These cities are being terrorized by migrant gangs, and Democrats who are mild on crime are encouraging the chaos.
The notorious Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua is relocating to New York City and torturing its victims.
Crimes masquerading as refugees are transforming American cities into battlefields.
According to police sources, the notorious Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, known for torturing its victims, is relocating to New York City.
Gang members enlist immigrants from shelters and buses carrying them from Texas, where they operate in retail theft rings or on mopeds, robbing pedestrians of their phones and handbags.
This is criminal organization. Paul DiGiacomo, head of the NYC Detectives' Endowment Association, compares it to the Mafia.
FBI FEARS VENEZUELA MIGRANT GANG MEMBERS COULD POTENTIALLY TEAM UP WITH MS-13 KILLERS.
Commissioner of the NYPD Edward Caban issues a warning about a "wave of migrant crime." Democratic lawmakers contest it. Governor Kathy Hochul of New York claims that immigrants "are looking for a better life." Mostly true, but not always.
Caban is accused by NYC Comptroller Brad Lander of "fear mongering" and of exploiting a "Republican talking point."
Trust the police, not the politicians.
Teams of two people steal cell phones from pedestrians and bring them to Tren de Aragua stash homes, where skilled hackers conduct fraudulent bank transactions and siphon off funds from all accounts. After that, the phones are cleaned and sent to South America to be sold again.
Finding the ringleaders who armed him and sent him into the store is the next task.
The teenager had been attending school and lived with his mother in the Stratford Hotel, a city shelter. He is also a suspect in two other incidents: a robbery in the Bronx on January 27 and an incident in Midtown on January 25. Figueroa ought to have been evicted and the shelter system informed following his initial run-in with the law.
"A lot more crossing the border are criminals or have criminal intent than is being publicly said," Weitzel stated.
Paul Mauro, a former NYPD inspector, concurs. In an independent interview with Fox News, he claimed that the assertion that Venezuela is freeing its prisoners is true.
Furthermore, Mayor Eric Adams ought to work to reverse the judicial injunction that requires New York City to provide shelter to everyone. The majority of "the network of thieves" resides in the shelter system, according to NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny's observations.
Adams is enforcing a curfew at some shelters until 11 p.m. That's just decorative glass.
It makes no sense to give lodging and board to the same individuals who rob and threaten us. When migrants are in legal difficulties, they should be expelled from the shelter system and informed. Rikers is the only place they should be receiving shelter.
It says on the Statue of Liberty, "Give me your tired, your poor." It says nothing about your gang bosses, brutes, and lawbreakers.
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