Posts filed under ‘Sanctuary cities- crime pays for illegals in oregon’
Alvarojimenez, Quintero Mexican Hispanic Meth Dealer In Portland Sanctuary City
Booking Information
Alvarojimenez, Quintero Mexican Hispanic Meth Dealer In Portland Sanctuary City
SWIS ID: 742406
Name: Alvarojimenez, Quintero
Age: 22
Gender: Male
Race: Mulatto
Height: 5 ft 6 in
Weight: 180 lbs
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Arresting Agency: Portland Police, East Precinct
Arrest Date: 11/23/2009 11:43 AM
Booking Date: 11/23/2009 12:54 PM
Current Status: In Custody
Assigned Facility: MCDC
Projected Release Date: Unknown
Court Case No. None DA Case No. None Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
DEL METH (B Felony) $50,000 Unsentenced
POSS METH (C Felony) $5,000 Unsentenced
MAN/DEL CS 2 (B Felony) $20,000 Unsentenced
Court Case No. None DA Case No. None Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
USI HOLD (U ) $0 Unsentenced
Bail required could be the full amount or 10% of the full amount.
Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office. 30 days of crime by mexican illegals in Oregon
Remember Dani Countryman
Assault of Portland Police officer by Crazed Dangerous Illegal Mexican Acevedo, Rufino in Portland Or Sanctuary City
Assault of Portland Police officer by Crazed Dangerous Illegal Mexican Acevedo, Rufino in Portland Or Sanctuary City
A picture is worth a thousand words: another Proud Productive Honest Hardworking Latino Participating in The Hispanic Surge in Portland.
Sheriff’s Office
SWIS ID: 700156
Name: Acevedo, Rufino Junior
Age: 26
Gender: Male
Race: Hispanic
Height: 5 ft 11 in
Weight: 170 lbs
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Arresting Agency: Portland Police, Other
Arrest Date: 10/17/2009 4:39 PM
Booking Date: 10/17/2009 4:54 PM
Current Status: In Custody
Assigned Facility: MCDC
Projected Release Date: Unknown
Court Case No. 090951242 DA Case No. 2170050 Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
HARASSMENT (B Misdemeanor) $0 Unsentenced
ATT ASSAULT POL OFF (A Misdemeanor) $4,000 Unsentenced
FTA ON CITATION (A Misdemeanor) $0 Unsentenced
Court Case No. 090935599 DA Case No. 2176116 Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
ASSAULT POLICE OFF (C Felony) $5,000 Unsentenced
ATT ASSAULT POL OFF (A Misdemeanor) $2,500 Unsentenced
HARASSMENT (B Misdemeanor) $1,500 Unsentenced
.
Senate keeps funding of Sanctuary Cities for Criminal Illegal aliens
DEAR FRIENDS,
Please go to your NumbersUSA Action Board and send the new faxes and make the phone calls to your Senators after they once again approved sanctuary cities.
Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) offered an amendment to the FY2010 Commerce, Justice and Science spending bill that would prevent certain federal funds from going to cities that have declared themselves “sanctuaries” for illegal aliens.
The Senate voted 61-38 to table (thus, kill) the amendment.
You will want to immediately pound your Senators who voted YES to table (kill) the amendment. Tony Bologna’s widow Sues San Francisco over Sanctuary City resulting in mass murder by Latino illegal alien criminal from El Salvador
And send a nice thank you note to the 38 Senators who tried to save the amendment.
Your Action Board will have the appropriate action notes for each of your two Senators.
Sanctuary policies bar public officials, including police officers, from asking an individual’s immigration status and from reporting illegal aliens to federal authorities.
In 1996, Congress passed a law that specifically prohibits state and local governments from enacting sanctuary policies. Despite that, cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and Houston, still have sanctuary policies in place. Maine is the only state with a sanctuary policy. The Vitter Amendment would have been a huge incentive for states and municipalities to rescind their sanctuary policies.
Cities with sanctuary policies are officially favoring outlaw employers who hire illegal foreign workers over unemployed Americans and legal immigrants.
The Senators who voted YES to table the Vitter amendment were taking a strong pro-illegal-alien position even though most will tell their constituents that they oppose illegal immigration.
Those Senators especially chose to side against Black and Hispanic Americans who make up the largest part of the unemployed in those sanctuary cities. Are these Senators racist? Maybe not. But their pro-sanctuary stance has the effect of racism by disproportionately keeping jobs out of the hands of America’s unemployed minorities.
THANKS,
Tony Bologna's widow Sues San Francisco over Sanctuary City resulting in mass murder by Latino illegal alien criminal from El Salvador
SAN FRANCISCO — The family of a father and two sons who were slain in San Francisco last year can go to state court with a claim that the city is to blame for failing to turn their alleged killer over to immigration authorities when he was arrested earlier as a juvenile, a federal judge has ruled.
————————-http://jonjayray.wordpress.com/2008/10/05/federal-probe-into-sf-sanctuary-city-policy/——————————————————-
City Attorney Dennis Herrera had asked U.S. District Judge Susan Illston to rule on the claim herself after dismissing the rest of the suit last month by Tony Bologna’s widow and daughter. But Illston said Friday that the remainder of the family’s case – that the city’s negligence caused the killings – belongs in Superior Court because it is based on state law and challenges San Francisco’s policies.
Bologna, 48, and his sons Michael, 20, and Matthew, 16, were shot to death near their home in the Excelsior district in June 2008. Edwin Ramos, 22, is charged with murdering them.
Ramos, a native of El Salvador whom prosecutors describe as a member of the MS-13 gang, was arrested twice as a juvenile, for an assault in October 2003 and an attempted purse-snatching in April 2004. Juvenile courts sent him to a shelter after the first incident and to the city-run Log Cabin Ranch in the Peninsula hills after the second.
Case records don’t show whether police or juvenile courts knew that Ramos had entered the United States illegally. But under juvenile authorities’ interpretation of the city’s sanctuary policy at the time, they would not have passed that information along to federal immigration officials. Federal authorities learned of Ramos’ status later but did not take him into custody for deportation proceedings.
The family’s lawsuit says the city was responsible for the shootings because its policy allowed Ramos to go free.
Last month, Illston rejected the family’s claim that the city’s actions violated the shooting victims’ constitutional right to due process of law. She said the city might be held to account if it knew Ramos posed a specific threat to the Bolognas, but not for releasing someone who allegedly endangered a large segment of the public.
Herrera’s office urged Illston to address the negligence claim as well, arguing that it was governed by the same legal standard: a requirement that the plaintiffs show city officials knew the Bolognas were in danger and had a duty to protect them.
But Matthew Davis, the family’s lawyer, said Monday that California law makes it easier to hold government officials accountable for allegedly harboring illegal immigrants or preventing police from reporting them to federal authorities.
E-mail Bob Egelko at begelko@sfchronicle.com.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/09/15/BAC519N0BR.DTL#ixzz0SoM1sBGo
SAN FRANCISCO — The family of a father and two sons who were slain in San Francisco last year can go to state court with a claim that the city is to blame for failing to turn their alleged killer over to immigration authorities when he was arrested earlier as a juvenile, a federal judge has ruled.
Images
More News
City Attorney Dennis Herrera had asked U.S. District Judge Susan Illston to rule on the claim herself after dismissing the rest of the suit last month by Tony Bologna’s widow and daughter. But Illston said Friday that the remainder of the family’s case – that the city’s negligence caused the killings – belongs in Superior Court because it is based on state law and challenges San Francisco’s policies.
Bologna, 48, and his sons Michael, 20, and Matthew, 16, were shot to death near their home in the Excelsior district in June 2008. Edwin Ramos, 22, is charged with murdering them.
Ramos, a native of El Salvador whom prosecutors describe as a member of the MS-13 gang, was arrested twice as a juvenile, for an assault in October 2003 and an attempted purse-snatching in April 2004. Juvenile courts sent him to a shelter after the first incident and to the city-run Log Cabin Ranch in the Peninsula hills after the second.
Case records don’t show whether police or juvenile courts knew that Ramos had entered the United States illegally. But under juvenile authorities’ interpretation of the city’s sanctuary policy at the time, they would not have passed that information along to federal immigration officials. Federal authorities learned of Ramos’ status later but did not take him into custody for deportation proceedings.
The family’s lawsuit says the city was responsible for the shootings because its policy allowed Ramos to go free.
Last month, Illston rejected the family’s claim that the city’s actions violated the shooting victims’ constitutional right to due process of law. She said the city might be held to account if it knew Ramos posed a specific threat to the Bolognas, but not for releasing someone who allegedly endangered a large segment of the public.
Herrera’s office urged Illston to address the negligence claim as well, arguing that it was governed by the same legal standard: a requirement that the plaintiffs show city officials knew the Bolognas were in danger and had a duty to protect them.
But Matthew Davis, the family’s lawyer, said Monday that California law makes it easier to hold government officials accountable for allegedly harboring illegal immigrants or preventing police from reporting them to federal authorities.
E-mail Bob Egelko at begelko@sfchronicle.com.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/09/15/BAC519N0BR.DTL#ixzz0SoM1sBGo
SAN FRANCISCO — The family of a father and two sons who were slain in San Francisco last year can go to state court with a claim that the city is to blame for failing to turn their alleged killer over to immigration authorities when he was arrested earlier as a juvenile, a federal judge has ruled.
Images
More News
City Attorney Dennis Herrera had asked U.S. District Judge Susan Illston to rule on the claim herself after dismissing the rest of the suit last month by Tony Bologna’s widow and daughter. But Illston said Friday that the remainder of the family’s case – that the city’s negligence caused the killings – belongs in Superior Court because it is based on state law and challenges San Francisco’s policies.
Bologna, 48, and his sons Michael, 20, and Matthew, 16, were shot to death near their home in the Excelsior district in June 2008. Edwin Ramos, 22, is charged with murdering them.
Ramos, a native of El Salvador whom prosecutors describe as a member of the MS-13 gang, was arrested twice as a juvenile, for an assault in October 2003 and an attempted purse-snatching in April 2004. Juvenile courts sent him to a shelter after the first incident and to the city-run Log Cabin Ranch in the Peninsula hills after the second.
Case records don’t show whether police or juvenile courts knew that Ramos had entered the United States illegally. But under juvenile authorities’ interpretation of the city’s sanctuary policy at the time, they would not have passed that information along to federal immigration officials. Federal authorities learned of Ramos’ status later but did not take him into custody for deportation proceedings.
The family’s lawsuit says the city was responsible for the shootings because its policy allowed Ramos to go free.
Last month, Illston rejected the family’s claim that the city’s actions violated the shooting victims’ constitutional right to due process of law. She said the city might be held to account if it knew Ramos posed a specific threat to the Bolognas, but not for releasing someone who allegedly endangered a large segment of the public.
Herrera’s office urged Illston to address the negligence claim as well, arguing that it was governed by the same legal standard: a requirement that the plaintiffs show city officials knew the Bolognas were in danger and had a duty to protect them.
But Matthew Davis, the family’s lawyer, said Monday that California law makes it easier to hold government officials accountable for allegedly harboring illegal immigrants or preventing police from reporting them to federal authorities.
E-mail Bob Egelko at begelko@sfchronicle.com.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/09/15/BAC519N0BR.DTL#ixzz0SoM1sBGo
SAN FRANCISCO — The family of a father and two sons who were slain in San Francisco last year can go to state court with a claim that the city is to blame for failing to turn their alleged killer over to immigration authorities when he was arrested earlier as a juvenile, a federal judge has ruled.
Images
More News
Bologna, 48, and his sons Michael, 20, and Matthew, 16, were shot to death near their home in the Excelsior district in June 2008. Edwin Ramos, 22, is charged with murdering them.
Ramos, a native of El Salvador whom prosecutors describe as a member of the MS-13 gang, was arrested twice as a juvenile, for an assault in October 2003 and an attempted purse-snatching in April 2004. Juvenile courts sent him to a shelter after the first incident and to the city-run Log Cabin Ranch in the Peninsula hills after the second.
Case records don’t show whether police or juvenile courts knew that Ramos had entered the United States illegally. But under juvenile authorities’ interpretation of the city’s sanctuary policy at the time, they would not have passed that information along to federal immigration officials. Federal authorities learned of Ramos’ status later but did not take him into custody for deportation proceedings.
The family’s lawsuit says the city was responsible for the shootings because its policy allowed Ramos to go free.
Last month, Illston rejected the family’s claim that the city’s actions violated the shooting victims’ constitutional right to due process of law. She said the city might be held to account if it knew Ramos posed a specific threat to the Bolognas, but not for releasing someone who allegedly endangered a large segment of the public.
Herrera’s office urged Illston to address the negligence claim as well, arguing that it was governed by the same legal standard: a requirement that the plaintiffs show city officials knew the Bolognas were in danger and had a duty to protect them.
But Matthew Davis, the family’s lawyer, said Monday that California law makes it easier to hold government officials accountable for allegedly harboring illegal immigrants or preventing police from reporting them to federal authorities.
E-mail Bob Egelko at begelko@sfchronicle.com.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/09/15/BAC519N0BR.DTL#ixzz0SoM1sBGo
Images
More News
City Attorney Dennis Herrera had asked U.S. District Judge Susan Illston to rule on the claim herself after dismissing the rest of the suit last month by Tony Bologna’s widow and daughter. But Illston said Friday that the remainder of the family’s case – that the city’s negligence caused the killings – belongs in Superior Court because it is based on state law and challenges San Francisco’s policies.
Bologna, 48, and his sons Michael, 20, and Matthew, 16, were shot to death near their home in the Excelsior district in June 2008. Edwin Ramos, 22, is charged with murdering them.
Ramos, a native of El Salvador whom prosecutors describe as a member of the MS-13 gang, was arrested twice as a juvenile, for an assault in October 2003 and an attempted purse-snatching in April 2004. Juvenile courts sent him to a shelter after the first incident and to the city-run Log Cabin Ranch in the Peninsula hills after the second.
Case records don’t show whether police or juvenile courts knew that Ramos had entered the United States illegally. But under juvenile authorities’ interpretation of the city’s sanctuary policy at the time, they would not have passed that information along to federal immigration officials. Federal authorities learned of Ramos’ status later but did not take him into custody for deportation proceedings.
The family’s lawsuit says the city was responsible for the shootings because its policy allowed Ramos to go free.
Last month, Illston rejected the family’s claim that the city’s actions violated the shooting victims’ constitutional right to due process of law. She said the city might be held to account if it knew Ramos posed a specific threat to the Bolognas, but not for releasing someone who allegedly endangered a large segment of the public.
Herrera’s office urged Illston to address the negligence claim as well, arguing that it was governed by the same legal standard: a requirement that the plaintiffs show city officials knew the Bolognas were in danger and had a duty to protect them.
But Matthew Davis, the family’s lawyer, said Monday that California law makes it easier to hold government officials accountable for allegedly harboring illegal immigrants or preventing police from reporting them to federal authorities.
E-mail Bob Egelko at begelko@sfchronicle.com.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/09/15/BAC519N0BR.DTL#ixzz0SoM1sBGo
Major Drug Bust: Three Mexicans & one Asian in Sanctuary City North Portland Panda Express Sanchez-Velasquez:Jesus Ramirez:Sonny Plew:Gildardo Bello-Chacon
WIN Team Arrests Four, Seizes Drugs, Gun, and Cash
Washington Co. Sheriff’s Office – 09/04/09
Summary of Event:
On Wednesday the Westside Interagency Narcotics Team (WIN) arrested four people in North Portland after Detectives observed a drug transaction. The four were all booked into the Multnomah County Jail.
Details of Event:
On Wednesday, September 02, 2009, detectives from the Westside Interagency Narcotics Team arrested four people for charges related to distributing methamphetamine. The arrests were made in the parking lot of the Panda Express located at 1440 N. Lombard Street in Portland. Three of the suspects were taken into custody without incident, the fourth ran from detectives, but was quickly apprehended.
During a search of the suspects and their cars, detectives found a stolen handgun, six ounces of methamphetamine (worth approximately $3000), and over $4000 in cash.
The suspects arrested were:
• Edgar Sanchez-Velasquez (DOB 2-24-81) – Charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance, Methamphetamine, Distribution of a Controlled Substance within 1000 feet of a school, Delivery of a controlled substance meth, and Conspiracy to Deliver Methamphetamine.
• Jesus Ramirez (DOB 6-1-90) – Charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance, Methamphetamine, Distribution of a Controlled Substance within 1000 feet of a school, Delivery of a controlled substance meth, and Conspiracy to Deliver Methamphetamine.
• Sonny Plew (DOB 3-9-85) – Charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance, Methamphetamine, Distribution of a Controlled Substance within 1000 feet of a school, Delivery of a controlled substance meth, and Conspiracy to Deliver Methamphetamine.
• Gildardo Bello-Chacon (DOB 6-8-89) – Charged with Conspiracy to Deliver Methamphetamine.
The investigation is ongoing and there are no further details at this time.
Hispanic Male _ Mexican Illegal alien ? opens fire Salem Park Shoots Three Kills One
Mexican Male shoots Three People At Salem Park one now deadOne Victim From Park Shooting Dies
Salem Police Dept. – 05/27/09
One of the victims in the shooting that occurred at Northgate Park on the afternoon of May 26 has died of his gunshot wounds.
21-year old Montez Bailey of Salem died early this morning from the wounds he sustained in the incident. Bailey was sitting on a park bench at the park along with 21-year old Skylar Hyland and 20-year old Cameron Carolino when the suspect walked up, had a brief conversation with them, then fired several gunshots. Hyland and Carolino also suffered gunshots wounds that are not life-threatening. They both remained hospitalized with their injuries.
Salem Police Dept. – 05/26/09
The three victims were sitting on a park bench in the southern portion of the park when they were approached by the suspect. A short conversation ensued between the suspect and the victims, then the suspect suddenly pulled out a gun and fired multiple shots. There was no indication of an argument or fight prior to the shots being fired.
Salem Police officers arrived on scene within three minutes of being dispatched and immediately began rendering aid to the victims and checking the area for the suspect, but they were unable to locate him.
One victim suffered life threatening gunshots wounds and the other two suffered non-life threatening wounds. All three were transported from the scene to Salem Hospital.
The suspect was described as a hispanic male, 16-18 years old, short black close cut hair, wearing a light colored shirt, long blue shorts and carrying a black backpack.
Anybody with information about this incident is asked to call the Salem Police Department at 503-588-6123.
Sharpie Eyebrow Mexican Breeder Salazarvelazquez, Milagros arrested Theft In Ron Wyden’s Open Borders Oregon
SWIS ID: 687512
Name: Salazarvelazquez, Milagros
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Race: Hispanic
Height: 5 ft 4 in
Weight: 135 lbs
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Arresting Agency: Gresham Police Department
Arrest Date: 4/26/2009 3:58 PM
Booking Date: 4/26/2009 5:03 PM
Current Status: In Custody
Assigned Facility: MCDC
Projected Release Date: Unknown
Court Case No. None DA Case No. None Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
COUNTY HOLD (U ) $0 Disposed
Court Case No. 040952143 DA Case No. 2033167 Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
THEFT II (A Misdemeanor) $1,234
Sharpie Eyebrow Mexican Breeder Salazarvelazquez, Milagros arrested Theft In Ron Wyden's Open Borders Oregon
SWIS ID: 687512
Name: Salazarvelazquez, Milagros
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Race: Hispanic
Height: 5 ft 4 in
Weight: 135 lbs
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Arresting Agency: Gresham Police Department
Arrest Date: 4/26/2009 3:58 PM
Booking Date: 4/26/2009 5:03 PM
Current Status: In Custody
Assigned Facility: MCDC
Projected Release Date: Unknown
Court Case No. None DA Case No. None Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
COUNTY HOLD (U ) $0 Disposed
Court Case No. 040952143 DA Case No. 2033167 Citation No. None
Charge Bail Status
THEFT II (A Misdemeanor) $1,234
List of Sanctuary Cities for Illegal aliens: Crime does pay in the US
http://www.ojjpac.org/sanctuary.aspList of Sanctuary Cities for Illegal aliens: Crime does pay in Oregon
the entire state is a sanctuary state in my opinion
The following is a list of sanctuary cities.
* Alaska and Oregon both have state-wide policies that forbid state agencies from using resources to enforce federal immigration law. Oregon law, however, does provide an exception to allow law enforcement officers to share information on immigration status with federal authorities with those arrested for criminal offenses
Anchorage, Alaska
Fairbanks, Alaska
Chandler, Arizona
Fresno, California
Los Angeles, California
San Diego, California
San Francisco, California
Sonoma County, California
Evanston, Illinois
Cicero, Illinois
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Orleans, Massachusetts
Portland, Maine
Baltimore, Maryland
Takoma Park, Maryland
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Durham, North Carolina
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Aztec, New Mexico
Rio Arriba County, New Mexico
Sante Fe, New Mexico
New York, New York
Ashland, Oregon
Gaston, Oregon
Marion County, Oregon
Austin, Texas
Houston, Texas
Katy, Texas
Seattle, Washington
Madison, Wisconsin.
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