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The Mexican Invasion - [Video]

November 28th, 2007 by admin

Amazingly, many Americans are not even aware of the war that is being waged on the streets in our cities and towns. It’s time to get out of your lazy chair, put down the remote, and stand up and fight to keep the nation that our forefathers fought and spilt their blood to create for us. Don’t expect the media to wake you from your slumber and report to you what is happening. The mainstream media is just as complicit as our leaders for what is happening to our country, before our very eyes.

A War you say?

On average between 2 and 3 soldiers are killed a day in the Iraqi theater of war, resulting in the loss of 820 lives a year, with total casualties of 3,466 service men and women since operations began in 2003 (as of June, 2007).

In the United States, 25 American citizens are killed a day by illegal aliens, totaling over 9,000 American deaths a year. Our casualty rate, at the hands of the illegal invaders, is TEN TIMES higher than the casualty rate our troops are facing in the war in Iraq. This does not even include atrocities committed that do not result in death, and does not take into account the murders committed by immigrants who are not considered illegal aliens.

Are you ready for the New America, your leaders have in store for you?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you don’t believe a war is being raged based on the statistics, perhaps you should believe the invaders themselves. Are you ready to stand to defend your nation, or will you remain silent and tell your children and grandchildren how you gave their country away without a fight?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Doing The Jobs Americans Won’t Do

From abc30 News

Mexican Accused of Raping an 80 Year Old Woman

Thursday, November 29, 2007 | 10:00 PM

By Sara Sandrik

Mexican Rape Suspect

11/29/07 — Action news north valley reporter Sara Sandrik shows us the surveillance photos investigators hope will lead to an arrest.

The Merced County Sheriff’s Department has been searching for the man responsible for this disturbing crime for the past two weeks.

Now detectives are releasing pictures of the suspect and asking for the public’s help in finding him.

These are gas station surveillance pictures of the man Merced county sheriff’s deputies believe brutally raped an 80 year old woman. Authorities say the suspect picked her up near the Stanislaus County line after she left a nearby assisted living facility for an afternoon walk.

Mark Pazin, Merced Co. Sheriff: “She was approached by a stranger driving a Dodge Durango SUV, if she needed a ride back to the facility. She accepted the ride.”

Sheriff Mark Pazin says from there the man drove to this Chevron station in Turlock. Surveillance pictures show the woman in the passenger seat of the dark colored Durango. Sunny Singh was working behind the register when the man came in to buy sodas and gas.

Sunny Singh, Chevron employee: “He just looks like a normal guy. Never expect to be a guy like that do something like this to somebody.”

Detectives say when the man left this store, he drove about an hour away and then raped then the victim.

Pazin: “It was on a rural canal bank in the northern part of Merced County where the sexual assault was done to her.

Sara Sandrik: “Authorities say after the rape, the suspect drove the woman all the way back to this quick stop station in Turlock. She walked inside, bleeding from her injuries, and store clerks called 9-1-1.”

Pazin: “She suffered severe internal trauma to the point where she needed emergency surgery to stop the bleeding and she was in the hospital for about five days and was just recently released.”

Now authorities hope the images caught on tape will help them catch the man who’s responsible.

Authorities describe the suspect as about 5′4″-5″6″ tall and 140-160 pounds. They say he’s about 25-30 years old.

Anyone with information about the suspect or the Durango he was driving is asked to call the Merced County Sheriff’s Department.

Detectives are on standby right now ready to take calls from the public.

 


Illegal Murders 18 Year Old Girl

KCTV5 Story
November 28,2007

Emily Sander aka Zoey Zane, an Internet porn star pictured below, disappeared last Friday after leaving a bar with illegal immigrant Israel Mireles, whose nearby motel room was found soaked in blood the next morning.

Emily Sander with killer Israel Mireles

Emily Sander, on left in picture above, was last seen Friday night leaving a bar with Israel Mireles, right top. Police said they fear Sander may have been the victim of a violent crime inside a local motel room. They are looking for Mireles and his girlfriend, Victoria Martens, right bottom.

Police believe Mireles killed Emily Sander that night and fled to Texas with his pregnant 16-year old girlfriend, Victoria Martens. Mireles rental car was found near a town in Texas where he has family, but he is thought to have continued on to Mexico.

Emily Sander with ex-boyfriend

Emily Sander in Myspace pic with ex-boyfriend. They broke up because he didn’t like her nude modeling website, ZoeyZane.com

 

UPDATE: November 30, 2007

Missing student’s body apparently found

By ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press Writer

The search for a missing college student who led a secret life as an Internet porn performer turned into a homicide case after her body was apparently found, said investigators who shifted their focus on finding a suspect.

Authorities said the preliminary physical description of the body found Thursday about 50 miles east of El Dorado matches that of Emily Sander, who was last seen leaving a bar here a week ago with a man who stayed in a motel room where police found large quantities of blood.

Investigators refused to give details about the state of the body or how it was found. Police Chief Tom Boren said the cause of death was not yet known. An autopsy was planned for Friday.

Sander’s case drew wide attention after it was revealed that she appeared nude on a popular adult Web site under the name Zoey Zane.

The 18-year-old Butler Community College student was last seen Nov. 23 with Israel Mireles, 24. Authorities are looking for him and his 16-year-old pregnant girlfriend.

The rental car the pair were driving was found abandoned Tuesday in Vernon, Texas, where Mireles has relatives.

“We got no information from them at all and very little cooperation,” Boren said of Mireles’ family.

The search for Sander gripped this small community, and the apparent discovery of her body left only memories to comfort her friends and family.

“She was probably the most independent girl I know,” said Nikki Watson, a close friend. “She was so anxious to get out on her own and make something of herself. She was ready to take on life.”

Former boyfriend Michael McAllister, 20, said Sander moved in with him when she was 17.

“It was the best time of my life, and I hope it was the same for her,” McAllister said.

He helped her finish high school, and she encouraged him in college. They bought pink and white Denver Broncos jerseys for themselves and their dog, Zan, that they wore on game days. She loved to dance to hip-hop music.

“She wanted to choreograph music videos. That is the only reason she did the Internet thing — to get a little exposure,” McAllister said.

They broke up in September after she started posing for nude photos, he said.

Watson said the attention over Sander’s Web site has upset her friends.

“She never referred to it as her porn site,” she said. “It was just her Web site. She didn’t make it into this big thing.”

Police insisted that Sander’s Internet activity had no connection to her disappearance. “The issue of the Internet and the spinoff of that has been literally crippling our investigation,” Boren said.

The body was found as searchers on foot and all-terrain vehicles were checking the tall grass along each side of Highway 54 as they traced the route Mireles may have taken Saturday on the way to Baxter Springs to pick up his girlfriend.

Sander’s grandmother, Shirley Sander, said the discovery of a body would “very definitely” bring closure to the family.

“We had to know one way or another,” she said in a telephone interview.


Mexican Porsche Sale

Newsday.com
Cops: Pa. couple robbed after being lured by Porsche

BY JOHN VALENTI

john.valenti@newsday.com

7:14 AM EST, November 27, 2007

A Pennsylvania couple drove to Freeport hoping to buy a Porsche they read about in an advertisement on the Web.

Instead, they got robbed on Rose Street Monday.

Police said the couple, both 34 years old, were waiting on Rose Street to meet a woman they believed was intent on selling them a 2006 Porsche. But, after receiving a call confirming the meeting and exiting their own car, they were approached by what police described as “a Hispanic female,” and three or four men rushed up and began punching the Pennsylvania couple — taking a cell phone and the cash intended for the down payment on the Porsche.

Nassau County police did not reveal how much money was stolen in the incident.

The husband and wife, police said, refused medical attention after the attack and robbery, which occurred at 6:15 p.m.

Police said they are now searching for the Hispanic woman, described as 5-foot-4, between the ages of 20 and 25, with a medium build and reddish-brown hair that was tied back in a ponytail. They also are searching for the male attackers, all believed to be in their late teens to early 20s.

Police are asking anyone with information contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-244-TIPS. All calls will remain anonymous.

 


Criminal Aliens No Longer Being Detained

Reported by Dallas News

Irving cannot detain some illegal immigrants

12:23 AM CST on Wednesday, November 21, 2007

By BRANDON FORMBY and STEPHANIE SANDOVAL / The Dallas Morning News
bformby@dallasnews.com, ssandoval@dallasnews.com

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials in North Texas will no longer detain most illegal immigrants arrested for Class C misdemeanors, citing a dramatic increase in referrals and limited resources.

The agency began notifying area cities this week that it wants to target for deportation suspected illegal immigrants charged with more serious crimes.

Dallas ICE spokesman Carl Rusnok said Tuesday that increased awareness of the Criminal Alien Program has led to a recent spike in referrals the agency receives from local law enforcement.
Also Online

Document: See the memo sent to City of Irving officials

“These additional referrals required additional resources not immediately available,” said Mr. Rusnok, whose office covers 128 Texas counties and all of Oklahoma. ICE officials are directing local law enforcement agencies to refer people suspected of being in the country illegally if they have been arrested on Class B misdemeanors or more serious crimes.

The agency will continue to look at those arrested for Class C misdemeanors if, for example, the suspect possessed a firearm or has an immigration warrant or a criminal record involving a Class B misdemeanor or more serious crime.

The new guidelines will enable ICE to “allocate our law enforcement assets in the most effective manner possible to address public safety and national security threats,” according to a memo sent to Irving outlining the changes.

Mr. Rusnok said his agency will check those charged with Class C misdemeanors as resources permit. He noted that anyone in the country illegally is at risk of deportation.

Irving officials estimate that 60 percent of the more than 1,700 suspected illegal immigrants they have turned over to ICE for deportation since last year faced only Class C misdemeanor charges. Such charges include speeding, assault, public intoxication and hot checks. The penalty for Class C misdemeanors is a fine of no more than $500.

Class B misdemeanors include disorderly conduct with a firearm, prostitution and driving while intoxicated. Penalties include a fine of up to $2,000 and up to 180 days in jail.

Mayor complains

News of the latest guidelines re-ignited debate about how best to grapple with illegal immigration. Local and state officials expressed shock and frustration at what they say is a lack of resources and inaction by federal officials on immigration.

“We’re cooperating in all the ways that we can to help them, and it’s obvious they don’t have the resources to get it done systemwide,” Irving Mayor Herbert Gears said.

He said ICE declined to place holds on several suspected illegal immigrants in Irving’s jail on Monday because they faced only Class C misdemeanors.

Hispanic leaders and activists for weeks have called for scaling back the program, which they say has deported people effectively for minor traffic violations. On Tuesday, they hailed the decision.

“We said to the Irving authorities that the way they were proceeding was wrong because … they were not affecting criminals but families for totally unjustified reasons,” Mexican Consul Enrique Hubbard Urrea said.

He warned immigrants from his country in September to avoid Irving so they wouldn’t be deported.
Irving generated buzz

CAP has long been available to local law enforcement agencies. But national publicity about Irving’s high number of arrestees turned over to ICE for deportation proceedings generated unprecedented attention in recent months.

Officials in other cities said Tuesday that they had heard rumors about the policy change but had not been formally notified. The move is expected to dramatically alter which North Texas arrestees are interviewed by ICE and held for possible deportation under CAP.

Sheriff’s departments in Dallas, Denton and Collin counties and the Farmers Branch, Garland and Grand Prairie police departments are among the North Texas law enforcement agencies that use CAP.

“Today it’s a big celebration for all immigrants that the CAP program is going to be revised and that illegal immigrants in Irving will not be deported for traffic citations,” said Carlos Quintanilla, who has gained media attention for organizing rallies in opposition to the program.

He said his attorney plans to file a lawsuit this week challenging the constitutionality of CAP and disparities in how it is implemented.

Some Irving Hispanic activists who disagreed with Mr. Quintanilla’s aggressive style opted instead to hold closed-door meetings to try to persuade Irving officials to scale back their use of CAP. They, too, considered the policy change to be good news.

“A program called the Criminal Alien Program should not be focused on misdemeanors and first-time offenses,” such as running a stop sign or driving without a driver’s license, said Alberto Ruiz, a co-founder of a group called Irving Forward, which defends illegal and legal immigrants and pushes for voter registration for those with U.S. citizenship.
Officials frustrated

State Rep. Ken Paxton, R-McKinney, said Texas and other border states are frustrated that the federal government is not following through on its job.

“If we’ve identified illegal immigrants, especially if they’re committing crimes, it needs to be dealt with,” said Mr. Paxton, who is also on the board of directors for the Texas Conservative Coalition. “They’re not supposed to be here.”

Farmers Branch Mayor Pro Tem Tim O’Hare said ICE’s change in policy is telling.

“The first thing I think it tells you is how many people who are here illegally break other laws, other than just being in the country illegally,” Mr. O’Hare said.

It’s also indicative of the large number of illegal immigrants in the Dallas area, he said.

Mr. O’Hare spearheaded the attempted crackdown in Farmers Branch that included a proposed ban on apartment rentals to most illegal immigrants.

“The federal government can’t handle this problem alone, and they need the assistance of cities and counties and states,” he said.

Irving City Council member Beth Van Duyne said the city now needs to work closer with federal officials, who she said are not doing enough to support successful programs such as CAP.

“My fear all along has been that resources will begin to dwindle, and it was always a short-term solution and not a long-term solution, and that’s what you’re beginning to see,” she said.

State Rep. Linda Harper-Brown, R-Irving, along with four other area lawmakers, recently praised Irving’s efforts and urged other cities to join CAP to curb illegal immigration.

“This is an epidemic, and it’s costing taxpayers millions of dollars,” she said Tuesday. “There has to be a process to turn them over. I don’t know why the feds are choosing to ignore the law.”

Staff writer Dianne Solís and Al Día staff contributed to this report.

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