8chan/8kun QResearch Posts (7)
#20498539 at 2024-03-01 11:11:21 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #25143: All Surv LeapFrog Hops The 7th Moon Edition
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2024/02/29/laken-rileys-murder-showcases-vulnerable-senate-democrats-opposition-to-kates-law/
Laken Riley's Murder Showcases Vulnerable
Senate Democrats' Opposition to Kate's Law
Breitbart Politics, by Bradley Jaye
Posted By: Imright, 2/29/2024 10:36:11 PM
Vulnerable Democrat Sens. Bob Casey (D-PA), Sherrod Brown (D-OH), and Jon Tester (D-MT) are facing criticism for their soft-on-crime voting record after the murder of Laken Riley. Riley, a 22-year-old Augusta University nursing student killed allegedly by an illegal alien released into the United States, is the latest American woman to fall victim to the federal government's inability to enforce immigration law. The tragedy has cast renewed attention on the fate of Kate Steinle, a 32-year-old murdered in 2015 allegedly by a seven-time felon, five-time deported illegal alien, Jose Garcia Zarate. He was acquitted of murder but convicted for federal gun charges in association with the murder.
#19247774 at 2023-07-27 00:10:58 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #23639: Impeachment Time Edition
18 arrested in human trafficking and child exploitation investigation in Bozeman
This investigation was part of a sting operation between the Bozeman Police Department and other collaborators, said Detective Captain Dana McNeil.
Detectives posted an advertisement for sexual services. They set up a dialog with those who responded and scheduled a time to meet up. When respondents arrived, police arrested them, McNeil said.
McNeil said it is hard to say whether trafficking is on the rise in the Bozeman area. There was a huge spike 15-20 years ago, but the means people use are constantly changing.
During the arrests, police seized cocaine, fentanyl and other physical evidence.
"We have concerns in sexual trafficking cases where people will meet up with somebody that's being trafficked to try and solicit them to come over and work for them. And they will bring money and they'll bring drugs and those sorts of things to try and entice somebody away. So, that's part of the dynamics in these cases," McNeil said.
According to the affidavits released by Gallatin County, the eighteen people arrested are as follows:
Jessie Lee Donnes
Alejandro Guerrero Aviles
Brian Heck
Mark Nahorniak
David Stoker
Dana Williams
Joseph Reed
Floyd Harmonson Jr.
Kevin Contreres Chicas
Bryce Widner
Kenneth Williams
Alfredo Landaverde
Steven Frey
Steven Strickland
Joshua Cook
Jose Garcia Gonzalez
Ian Nicklin
John Schwabel
https://www.montanarightnow.com/bozeman/18-arrested-in-human-trafficking-and-child-exploitation-investigation-in-bozeman/article_ef18bd9e-2a3b-11ee-a5a2-5f99ebe6190c.html
#13435197 at 2021-04-16 00:09:56 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #17018: Sailing Through The Waves of Sound Edition
>>13435189
>Twenty-Two Indicted for Drug Trafficking in San Antonio Area
U.S. Attorney's Office
Western District of Texas
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, April 15, 2021
Twenty-Two Indicted for Drug Trafficking in San Antonio Area
Twenty-two defendants from San Antonio, Del Rio and Laredo face federal drug trafficking charges, announced U.S. Attorney Ashley C. Hoff and Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Special Agent in Charge Daniel C. Comeaux, Houston Division.
A federal grand jury indictment unsealed today charges the following defendants with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance:
Matthew Noe Arteaga, age 35 of San Antonio;
Nicolas Rodriguez, age 39 of San Antonio;
Bryan Anthony Brown, age 33 of San Antonio;
Brian Victorino Chavarria, age 24 of San Antonio;
Oscar Oviedo, age 26 of San Antonio;
Joseph Richard Guerrero, age 28 of San Antonio;
Homero Garcia, age 36 of San Antonio;
Jesus Gerardo Vasquez, age 19 of San Antonio;
Jesse Martinez, age 41 of San Antonio;
Justin Paul Guerrero, age 26 of San Antonio;
Ricardo Gonzalez, age 24 of San Antonio;
Juan Carlos Robles, age 35 of San Antonio;
Fernando Jose Moreno, age 45 of San Antonio;
Rene Palafos, age 37 of San Antonio;
Michael Barron, age 39 of San Antonio;
Oswaldo Jesus Lopez, age 26 of Laredo;
Oscar Jesus Lopez, age 23 of Laredo;
Javier Garcia Lopez, age 29 of San Antonio;
Jose De Jesus Garcia, age 35 of San Antonio;
Madilyn Marie Alvarado, age 26 of Del Rio
James Patric Bartlett, age 42 of San Antonio; and,
Albelardo Oviedo, age 29 of San Antonio.
The indictment alleges that defendants Arteaga, Rodriguez, Brown, Chavarria, Oscar Oviedo, Joseph Guerrero, Vasquez, Martinez, Justin Guerrero, Gonzalez, Robles, Moreno, Palafos, Barron, Lopez, Jose Garcia, Alvarado, Bartlett, and Albelardo Oviedo conspired from June 2019 until April 7, 2021, to distribute methamphetamine. It also alleges that from June 2019 until April 7, 2021, Oscar Oviedo, Vasquez, Justin Guerrero, Moreno and Palafos conspired to distribute cocaine, and that Chavarria, Homero Garcia, Oswaldo Lopez and Oscar Lopez conspired to distribute heroin. All of the defendants except Albelardo Oviedo are also charged in substantive counts in the indictment related to specific instances of drug trafficking that occurred throughout the course of the conspiracy.
During this investigation, authorities seized approximately 24 kilograms of methamphetamine, six kilograms of heroin, three kilograms of cocaine, four firearms and approximately $100,000 along with other assets attributable to this organization.
Over the past two days, federal, state and local authorities arrested all of the defendants with the exception of Brown, Martinez, Jose Garcia, Alvarado, and Bartlett. Those five defendants were already in custody.
"These arrests send a strong and unified message that these crimes will not be tolerated in our communities and those who commit these offenses will be brought to justice," said DEA Special Agent in Charge Comeaux. "We will continue to work closely with our federal, state and local law enforcement partners in order to enhance the quality of life for the citizens in the San Antonio region."
Martinez, Robles, and Jose Garcia face between 15 years and life upon conviction of conspiracy to possess a controlled substance with intent to distribute. Each has a prior serious felony drug conviction which enhances their minimum mandatory sentence. All the remaining defendants face between 10 years to life in federal prison upon conviction.
It is important to note that an indictment is merely a charge and should not be considered as evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
The DEA, U.S. Marshals Service, IRS Criminal Investigations, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Texas Department of Public Safety, Bexar County Sheriff's Office, Terrell Hills Police Department, Seguin Police Department and San Antonio Police Department conducted this Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation called Operation Alamo Fade. The Bexar County District Attorney's Office also assisted in the investigation. OCDETF Lead Task Force Attorney Adrián Rosales is prosecuting this case on behalf of the government.
#8331170 at 2020-03-06 08:16:58 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #10666: Someone Bless This Ebil Trip Bread Edition
I put Nygard on this Board many moons ago. Quick update from Miami:
1. Ultra isn't "officially" cancelled yet.
2. County of Miami-Dade Gimenez is the County.
3. Ultra is held in the tiny City of Miami.
4. Joe Carollo a City of Miami Commissioner literally I mean literally got in a fight regarding a TEA POT:
The six-month-old domestic violence case against Miami Mayor Joe Carollo, accused of striking his wife in the head with a teapot, ended quietly in a 30-second court hearing Monday with the charge dropped because he completed anger management counseling.
The case arose from an early morning dispute between the spouses in February during which Carollo's wife said she taunted him for not knowing how to boil water to brew tea. Though legally separated at the time, they continued to share their Coconut Grove house.
He said he meant to hit only the wall, not her, when he heaved the terra-cotta teapot in her direction. Results of a polygraph examination, distributed to reporters outside the court by Attorney Benedict P. Kuehne, seem to support his story.
Neither the mayor nor his wife, Maria "Mari" Ledon Carollo, was in court. But Kuehne said afterward that his client was relieved, and Mari Carollo said she was, too.
"I'm very glad to put this behind us," she said by telephone following the hearing before County Judge Carroll J. Kelly, who also lifted the restrictions she had placed on Carollo's contact with his wife.
Mari Carollo said the couple and daughters Caroline, 13, and Kelley, who turns 11 in a week, would continue with the family counseling that began late last year before she filed for divorce.
"That's the best course for us to take," she said.
The Miami-Dade County State Attorney's Office said in a news release that dropping the misdemeanor charge "is the preferred and customary method of dealing with first-time offenders charged with similar offenses. Successful completion of a counseling program allows the offender not to have a criminal record while providing rehabilitation to the behavior which led to police intervention."
"Mayor Carollo is entirely pleased and gratified that the system worked today," said Kuehne, who qualified his remarks by insisting that no crime was committed. "I think he would have preferred to have been cleared, and would have been, in a trial."
Carollo, 46, faces a tough re-election bid in November against eight opponents, including City Commissioner Wilfredo "Willy" Gort and former mayors Maurice Ferre and Xavier Suarez. Other strong contenders are former City Manager Jose Garcia-Pedrosa and lawyer Manny Diaz.
The domestic violence case had proceeded despite repeated attempts by Mari Carollo to have it dismissed after initially cooperating with police who responded to a 911 call placed by daughter Kelley.
The first officer on the scene on Feb. 7 reported that Mari Carollo had a golf-ball-sized bruise on her left temple. The mayor also suffered scratches to his neck.
"I know you are his friend," she reportedly told the officer. "But you have to act as a cop. Look what he did to me."
But at a bond hearing later that day, a lawyer for Mari Carollo, 43, read a statement in which she said her husband did not mean to hurt her.
"I am grateful to the police officers who responded with concern and sensitivity this morning at my home," Mari Carollo said in the statement. "But despite the concern of the police, this is a matter to be handed by Joe and me. I am completely opposed to any further involvement of the legal system in this very personal situation."
Ellis Berger can be reached at eberger@sun-sentinel.com or 305-810-5004.
#8178676 at 2020-02-19 01:49:12 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #10470: Gold Nuggs and Frosty Muggs The Kick Back And Nightshift Edition
Illegal Alien Acquitted for Kate Steinle's Murder Deemed Mentally Ill, Unfit to Stand Trial for Gun Charges
The seven-time felon, five-time deported illegal alien acquitted for 32-year-old Kate Steinle's murder in 2017 will not stand trial on federal gun charges after a California court has deemed him mentally ill.
Following Steinle's 2015 killing on a pier in San Francisco, illegal alien Jose Garcia Zarate was charged with her murder after being caught on surveillance footage running from the shooting. After his arrest, Zarate admitted to shooting and killing Steinle, who was walking on the pier at the time with her father, saying he chose San Francisco because it was a sanctuary city that shields criminal illegal aliens from arrest and deportation by federal immigration officials.
Now, after his acquittal of Steinle's murder, Zarate is facing federal criminal charges for illegal possession of a firearm. Zarate has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Records from last week reveal that a California court is declaring Zarate mentally ill and thus unable to stand trial for the charges, as FOX 5 San Diego reported:
A court evaluator concluded Jose Ines Garcia Zarate is not competent to stand trial on federal gun charges "because of a mental illness that is not presently being treated," according to a court document from the US District Court in California. [Emphasis added]
...
"If neither side disputes the evaluator's conclusion, the Court wishes to explore ... what efforts should be made locally to restore the defendant to competency through proper medication, as opposed to sending the defendant to a federal facility outside California," according to court documents dated February 14. [Emphasis added]
The defense and prosecution are set to meet this week to discuss the matter.
Illegal aliens facing trial, as Breitbart News has chronicled, increasingly have used the defense of being insane, mentally ill, and mentally disabled to escape maximum sentences for murder.
In the case of illegal alien Wilbur Ernesto Martinez-Guzman - accused of murdering four Americans in Reno, Nevada - the defense is expected to claim that Martinez-Guzman is "mentally disabled" to avoid the death penalty if he is convicted.
Likewise, the 34-year-old illegal alien Apolinar Altamirano, an alleged self-proclaimed member of the Sinaloa Cartel, accused of murdering 21-year-old gas station clerk Grant Ronnenbeck in cold blood in January 2015, will not be eligible for the death penalty after he successfully got himself declared "intellectually disabled."
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/02/18/illegal-alien-acquitted-for-kate-steinles-murder-deemed-mentally-ill-unfit-to-stand-trial-for-gun-charges/
#6506897 at 2019-05-15 20:13:42 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #8321: National Police and Peace Officers Memorial Service Edition
Mexican Cartel Connected to Heroin Trafficking Bust in Oklahoma, Say Feds
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Oklahoma announced the indictment of 29 alleged members and co-conspirators of a drug trafficking organization with ties to the Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). The 29 are accused of participating in a criminal enterprise to possess and distribute heroin and perform money laundering.
The indictment alleges that the Giovanni Drug Trafficking Organization established a heroin distribution network based in Mexico with operations in Tulsa, dating back to November 2017. The organization allegedly imported, processed, and distributed approximately two kilograms of heroin per week while utilizing multiple levels of distribution to supply street-level dealers and users, according to the federal grand jury indictment issued on May 9, and unsealed Tuesday.
"Operation Smack Drago" was a long-term multi-agency investigation. According to the indictment, the organization's leaders in Mexico supplied heroin to the Tulsa "cell heads." These cell heads were also originally from Mexico but took up residence in Oklahoma. Stille Giovanni Gutierrez Vivanco was identified in the court filing as the leader of the Mexico group. According to the indictment, "the criminal organization smuggled heroin into the United States and transported the drug to storage locations in Tulsa where they prepared it for distribution throughout the United States."
A select group of cell heads were responsible for managing the transportation of drugs from the Mexican border to Tulsa, the filing notes. Laundering techniques were then used to send proceeds out of the U.S. Cell heads were identified as Jose Garcia, 36, Edson Garcia-Velasquez, 25, and Norman Fabian Huerta Avalos, 36, according to a release.
The CJNG is blamed for much of the record-breaking violence in Mexico as they quickly move to take new operational territories.
Criminal charges handed down by a federal grand jury were announced Tuesday at a press conference hosted by U.S. Attorney Trent Shores.
https://www.breitbart.com/border/2019/05/15/mexican-cartel-connected-to-heroin-trafficking-bust-in-oklahoma-say-feds/
#5498820 at 2019-03-04 14:03:20 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #7030: Caca De Toro Edition
DEA Targets Alleged Drug Mill, Walks Out with Enough Drugs To Kill 2 Million People
A law enforcement raid of a residential home in Westchester County, New York, on Friday resulted in the seizure of enough fentanyl to kill about 2 million people, ABC News reported.
The Drug Enforcement Agency's Tactical Diversion Squad and local police "executed a search warrant" in the home, which authorities believe functioned as "an elaborate heroin and fentanyl mill," according to News 12 Westchester.
Law enforcement discovered 6 kilos of heroin and 5 kilos of fentanyl. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says fentanyl, a synthetic opioid, is "50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine."
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Fentanyl is often added to heroin, cocaine and counterfeit prescription pills without the user's knowledge, leading to overdose deaths.
The suspects arrested in the raid included Braulio Mata, Jose Garcia, Ramon Aracena Alfe, Dionell Duarte Hernandez and Yarly Mendoza-Delorbe, officials told WABC.
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"The five face charges ranging from conspiracy and possession of heroin and fentanyl to resisting arrest," News 12 said.
https://www.westernjournal.com/ct/dea-targets-alleged-drug-mill-walks-enough-drugs-kill-2-million-people/?utm_source=push&utm_medium=westernjournalism&utm_content=2019-03-03&utm_campaign=manualpost