Kamala’s Willie Horton?

by
Steve MacDonald

A vast, unwashed hoard has entered the country without as much as a bureaucratic blink of an eye. Those tasked with detention, offering little more than a notice to appear after letting them go – arriving in the interior on buses or planes thanks to the Biden Administration or just making their way on their own. One such “migrant” is Gianfranco Torres-Navarro. “In May, Torres-Navarro crossed illegally into the U.S. near Roma, Texas, in the Rio Grande border sector. He was arrested by U.S. authorities who then…let him go.” Navarro got his notice to appear and was left to not appear, which is the same deal millions of illegals have received, but Torres-Navarro isn’t your average everyday entrant.

Torres-Navarro is the leader of a Peruvian crime gang and is thought to be personally responsible for 23 murders. He is a notorious figure in Peru, where he is known as “Gianfranco 23,” clearly “a reference to the number of people he is alleged to have killed,” according to the Associated Press

Drugs, gangs, thugs, and human traffickers arrive with children who are not theirs and (of course) some unknown number of military-aged males. Here’s you hall pass, make sure you get to the court on time – never to be seen again, and that’ clearly the point.

The presence of Torres-Navarro in the U.S., free to go as he pleases, was a direct result of the border policies of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. You’ve heard about their policy of allowing millions into the U.S. unvetted. This is that policy in action. Torres-Navarro is the face of that policy. He is a one-man, walking illustration of the dangerous nature of the Biden-Harris border.

Gianfranco Torres-Navarro has been living in Endicott, New York. Endicott is west of Binghamton, south of the Fingerlakes and New York wine country. Its population is slightly larger than Claremont but less than Pelham (a few hundred souls above 13,000). For those unfamiliar, much of New York state is empty wilderness. The place is littered with tiny pastoral towns, and Gianfranco Torres-Navarro has been living in one or was. ICE caught up with him last week, which is newsworthy, but there is no guarantee he’ll remain in detention to get deported. Or that, if deported, he won’t find his way back by other means. Kamala’s border is that bad.

Wait a minute, some Democrats might say. Are you arguing that every person who crosses the border illegally is a murderer? Of course not. What the Torres-Navarro case shows is that U.S. authorities, under Biden and Harris, are not really checking anybody. If they let a man wanted for 23 murders through, they’ll let anybody through. And indeed, they do.

There are millions of them, and it is anybody’s guess what their disposition was before arrival or their intentions. Well, not entirely a guess. The child rapists, murderers, thieves, squatters, drug gangs, and human traffickers are practicing their vocation on many an unsuspecting American (and more than a fair share of ‘migrants’). We would do well to attach the name Gianfranco Torres-Navarro to the person responsible for the policies that allowed him entry and access to our families, friends, and neighbors. Kamala’s Willie Horton, if you like.

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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