Posted on 10/29/2010 7:20:03 PM PDT by jazusamo
The suspect in all three killings is Marco Antonio Garcia. Police say that Garcia did odd jobs for Stout, and lived with Alvizo, who was his girlfriend.
According to the Travis County Sheriffs office, Garcia is in custody in the Travis County Jail, facing charges including capital murder and robbery. More are likely. Authorities were able to track him because he was using credit cards stolen from Mr. Stout.
According to one APD officer I spoke with today, Garcia is an illegal alien who has been deported before. KVUE has reported that on the air, but hasnt updated their online story yet. A quick check of the Travis County Jails web site shows that there is an INS hold on him, meaning he is suspected of being here illegally. See the image below.
So our porous border appears to have claimed more lives, this time deep in the heart of Texas.
Bryan Preston has been a leading conservative blogger and opinionator since founding his first blog in 2001. Bryan is a military veteran, worked for NASA, hails from Hot Air, was producer of the Laura Ingraham Show and, most recently before joining PJM, was Communications Director of the Republican Party of Texas.
Deporation?
sarc/ but true.
Maybe the joke RINO GOP in Texas might start doing something about it. Just like the RINO GOP in FL and McCain the bag of sh*t.
Deportation is merely a one way vacation to visit relatives and friends and come back across the porous border whenever you want to. Secure the border and send the illegals back home. Illegal immigration the number one problem facing this country. It affects jobs, uncollected taxes, a burden on education, housing, natural resources, medical, criminal justice system etc....
Fixed it.
Deporation is what happens to illegal aliens when democrats drive them to vote and then give them free beer.
Not in Travis county. It is a “safe” zone.
USBP Weekly Blotter - October 21 - October 27
Snips:
Reported on October 21, 2010
El Centro Sector Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Mexico near Calexico, California. Records checks revealed the subject had prior convictions for participating in a criminal street gang and various sexual offenses. The subject had also previously been removed from the United States.
Rio Grande Valley Sector Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from El Salvador near Riviera, Texas. During processing, the subject was identified as a member of the Mara Salvatrucha 13 (MS-13) gang. Records checks revealed the subject had previously been removed from the United States.
Reported on October 23, 2010
Miami Sector Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Colombia near Tamarac, Florida. Records checks revealed the subject had prior convictions for multiple felonies, to include sex offense against a child / fondling / lewd and lascivious behavior; cocaine possession and fleeing/eluding law enforcement. The subject had also previously been removed from the United States.
Rio Grande Valley Sector Border Patrol agents detained a USC at the traffic checkpoint near Falfurrias, Texas. The individual was identified as the subject of an active warrant of arrest for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
Tucson Sector Border Patrol agents arrested an illegal alien from Mexico near Tombstone, Arizona. During processing, the subject admitted to being a member of the Sureño 13 gang. Records checks revealed the subject had previously been removed from the United States.
Reported on October 25, 2010
Marfa Sector Border Patrol agents seized .145 pounds of marijuana, a .380 caliber semi-automatic pistol, and arrested a USC at the traffic checkpoint near Sierra Blanca, Texas. The subject presented himself for inspection and a Border Patrol canine alerted to the vehicle. A subsequent search of the vehicle revealed the marijuana and the pistol. Records checks revealed the subject had a prior felony conviction for forgery.
Reported on October 26, 2010
El Paso Sector Border Patrol agents seized 92 pounds of marijuana and arrested a USC near Animas, New Mexico. Records checks revealed the subject had prior convictions for aggravated sexual assault on child, and assault causing bodily injury to a family member. The subject was also registered as a sex offender in the state of Texas. DEA assumed custody of the case. A 72 hour lane check was negative.
Rio Grande Valley Sector A Border Patrol agent was assaulted by an illegal alien from Mexico near Brownsville, Texas. The subject actively resisted and assaulted the agent during the arrest. The agent was able to subdue the subject and take him into custody. Records checks revealed the subject had previously been removed from the United States.
AMEN! You’re correct on all points.
Leni
Thanks for BP blotter info. With this Austin murder and the beheading in Arizona it is so clear that the violent drug-funded/fueled revolution has poured across the borderlands. The gubmit is curiously silent about the state of affairs - it is really important to be extra aware and equipped for any situation when leaving the house now.
I hear you! I have friends in Texas, so all news about it is important to me. If you click on the Border Patrol Blotter link, you’ll see the numerous drug arrests - quite substantial, but of course, unreported by US media.
He’ll pop across the border into Mexico for a few weeks until things calm down and then pop back in to do the same thing somewhere else.
These guys are not afraid of getting caught.
About 5 years ago on FR was an article of some gal bragging she’d crossed 450+ times and said that time when they sent her back, she’d cross again. IIRC, it was at McAllen, TX.
Last year, a student of mine was telling me about the Mexican gangs in Austin, TX. All illegals. Very scary. And nothing much being done about them.
I have an middle-aged acquaintance who works at a big store in San Antonio who became a US citizen long ago (family from Mexico). He said he ALWAYS tells illegals that they MUST speak English if they want service at his store. He is small in statute, but big in attitude and expectation illegals. When we visited several years ago, he took us to the not-so-well-known old religious forts or whatever they are called and to the Alamo next door to Dillards.
Good for him but here’s hoping his friends Smith and Wesson have his back.
I used to live in San Antonio. They are called missions (basically fortified churches with small communities surrounding them). The Alamo grounds are now a joke. NOT the Alamo itself, mind you, but encroachment of downtown. It’s just a shadow of what it was when I was young. Nearby La Villita is nothing but a pricey tourist trap. Back in the day, hubby’s great-grandpa fought in those houses for the Texican side. The other missions, though, are being kept more as they should be. My home church was San Jose which is the most popular (after the Alamo) with it’s rose window. We used to run all over the grounds! My favorite is San Juan de Capistrano because it was so far out of town and all was quiet and peaceful. Sadly, the row of homes/stores/storage buildings across from the front of the church are now gone and there’s a park ranger’s house built right by the front.
Hey, did your friend take you to the Ghost Children? It’s right down the road from Capistrano. Go south on Villamain, the road in front of the mission until you cross the railroad onto Shane Rd. I know you’ve heard of it because every so often there’s some ghost show on tv about it. It’s supposedly not true but the story goes that a school bus was hit by a train there and if you get stuck there the ghost children will push your car across the tracks to safety. You’ll see lots of baby powder bottles thrown out by the corner (litter, yeah, I know) because people sprinkle powder on the back of their car. Anyway, drive down a ways on Shane Rd. (all the streets there are children’s names) and turn around facing the tracks. Go further than what you think. Then put the car in neutral, don’t brake, and let the children push your car across the tracks. People claim that sometimes you can see handprints in the powder. You can’t miss it because there’s all the powder bottles and there’s always other cars there. Boo!
How good a replica was the John Wayne ‘Alamo’ down the road in Bracketville, TX, which I hear has just been closed down (in August)?
No, I didn’t get to see that, but they took us to a famous BBQ place where the food was succulent and delicious. Don’t remember the name of it, but they said it was a San Antonio favorite place.
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