close
close

Massachusetts mother criticizes Healey’s immigration policies, 2 illegals arrested for sex crimes

Massachusetts mother criticizes Healey’s immigration policies, 2 illegals arrested for sex crimes

A Massachusetts mother told the nation she is concerned about her children and their safety. illegal immigrants People flocking to the Bay State are in custody for alleged sex crimes against minors.

Enforcement and Deportation Operations Boston arrested Mateo Hincapie Cardona, a Colombian national who was illegally present on Oct. 29 after the Suffolk County Department of Corrections failed to honor an inmate and released him 10 days earlier, according to authorities.

The Boston Police Department took the 28-year-old into custody on October 16 on charges of seducing a child under the age of 16, distributing obscene material, and exposing a child naked and engaging in lascivious poses.

Cardona was arraigned in Charlestown District Court the same day he was arrested, and ERO Boston filed a detainer requesting that local or state law enforcement “maintain custody of the noncitizen for a period not to exceed 48 hours beyond the period the person would otherwise do.” will be released.”

The Suffolk County Department of Corrections denied the request, and immigration officers later found and arrested Cardona in East Boston, authorities said at ERO Boston.

Cardona is said to have entered the country on April 26, where border patrol agents encountered him near Lukeville, Ariz., where they arrested him and released him on personal recognizance the same day.

Holden resident Stephanie Mulroy, a mother of four school-age children, highlighted the case in a statement to Fox News on Wednesday, calling the alleged crimes “disgusting.”

“This is just one of thousands roaming our streets, schools, hotels and shelters across the state,” Mulroy told America Reports co-host Sandra Smith. “Parents can’t let their kids walk downtown to get a soda without wondering who’s going to stop them on the way. “This is terrible.”

Two days after ERO Boston arrested Cardona, officers detained 36-year-old Brazilian fugitive Andre Tiago Lucas in Bourne in connection with the rape of a 13-year-old boy in his home country, according to authorities.

It was reported that Lucas, who was convicted of raping a defenseless person in Brazil in December 2016 and sentenced to nine years and four months in prison, fled his country and settled in Massachusetts before his sentence.

Mulroy, a member of the Massachusetts Republican State Committee and the Holden Board of Elections, said that while she is concerned about her children and their safety, she is also compassionate. He described how “diverse” the Bay State was when he attended school with non-English-speaking classmates in the 1980s.

“Our housing rights law, created in the ’80s, has been abused and misinterpreted by Maura Healey throughout her entire administration, so much so that she created it to make the state a state,” Mulroy said of the governor. basically a magnet for criminals.”

Massachusetts remains the only state in the country to have a “right to housing” law since its enactment in 1983; The law only guarantees emergency shelter to families with children and women who are pregnant with their first child.

Aspect immigrant crisis Critics of Healey, who has been straining the capacity of the emergency system for months, criticize the governor for not prioritizing U.S. citizens, especially veterans.

Healey doubled earlier this week about last week’s stance does not have authority to enforce immigration and he Will not use Massachusetts State Police Assisting President-elect Trump’s mass deportation efforts.

Healey also said he wants to see Trump follow through on his promises on the border.

Mulroy told Fox News he was working with Massachusetts GOP Chair Amy Carnevale to find a Republican candidate “to be in line for the next (gubernatorial) election” in 2026.

“He’s an absolute hypocrite,” Mulroy said of Healey’s views. “He relies on people’s emotional appeal and doesn’t take facts into account.”

“The reality is that we have a housing crisis here in Massachusetts,” Mulroy added, “who seem to be very vocal about it, but take no means or action to actually deport or remove people who are exercising our right to housing: young mothers, homeless people , we enforce the law in an abusive manner so that veterans cannot use the resources we have here.”

BAD MOVEMENT: Inmates are getting out early to 'have a good time' from prisons in the Bay State, including the Suffolk County Correctional Facility in Boston, above.
Suffolk County Correctional Institution in Boston. (Herald file photo)

First Publication Date: