Immigration
ICE Conducts ‘Major Bust’ Across Sanctuary Cities in Single-Day Raid
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) celebrated the arrests of five illegal migrants with serious criminal backgrounds across Maryland’s sanctuary cities during a single-day operation in October. The crackdown targeted individuals involved in crimes ranging from gang activity and drug distribution to sexual assault, according to an ICE press release.
“This targeted operation resulted in the arrest of five noncitizens with serious criminal histories including fentanyl distribution, gang activity, drug cartel association, assault, and sexual assault,” said Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Baltimore Field Office Director Matthew Elliston. “ERO Baltimore will not tolerate these egregious noncitizen offenders victimizing our Maryland communities.”
The arrests took place in areas like Montgomery County, Howard County, and Baltimore County—designated as “sanctuary jurisdictions” for their policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities. These policies have been criticized for hampering ICE’s ability to detain and remove criminal migrants, reports the Daily Caller News Foundation.
Baltimore field agents have recently achieved significant successes despite these limitations. In the 2024 fiscal year, the Baltimore ICE office set a record by arresting 161 non-citizen sex offenders, surpassing its previous high of 152 in a single year.
ICE operations are expected to intensify under President-elect Donald Trump, who has pledged to initiate the largest deportation operation in U.S. history. Trump has indicated that he plans to declare a national emergency and deploy military assets to assist in mass deportations, focusing on individuals with criminal records.
The individuals apprehended include: a 24-year-old Guatemalan national and documented gang member, convicted of second-degree assault in Montgomery County, a 38-year-old Honduran national arrested in Howard County for DUI and driving with a handgun, a 29-year-old Salvadoran national convicted of intent to distribute fentanyl, a 41-year-old Salvadoran national previously deported and later convicted of second-degree assault in Baltimore County, an 18-year-old Trinidadian national who violated his visa terms and was convicted of robbery in Baltimore City.
Immigration
Sinaloa Cartel Offering Huge Pay Days to College Chemistry Students to Produce More Potent Fentanyl
An in-depth report conducted by the New York Times follows how the Sinaloa Cartel is recruiting young college students studying chemistry to make Fentanyl. The Times report included interviews with seven fentanyl cooks, three chemistry students, two high-ranking operatives and a high-level recruiter. All of them work for the Sinaloa Cartel, which the U.S. government says is largely responsible for the fentanyl pouring over the southern border.
The cartels “know we are now focused on the illicit trafficking of these precursor chemicals around the world,” said Todd Robinson, the State Department’s assistant secretary of the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs.
But as the cartels gain greater control of the fentanyl supply chain, U.S. officials say, it will become more difficult for law enforcement in both countries to stop the industrialized production of synthetic opioids in Mexico.
The Times details the information it learned from one of the recruiters:
Before the Sinaloa Cartel ever approaches a recruit, it scouts out its prospect.
The ideal candidate is someone who has both classroom knowledge and street smarts, a go-getter who won’t blanch at the idea of producing a lethal drug and, above all, someone discreet, said one recruiter in an interview.
In months of searching, he said, he’s found three students who now work for him developing precursors. Many young people just don’t meet his standards.
“Some are lazy, some aren’t bright, some talk too much,” said the recruiter, a lanky middle-aged man with square glasses, who has worked for the cartel for 10 years. He described himself as a fix-it man, focused on improving quality and output in the fentanyl business.
To identify potential candidates, the cartel does a round of outreach with friends, acquaintances and colleagues, the recruiter said, then talks to the targets’ families, their friends, even people they play soccer with — all to learn whether they’d be open to doing this kind of work. If the recruiter finds someone particularly promising, he might offer to cover the student’s tuition cost.
“We are a company; what a company does is invest in their best people,” he said.
When the cartel began mass-producing fentanyl about a decade ago, the recruiter said, it relied on uneducated cooks from the countryside who could easily get their hands on what people in the business call “recipes” for making the drug.
The Times also writes about one of the students recruited to be a fentanyl cook by the cartel:
The cartel offered the student $1,000 as a signing bonus, the woman said. She was terrified, but she said yes. The lab where she works is about an hour’s flight from Sinaloa’s capital, on the small aircraft the cartel uses to transport cooks to work. Her bosses told her that her job was to manufacture more powerful fentanyl, she said.
The fentanyl coming out of Mexico has often been of low purity, a problem the recruiter attributes to the desperate rush to satisfy Americans’ appetite for the synthetic opioid.
“There was such an explosion of demand that many people just wanted to earn money, and those manufacturers just made whatever without caring about quality,” the recruiter said. But in a competitive market, he said, the cartel can win over more clients with a stronger drug.
The first-year student said she had experimented with all manner of concoctions to increase fentanyl’s potency, including mixing it with animal anesthetics. But none of her attempts at producing fentanyl precursors have worked.
A second student, who is a sophomore chemistry student, detailed how he had been recruited on campus, but had no idea what he was supposed to be doing. He said the lab was in the mountains, in the midst of trees and covered by a tarp that had been painted to look like foliage, so it couldn’t be seen from a helicopter.
After three days of work, he said, one of the men in charge told him that he wasn’t there to make fentanyl. He was the newest member of a research and development lab, where everyone was working to figure out how to make precursors from scratch. He said he immediately started worrying about inadvertently causing an explosion.
“They don’t tell you how to do it — they say, ‘These are the products, you’re going to make them with this, it could go wrong, but that’s why you’re studying,’” he said.
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Reg Bulldog
November 22, 2024 at 9:53 am
& there are actually mayors & governors all over the country opposing ICE removing these criminals by making it harder to arrest & pursue them in their states & cities.
Guierllmo Adamski
November 22, 2024 at 1:30 pm
Wait till the summer ! Rocky Gap State Park in Allegany County thousands there every weekend and only one way out unless to try and swim across the lake !