ICE agents arrest 3 Portuguese illegals charged with death of an infant

Three illegals living in the Boston area were just arrested by ICE agents and charged with the death of an 1-year-old infant.

The three illegals are Portuguese females who came lawfully and never left.

Here’s more from the Boston Herald:

ICE Boston agents have arrested three immigrants who were charged in connection with the death of an infant, according to officials.

Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Boston agents arrested three unlawfully present Portuguese nationals who were recently charged with child endangerment following the death of a 1-year-old child in Pawtucket, R.I.

Deportation officers apprehended the three women — aged 32, 25 and 22 — in Rhode Island earlier this month.

The three Portuguese nationals were arrested on Feb. 11 by the Pawtucket Police Department in connection with the child’s death, which occurred under their care, police said.

Police officers also arrested a 25-year-old man alleged to be the child’s father. The three women were charged with felony child endangerment. The alleged father was charged with manslaughter, three counts of second degree child abuse, and child endangerment.

Police responded to their residence on an emergency call and found the boy unresponsive with significant bruising on his face. The child was later pronounced dead at a local hospital.

“The alleged crimes of these unlawfully present individuals resulted in the death of an innocent child,” ERO Boston Field Office Director Todd Lyons said in a statement.

“Those who commit crimes against children must be held accountable,” Lyons added. “Unlawfully present foreign nationals posing a danger to our New England communities cannot expect to escape the consequences of their actions.”

One came in 1998 and the other two came in 2016 and 2022:

One of the three female Portuguese nationals had been admitted on a nonimmigrant tourist visitor in April 1998, and unlawfully remained in the U.S. more than 25 years beyond the allowable terms of her visa.

The other two Portuguese nationals were admitted to the U.S. under a visa waiver program — one in July 2016 and the other in March 2022. Both violated the terms of their visa waivers by remaining in the country longer than allowed.


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