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Bonifacio Oseguera-Gonzalez, 29, was accused of three counts of aggravated murder and one count of attempted aggravated murder. He appeared in court Tuesday afternoon.
KGW News partner KXL reported the suspect was deported from the United States six times since 2003.
“This defendant shot four people, killing three of them, admitted to doing so when interviewed by police,” said a Marion County prosecutor.
Deputies were dispatched to the 13400 block of Killiam Loop Northeast at 11:05 a.m. Monday. When they arrived, deputies said they encountered an active shooter situation and two men dead at the scene.
Two more victims, a man and a woman, were injured, deputies said. Medics rushed them to Portland hospitals. The woman later died of her injuries.
A Mexican national charged with aggravated murder in the shooting deaths of three people at a rural Oregon blueberry farm had been deported six times, most recently in 2013, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Bonifacio Oseguera-Gonzalez, 29, has no significant prior criminal convictions, but ICE asked Oregon authorities to turn him over to them if he's released from custody in the current case, the agency said in a statement to The Associated Press on Friday.
There's something wrong with the story. If someone has been deported and returns, it is a felony. That means it is a criminal conviction.
Bonifacio Oseguera-Gonzalez, 29, has no significant prior criminal convictions, but ICE asked Oregon authorities to turn him over to them if he's released from custody in the current case, the agency said in a statement to The Associated Press on Friday.
Are you talking about this?
Atleast Japan had the balls to deal with it before it's become a problem for them too.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: MysticPearl
There's something wrong with the story. If someone has been deported and returns, it is a felony. That means it is a criminal conviction.
Bonifacio Oseguera-Gonzalez, 29, has no significant prior criminal convictions, but ICE asked Oregon authorities to turn him over to them if he's released from custody in the current case, the agency said in a statement to The Associated Press on Friday.
“After conducting a comprehensive review of Mr. Oseguera’s immigration and criminal history, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has designated this as a federal interest case. To that end, the agency filed a notice of action with the Marion County Jail asking to be alerted if or when Mr. Oseguera is slated for release so the agency can take custody ot pursue further administrative enforcement action. Relevant databases indicate Mr. Oseguera has no significant prior criminal convictions. However, he has been repatriated to Mexico six times since 2003, most recently in 2013”
Perhaps they just deported him each time with no trial
Until the mid-'90s, virtually all immigrants at risk of being deported went through an immigration hearing before a judge. But, partly in response to immigration court backlogs, a 1996 law called the Illegal Immigration Reform and Responsibility Act changed that, extending the ability to issue deportations to immigration officers—the same people who arrest and detain immigrants. Since 2003, the number of immigrants deported by officers without a trial has tripled; in fiscal year 2013, according to the ACLU, some 363,000 deported individuals "did not have a hearing, never saw an immigration judge, and were deported through cursory administrative processes where the same presiding immigration officer acted as the prosecutor, judge, and jailor."
originally posted by: 727Sky
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: MysticPearl
There's something wrong with the story. If someone has been deported and returns, it is a felony. That means it is a criminal conviction.
Bonifacio Oseguera-Gonzalez, 29, has no significant prior criminal convictions, but ICE asked Oregon authorities to turn him over to them if he's released from custody in the current case, the agency said in a statement to The Associated Press on Friday.
That is the old world we grew up in Phage.... in this new world they are given housing, welfare, medical and a voter registration card that says welcome back.
Talk to the Donald about this guy, he WONT jump over Donald's fence.......
has jumped back and forth over the Mexico border.
No Deportation without a formal proceeding.
As stated, he had been deported once before and that was according to ICE.
In any event, Removal proceedings combines the determinative capacity of an Immigration Judge to adjudicate U.S. INS claims of deportability or inadmissibility pursuant to §§ 237 and 212 of the INA, respectively. As such, removal proceedings have the dual similarity of both of the former deportation and exclusion processes.