Friday, October 23, 2009

SAN DIEGO - Police Ignore Prostitution In Migrant Camps -WHY ARE THERE MIGRANT CAMPS???

FROM JUDICIAL WATCH … get on their emails
Police Ignores Prostitution In Migrant Camps
Last Updated: Thu, 10/22/2009 - 12:06pm
A multitude of criminal activity—including prostitution and public drunkenness—is perpetually ignored by police in a southern California border city because the violators are illegal aliens and the department refuses to deal with immigration enforcement.
For years hundreds of illegal immigrants have lived in shanty town encampments on a stretch of publicly owned canyon in northeastern San Diego not far from the Mexican border. They stay mostly in tents, use the bushes as their bathroom and steal water from the city’s irrigation lines. The migrants also create fire hazards with illegal campfires, propane-fueled lights and candles and have destroyed the once-lush and scenic mountain terrain with empty alcohol containers, cigarette butts and other trash.
Prostitution is also rampant, according to area residents and various news reports, that have discovered makeshift “sex dens” inside trees, complete with used and unused condoms, lubricant and beds. There is also underage sex-trafficking that has long been ignored by local authorities because it involves illegal aliens. Area immigration advocates still help the law breakers, visiting the canyon camps regularly to deliver food and water.
San Diego Police has known for years that the intruders live on the canyon, which is located in an area known as Rancho Penasquitos. The city and county actually run a public park in the area, which ironically, has regulations that are repeatedly violated by the illegal aliens. They include a ban on glass containers, littering and overnight camping. All are strictly prohibited, according to city and county officials, though the rules evidently don’t apply to illegal immigrants.
Enraged area residents want police to at the very least enforce local laws and punish those who break them, regardless of immigration status. Many have encountered the disgusting shanty town filth during hikes with their children in the once-breathtaking canyon they assure has been ruined by invaders.
Like many local law enforcement agencies nationwide, the San Diego Police Department has a don’t-ask-don’t-tell immigration policy that forbids officers from inquiring about a suspect’s status. In this case however, it certainly appears as though police is taking it a step further than most to protect illegal aliens.
A department captain actually justifies the migrant camps, pointing out that the region’s lack of low-income housing leaves the canyon dwellers no choice. Residents counter that many of the migrants make up to $100 a day tax free and can afford to rent a small place. But the sympathetic police captain, Miguel Rosario, explains that if the migrants “are not legal, they lack the proper documentation to secure an apartment.”
So there you have it—a high-ranking law enforcement official in a major U.S. city defending criminals as if they were the victims.

SANCTUARY CITY SAN FRANCISCO PROTECTS ILLEGAL CRIMINALS

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S.F. Passes Law To Shield Criminal Illegal Alien Youths


View Discussion Last Updated: Wed, 10/21/2009 - 12:14pm
San Francisco has taken its acclaimed illegal immigrant sanctuary status a huge step further by passing legislation that forces police and probation officers to violate federal law in order to protect undocumented youth criminals.

The measure, overwhelmingly approved by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors this week, requires that underage illegal aliens arrested and charged with felonies actually be convicted before police could turn them over to federal immigration authorities for deportation.

The convoluted story of how the law came to be features a politically motivated mayor’s desperate efforts to appear tough on illegal immigrant crime as he seeks statewide office. For years San Francisco has offered illegal immigrants sanctuary, forbidding city employees—including law enforcement officers—from reporting undocumented residents to the feds. The city even offers illegal immigrants official municipal identification cards so that they can enjoy public services and integrate into the community.

Among the most protected are violent youths convicted of serious crimes, many of them repeat offenders. Over the years San Francisco has spent millions of taxpayer dollars to shield them from deportation by housing them in unsecured group homes. The outrageous policy came under fire last year when two illegal aliens who had been convicted of felonies as youths committed heinous crimes as adults.

First a gangbanger (Edwin Ramos) from El Salvador brutally murdered a father and his two sons as they drove home from a family picnic. As a youth Ramos had been convicted of two felonies (a gang-related assault on a bus passenger and the attempted robbery of a pregnant woman). In an unrelated incident, a Mexican gang member convicted of several felonies as a teenager “gutted” a man like a “pig,” according to police.

The atrocities received worldwide media attention and inspired San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom to pretend he’s tough on crime because he wants to be California’s next governor. Newsom, an ardent defender of his city’s sanctuary policies, issued an order directing local authorities to turn youth offenders over to federal officials as soon as they’re booked on felony charges. No conviction necessary.

The order incensed the Board of Supervisors who struck back with this week’s veto-proof law to protect young illegal alien thugs. The measure was authored by a county supervisor (David Campos) who proudly boasts that he arrived in the U.S. as an illegal immigrant from Guatemala. Campos has already threatened to take action against the mayor if he doesn’t abide by the new law.

Gavin is standing his ground, claiming that the bill isn't worth the paper it's written on. The city attorney had previously issued an advisory saying that the legislation cannot be enforced since federal law prohibits the city from taking any adverse action against a city official or employee who reports a juvenile to federal immigration authorities.

Judicial Watch has sued San Francisco, on behalf of a local taxpayer, over its sanctuary policies and has thoroughly investigated the Ramos triple murder case, obtaining public records relating to his arrest and lengthy criminal history.

LA FAMILIA CARTEL demands OBAMA AMNESTY FOR VOTES

More Than 300 Alleged La Familia Cartel Members and Associates Arrested in
Two-Day Nationwide Takedown

"Project Coronado" Results in Nearly 1,200 Arrests during 44-Month Operation,
Seizures of Approximately 11.7 Tons of Drugs and $32.8 Million in U.S.
Currency


WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Today Attorney General Eric
Holder announced the arrest of nearly 1,200 individuals on narcotics-related
charges and the seizure of more than 11.7 tons of narcotics as part of a
44-month multi-agency law enforcement investigation known as "Project
Coronado." The Attorney General was joined in announcing the current results
of Project Coronado by DEA Acting Administrator Michele M. Leonhart, FBI
Director Robert S. Mueller III and ATF Acting Director Kenneth E. Melson.


Over the past two days, 303 individuals in 19 states were arrested as part of
Project Coronado, which targeted the distribution network of a major Mexican
drug trafficking organization known as La Familia, through coordination
between federal, state and local law enforcement. More than 3,000 agents and
officers operated across the United States to make the arrests during the
two-day takedown. During the two-day operation alone, $3.4 million in U.S.
currency, 729 pounds of methamphetamine, 62 kilograms of cocaine, 967 pounds
of marijuana, 144 weapons and 109 vehicles were seized by law enforcement
agents.


"This unprecedented, coordinated U.S. law enforcement action -- the largest
ever undertaken against a Mexican drug cartel -- has dealt a significant blow
to La Familia's supply chain of illegal drugs, weapons and cash flowing
between Mexico and the United States," said Attorney General Holder. "We will
not allow these cartels to operate unfettered in our country, and with the
increases in cooperation between U.S. and Mexican authorities in recent years,
we are taking the fight to our adversaries. We will continue to stand strong
with our partners in Mexico as we work to disrupt and dismantle cartel
operations on both sides of the border."


The La Familia cartel is a violent drug trafficking cartel based in the state
of Michoacan, in southwestern Mexico. According to court documents, La
Familia controls drug manufacturing and distribution in and around Michoacan,
including the importation of vast quantities of cocaine and methamphetamine
from Mexico into the United States. La Familia is philosophically opposed to
the sale of methamphetamine to Mexicans, and instead supports its export to
the United States for consumption by Americans. La Familia is a heavily armed
cartel that has utilized violence to support its narcotics trafficking
business including murders, kidnappings and assaults. According to one
indictment unsealed in the Southern District of New York, associates of La
Familia based in the United States have allegedly acquired military-grade
weapons, including assault weapons and ammunition, and have arranged for them
to be smuggled back into Mexico for use by La Familia. In a criminal
complaint filed in Dallas, ATF investigators allege that operatives of La
Familia shipped hundreds of firearms from the U.S. to Mexico over a 12-month
period ending in October 2009. Individuals indicted in the cases are charged
with a variety of crimes, including: conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine,
cocaine and marijuana; distribution of methamphetamine, cocaine and marijuana;
conspiracy to import narcotics into the United States; money laundering; and
other violations of federal law. Numerous defendants face forfeiture
allegations as well.


To date, Project Coronado has led to the arrest of 1,186 individuals and the
seizure of approximately $32.8 million in U.S. currency, and approximately
2,710 pounds of methamphetamine, 1,999 kilograms of cocaine, 29 pounds of
heroin, 16,390 pounds of marijuana, 389 weapons and 269 vehicles.


"Project Coronado, our massive assault on the La Familia Cartel, is part of
our continued fight against all of the powerful Mexico-based drug cartels,"
said DEA Acting Administrator Michele M. Leonhart. "This organization, the
newest of Mexican cartels, is directly responsible for a vast majority of the
methamphetamine pouring into our country across our Southwest Border, and has
had a hand in fueling the cycle of violence that is wracking Mexico today.
DEA, along with our U.S. and Mexican partners, are committed to strategically
attacking the international and domestic drug trade with every tool at our
disposal, and defeating those that thrive on the suffering of others."


"Multi-agency coordinated investigations such as Project Coronado are the key
to disrupting the operations of complex criminal organizations like La
Familia. Together -- with the strong collaboration of our international,
federal, state and local partners -- we have dealt a substantial blow to a
group that has polluted our neighborhoods with illicit drugs and has
terrorized Mexico with unimaginable violence," said Director Mueller.


"ATF's arrest of defendants in Project Coronado highlight the almost
inseparable link between illegal trafficking of firearms and narcotics between
the U.S. and Mexico," said ATF Acting Director Kenneth Melson. "ATF is on the
frontline against violent crime and focuses its investigative tools on
criminal groups such as La Familia, which use firearms to further their
illegal trade and ruin and endanger countless lives. It is alleged that La
Familia used proceeds from the sale of drugs to purchase or obtain hundreds of
firearms that were then moved illicitly to Mexico."


"The operation to dismantle the La Familia drug trafficking organization in
the United States demonstrates an unprecedented level of partnership and
coordination at the local, state and federal levels. We at ICE are proud to
have played an important role in yesterday's operation and look forward to
continuing to work with our law enforcement partners to target these criminal
organizations," said Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Assistant
Secretary John Morton.


Arrests were made or charges have been unsealed yesterday and today related to
Project Coronado in the following districts: Central District of California,
Southern District of California, District of Colorado, Northern District of
Georgia, District of Massachusetts, District of Minnesota, Southern District
of Mississippi, Eastern District of Missouri, Northern District of Oklahoma,
Southern District of New York, Northern District of New York, Middle District
of North Carolina, District of South Carolina, Middle District of Tennessee,
Eastern District of Texas, Northern District of Texas, Western District of
Texas and the Western District of Washington. There were also arrests by
state authorities in California, Nevada, North Carolina and Georgia.
Assistance for Project Coronado was provided by the Criminal Division's
Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section and Office of International Affairs.
Additionally, local prosecutions will occur in San Diego, San Bernardino, Los
Angeles and Orange County, Calif.; Clark County, Nev.; Gwinnett County, Ga.;
and Pitt County, N.C.


The investigative efforts in Project Coronado were coordinated by the
multi-agency Special Operations Division, comprised of agents and analysts
from the DEA, FBI, ICE, Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, U.S. Marshals Service and ATF, as well as attorneys from the
Criminal Division's Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section. More than 300
federal, state, local and foreign law enforcement agencies contributed
investigative and prosecutorial resources to Project Coronado through the
Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces.


An indictment is merely an allegation and is not evidence of guilt. A
defendant is entitled to a fair trial in which it will be the government's
burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.


SOURCE U.S. Department of Justice

Woman Raped By Illegal Hispanic "Day Laborer"

Every day there are 12 Americans murdered by illegals. Every day there are 8 children molested by an illegal.

In California there have been more than 2,000 Americans murdered by illegals from Mexico that fled back over the border, and yet OBAMA and his La Raza Dems work tirelessly for OPEN BORDERS - AMNESTY and the ILLEGALS' VOTES!




FEMALE UCSC STUDENT BRUTALLY RAPED BY ILLEGAL DAY LABORER ON RIVER ST! (santa cruz)


WARNING ; TWO WEEKS AGO A YOUNG FEMALE STUDENT WAS RAPED AND SEVERELY BEATEN BY AN ILLEGAL HISPANIC "DAY LABORER " WHO LOITERS IN FRONT OF PRO_ BUILD LUMBER STORE ON RIVER STREET . REPORTS SAID THE YOUNG WOMAN FELT AS THOUGH SHE HAD BEEN WATCHED FOR MONTHS BY THIS GROUP OF ILLEGAL UNDOCUMENTED HISPANIC MALES WHO LOITER ON RIVER STREET UNDER THE GUISE OF " LOOKING FOR WORK " SHE TOLD DETECTIVES SHE HAD BEEN FOLLOWED REPEATEDLY BY MORE THAN ONE OF THESE ILLEGAL HISPANICS AND FELT AS THOUGH THEY WERE " UNDRESSING HER WITH THEIR EYES " AS SHE WALKED TO AND FROM HER RENTAL ON RIVER STREET . SANTA CRUZ POLICE REFUSE TO ENFORCE ANY LOITERING LAWS REGARDING THIS DANGEROUS PACK OF ANIMALS AND SINCE SANTA CRUZ IS A "SANCTUARY CITY" FOR ILLEGAL HISPANICS, EXPECT MORE WOMEN TO BE VICTIMIZED IN AND AROUND THE RIVER STREET AREA !! AVOID PRO BUILD AND RIVER STREET OR YOU WILL BECOME THIS GROUP OF ILLEGAL HISPANIC SAVAGES NEXT VICTIM !! FEMALES OF THE RIVER STREET AREA YOUVE BEEN WARNED !!!!