Mark Krikorian, executive director
of the Center for Immigration Studies, said that to understand such a discon- nect is to understand that American liberalism has long been percolating into abnormalities that include global- ist views that illegal immigrants are the most oppressed citizens of the world. “They’re opposed to normality, so
whether it’s enforcing immigration laws, whether it’s trans, whether it’s gay and/or Gaza, it’s all the same,” he said. “Whatever is normal and main- stream, they’re against.”
BABY TRAFFICKING According to the National Counterter- rorism Center (NCTC), two Mexican cartels running the kidnapping and organ harvesting racket were selling newborns to American couples for up to $13,000 each. In a joint U.S.-Mexican operation, authorities arrested Martha Alicia Mendez Aguilar, a cartel leader known as “La Diabla,” accusing her of luring poor, pregnant women, killing them, harvesting their organs, and selling their babies. The ring required recruiters, bro-
kers, and medical professionals in clan- destine Mexican hospitals or clinics. “These are examples of what these
groups will do to diversify their rev- enue streams and finance operations,” said Joe Kent, director of NCTC, when announcing the September bust.
FAKE ADDERALL ICE agents helped take down a fake Adderall pill cartel in suburban Boston. Adderall is commonly prescribed
to treat children diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disor- der (ADHD). It’s also the go-to drug to treat narcolepsy, a disorder that causes people to suddenly fall asleep. Jarod Forget, a veteran special
agent for the Drug Enforcement Agen- cy, said he “cannot tell the difference between a pharmaceutical-grade pill and one that’s made by the cartel.” A man nicknamed “Heartless” pleaded guilty in connection with sell-
Progressives Deplore Crackdown
I
n a month-long sweep in Boston, ICE agents apprehended 1,400 illegal
immigrants with violent histories, hundreds of them being convicted child rapists. One was Perfecto Nolasco-Lopez, 21,
of Guatemala, who had convictions for indecent assault and battery on a child, assault and battery, strangulation/ suffocation, and kidnapping. Nonetheless, not long after the
sweep, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu was leading a No Kings protest in the Massachusetts capital, heralding its sanctuary status for illegal immigrants. “The story of Boston is the story of people who found injustices intolerable and fought to correct them,” she said in condemning the work of ICE agents to a crowd of cheering onlookers. Meanwhile, controversial Chicago
District Judge Jeffrey Cummings said ICE oficers should be arrested if they nab suspected illegals outside courtrooms in the sanctuary city. Cummings imposed an obligation
on ICE to report how many people are arrested in the Chicago area without a warrant and stated that courts must be places where witnesses and suspects feel safe.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi
Noem fired back that “Nothing in the Constitution prohibits arresting a lawbreaker where you find them. “We aren’t some medieval kingdom; there are no legal sanctuaries where you can hide and avoid the consequences for breaking the law,” she said. Two weeks after Cummings’
order, which was praised by Illinois Gov. JD Pritzker, ICE issued a detainer for Leyter Jeferson Arauz-Medina, a Nicaraguan man who had just weeks earlier brutally assaulted and raped a local 54-year-old woman in broad daylight in the Windy City. Mike Pekara, assistant Cook
County state’s attorney, presented to a judge surveillance video that captured Arauz-Medina strangling her, grabbing her by the hair, repeatedly slamming her head into a concrete sidewalk, and raping her. The judge, however, released Arauz- Medina. As of late October, the illegal immigrant remained at large.
ing thousands of counterfeit Adderall pills that were actually a dangerous compound of methamphetamine and caffeine to undercover officers.
AUTO THEFT According to Matthew Stentz, a spe- cial agent with Homeland Security Investigations, a raid by ICE agents turned up 350 stolen cars in Ameri- ca’s auto manufacturing heartland, an operation that “hit even closer to home in a state like Michigan — where auto theft doesn’t just hurt our wallets,” he said, “but our culture.” Law enforcement wiretaps over-
heard the gang bragging about their incredible wealth, including interna- tional real estate and piles of cash overseas, prosecutors said. The gang netted an estimated $35
million by shipping cars to Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, and Turkey, they said. Two months earlier in Florida,
ICE agents helped arrest four Cuban nationalists living in the U.S. illegally who were stealing ECMs from com- mercial tractor-trailers parked over- night at truck stops in multiple states. The illegals were shipping the
ECMs to a broker in Texas, who would wipe their data and resell them, some- times for as high as $10,000. Aside from rendering the trucks inoperable, the operation disrupted major deliveries, including nationally distributed food and medical supplies. American truckers shell out thou-
sands of dollars for replacement costs. According to the Florida Attor- ney General’s Office, the illegal immi- gration operation costs Florida truck- ers alone more than $500,000 in lost income and truck repairs.
“They crossed over into the United
States under the Biden administra- tion. They’ve got criminal records. They shouldn’t have been here, and here they are operating this organized scheme to defraud our citizens,” said Florida Attorney General James Uth- meier, during a recent press confer- ence about the ring.
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