Tuesday, May 30, 2017

DAVID SEMINARA - CONSTANTINO BANDA-ACOSTA HAS HAD 15 PREVIOUS DEPORTATIONS.HE KNOWS U.S. BORDERS ARE WIDE OPEN. HE RETURNED AND NEARLY KILLED BOY

EVERY DAY THERE ARE 12 LEGALS MURDERED BY MEXICANS, FREQUENTLY THOSE DRIVING ILLEGALLY, UNINSURED, UNLICENSED AND DRUNK!

..... NEVER UNDERESTIMATE THE MEXICANS  CONTEMPT FOR OUR LAWS!

Man with 15 Previous Deportations Nearly Kills Boy, Mainstream Media Shrugs
By David Seminara

CIS Blog, May 15, 2017
http://cis.org/seminara/man-15-previous-deportations-nearly-kills-boy-mainstream-media-shrugs

Excerpt: Documenting crime cases involving illegal immigrants in the news is indeed a tricky business. I agree that it's senseless and perhaps even harmful to over-cover illegal immigrant crime stories if there is no policy significance to the case. But when you have crime-related stories that illustrate the failure of sanctuary cities to protect American citizens, those incidents deserve to be covered because they have clear implications for policymakers. And stories like the Lennox Lake case, which illustrate what a revolving door our border is, deserve extensive coverage for the same reason.

This isn't illegal immigrant crime porn; it's a story that encapsulates the urgent need to secure our borders. Editors can attempt to distort reality by feeding the public a steady diet of deportation sob stories, giving the public the false impression that the only people being removed from the country are altar boys and saints. But they also have a responsibility to cover stories like the Lennox Lake case. And so, readers, viewers, and listeners must demand more balanced coverage or take their news loyalties elsewhere.

*
 Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had a loyalty rewards program, surely Constantino Banda-Acosta would be a platinum member. Banda-Acosta, a 38-year-old citizen of Mexico, has been deported from the United States at least 15 times according to the San Diego Union Tribune. Last week, while driving drunk, he allegedly blew through a stop sign and smashed into another vehicle, seriously injuring Lennox Lake, a six-year-old boy who was on his way home from a family trip to Disneyland. Banda-Acosta didn't stop or seek help, and the poor little boy had to undergo two surgeries at a Children's Hospital. (Donate to his GoFundMe page here.)
Banda-Acosta, who has pled not guilty, also has previous infractions include domestic violence arrests from 2006 and on January 9 this year, when he was removed for the fifteenth time. This is a guy who has essentially made a career out of violating our laws, sneaking back in, and then reoffending. We've used taxpayer money to deport him 15 times and, with any luck, can look forward to deportation No. 16 soon.
Anyone who still isn't convinced that we need to secure our borders needs to read Lennox Lake's sad story. But in all likelihood, only those who read conservative news outlets or live in the San Diego area will find out about his case. Editors have the power to take local stories like this one and elevate them into national stories. We see this all the time, for example, in cases where white police officers shoot black men or when someone with a heartbreaking story is deported.
When a local story suits the agenda of the news outlet, it's promoted to the national stage, but when it doesn't, it's ignored. As soon as I read this story, I knew it would be largely ignored by the big newspapers, CNN, MSNBC, and the networks. And yet conservative news outlets give stories like this one big play. This is one of the reasons why the country is so divided —what we hear, see, and read is heavily impacted by our news choices.
It isn't just liberal bias that causes editors to ignore outrageous stories like this, although that certainly is a factor. It is also the view that publicizing stories like these might engender ill will toward all immigrants or those who appear foreign. This is a kind of disdain for the reader/viewer/listener. Editors who make a practice of ignoring stories like this one are essentially telling their readers: you're too stupid to process this story and place it in its proper context. The consumer of news is viewed as a dolt who, if fed the wrong information, might go out and do something terrible.
Documenting crime cases involving illegal immigrants in the news is indeed a tricky business. I agree that it's senseless and perhaps even harmful to over-cover illegal immigrant crime stories if there is no policy significance to the case. But when you have crime-related stories that illustrate the failure of sanctuary cities to protect American citizens, those incidents deserve to be covered because they have clear implications for policymakers. And stories like the Lennox Lake case, which illustrate what a revolving door our border is, deserve extensive coverage for the same reason.
This isn't illegal immigrant crime porn; it's a story that encapsulates the urgent need to secure our borders. Editors can attempt to distort reality by feeding the public a steady diet of deportation sob stories, giving the public the false impression that the only people being removed from the country are altar boys and saints. But they also have a responsibility to cover stories like the Lennox Lake case. And so, readers, viewers, and listeners must demand more balanced coverage or take their news loyalties elsewhere.





DUI suspect in hit-run crash that left boy, 6, badly hurt was deported 15 times






A drunken driving suspect in a hit-and-run crash that severely injured a 6-year-old boy in San Ysidro over the weekend had been deported from the U.S. at least 15 times, authorities said Tuesday.
Constantino Banda-Acosta, 38, was last deported Jan. 18, with at least 14 prior cases since 2002, federal authorities said.
Banda-Acosta is accused of speeding west on Camino de La Plaza, running a stop sign at Dairy Mart Road and slamming his pickup into a Honda Accord about 11:30 p.m. Saturday. The pickup driver did not stop.
Banda-Acosta, a Mexican citizen, was arrested about half an hour later, San Diego police and the U.S. Border Patrol said.
The car that was struck was occupied by a family driving home after a day trip to Disneyland. They were a block away from their home when the crash occurred, a relative said.
The speeding Chevrolet Silverado hit the driver and passenger’s side where the boy, Lennox Lake, was sitting in his car seat, said his grandmother, Cheryl Lake.
The boy’s father, Benjamin, became trapped. His wife, Ingrid, crawled out of the front passenger seat and rushed to aid Lennox, who was unconscious, not breathing and bleeding from his nostrils, ears and head, his grandmother said.
The child suffered a major head injury and was taken to a hospital. As of Tuesday night, he had undergone two surgeries at Rady Children’s Hospital, Cheryl Lake said.
Despite a long road ahead, his family and doctors are “cautiously optimistic” the boy will make a full recovery, his grandmother said.
She described Lennox as a friendly and smart boy.
"The kid makes friends everywhere he goes. He's just a delight as a grandson," Cheryl Lake said, fighting back tears.
Lennox has two older brothers, 14 and 16, who did not join the family on the trip to Disneyland. His family set up a GoFundMe page to raise funds for the medical bills and other expenses.
Soon after the collision, Border Patrol agents came upon the family’s wrecked Honda and fanned out in search of the hit-and-run driver.
A few blocks away, shortly after midnight, agents found a damaged pickup that matched the description Ingrid Lake gave them. Inside were two men, who were detained.
Banda-Acosta was identified as the driver. He 

was booked into jail on suspicion of felony

hit-and-run with injury, drunken driving with

injury and driving without a valid license.
The Border Patrol took custody of Banda-Acosta’s passenger, also an unauthorized immigrant, agency officials said.
Banda-Acosta is scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday . He was being held on $100,000 bail.
His criminal history includes arrests stemming from domestic violence allegations against his wife of 18 years, Chula Vista police Capt. Fritz Reber said. Chula Vista police arrested Banda-Acosta April 9, 2006 and Jan. 9 of this year.
ICE spokeswoman Lauren Mack said the agency would again seek deportation for Banda-Acosta after any conviction and sentence is served in connection with the DUI and hit-and-run crash.
The agency confirmed that, given its longstanding relationship with the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, ICE is confident Banda-Acosta will be released to the agency once his criminal case is settled.
Cheryl Lake, the boy’s grandmother, was shocked and at a loss for words when a Union-Tribune reporter shared information about the number of times Banda-Acosta has been deported.
She said she couldn’t wrap her mind around how Banda-Acosta repeatedly entered the country illegally.
"There are not enough words to describe the huge impact his actions have had,” she said.
ICE confirmed that 15 removals is a significant number and indicates an egregious immigration violation.
San Diegans who support Trump's immigration policies saw the incident as proof that his plans are needed.
"Why do we continue to accept these travesties day after day?" said Imperial Beach resident Ernie Griffes via email. "Our state legislators encourage it with legislation.
"We need vetting, rules, order, structure. At a minimum, criminals need to go," said Patti Brasga via email.
San Diegans who oppose Trump's immigration policies spoke out against using this case to depict all immigrants as criminals.
"Drunk driving is a nation-wide problem that has affected the lives of far too many," said Andrea Guerrero, executive director of Alliance San Diego, via email. "Using the pain and suffering of victims and their families to vilify a single community is irresponsible and unhelpful. We all need to work together, immigrants and citizens alike, in an atmosphere of trust in order to solve public safety issues."
Because of the Banda-Acosta’s immigration history, the boy and his family will be eligible for help from the new Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement, or VOICE, office created by President Donald Trump in an executive order. The office aids victims of crimes committed by unauthorized immigrants.
The office was announced at the end of April and plans to study statistics related to unauthorized immigrants and crime in addition to supporting victims.

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/public-safety/sd-me-dui-deportee-20170509-story.html



AMERICA: No Damned Legal Need Apply!


While the declining job market in the United States may be 

discouraging some would-be border crossers, a flow of illegal 

aliens continues unabated, with many entering the United 

States as drug-smuggling “mules.”



HOW TO DESTROY AMERICA:

THE OBAMA DOCTRINE OF UNLEASHING MEXICAN CRIMINALS ACROSS AMERICA FROM BORDER to OPEN BORDER


MURDER, RAPE, LOOT and vote Democrat for more!




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