklet contains true accounts of victims of illegal aliens. It’s a big problem in our country, which the Mainstream Media does not publicize. )
Tags: "Sanctuary Cities", "Sanctuary" Policies, Donald Trump, Drunk Driving, Honduras, Illegal Aliens, Illegal Immigration, Joe Biden, Joe Storie, Luis Alberto Rodriguez-Castro, North Carolina, Outer Banks, Raleigh in North Carolina, The Victims of Illegal Immigration - Third Edition, Victims of Illegal Immigration, Virginia, VOICE (Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement), Wright Brothers
Tapachula, a Mexican city not far from the Guatemalan border, is a major thoroughfare for the migrants as they begin the Mexico phase of their journeys.
On March 18th, a mob of non-Mexican migrants broke into an immigration processing station in Tapachula.
It’s probable that eventually many of these people are going to end up in the United States.
For the entire blog entry, click here.
Blog entry by Allan Wall, published March 23rd, 2022, on US Incorporated website.
Tags: Biden Border Rush, Crime and Immigration, Donald Trump, Guatemala, Ignacio Rocha, Immigration in Mexico, Immigration Through Mexico, INM (Mexican Immigration Bureaucracy), Joe Biden, Miel and Canela Foundation, Rosa Castillo, Tapachula
In the year 2000, Iriana DeJesus was a 5-year old girl living in Philadelphia. She liked to put red ribbons in her hair. Family, neighbors and friends called her “Nena”.

Her mother went to pick up food at a restaurant, thinking it was safe to leave Iriana and her sister playing in the yard. But upon the mother’s return, Iriana was missing.
After five days, Iriana’s lifeless body was found in a nearby building, wrapped in a trash bag. The little girl had been raped and strangled.
Some time earlier, a drifter called Carlos (or Carlo) had shown up in the neighborhood and worked as a handyman.
On the day that Iriana disappeared, a witness saw her walking hand in hand with Carlos.
The evidence overwhelmingly pointed to Carlos, but Carlos was nowhere to be found. In addition to that, nobody in the neighborhood knew who he really was.
There was DNA at the murder scene but nothing to match it with.
Two years later, in 2002, in Arizona, an illegal alien by the name of Alexis Flores was arrested for shoplifting, but was not deported.
In 2004, Flores presented fake Identification to the police and they discovered that he had in his possession a forgery device.
Flores went to jail for 60 days and after that he was deported to his native Honduras, in 2005.
Meanwhile back in the United States the FBI was expanding its Combined DNA Index System (CODIS). In 2007 it was discovered that the DNA of Alexis Flores, arrested in Arizona, was the same as the DNA from Iriana’s murder scene in Philadelphia. So “Carlos” was Alexis Flores.
By that time, of course, Alexis Flores was back in Honduras. The problem is, despite the close economic and military relations between the U.S. and Honduras, the two countries have no extradition treaty.
In 2007 Flores was placed on the FBI’s Top Ten Most Wanted Fugitives List, and is on the list to this day. The FBI offers a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading to his apprehension. Furthermore, Interpol has issued a Red Notice for Flores.
But who really knows where Alexis Flores is? Given today’s chaotic immigration situation, he might even be back in the United States.
If our country could have just prevented Flores’ initial illegal entry into the U.S., Iriana might still be alive today.
(Note: This selection is an article in my 2021 booklet The Victims of Illegal Immigration, Third Edition, published by US Incorporated. That booklet contains true accounts of victims of illegal aliens. It’s a big problem in our country, which the Mainstream Media does not publicize. )
Tags: Alexis Flores, Arizona, Crime and Immigration, FBI, Honduras, Illegal Aliens, Illegal Immigration, Interpol, Philadelphia, The Victims of Illegal Immigration - Third Edition, Victims of Illegal Immigration
