Kidnapping Suspect Deported to Mexico
A
Mexican national wanted for kidnapping in Mexico
was escorted out of the United
States by U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement's (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) officers Friday,
November 30, 2012, and turned over to Mexican law enforcement officials.
Joel
Quintero-Cisneros, 30, is wanted on an outstanding arrest warrant in Mexico for
aggravated kidnapping. According to the warrant, dated March 13, the crime
occurred May 6, 2011, in Santa Gertrudis in the Mexican state of Oaxaca at
approximately 9 p.m. Quintero-Cisneros, armed with a .38 caliber handgun, and
two co-conspirators who have already been sentenced, kidnapped the victim – a
mother of three young children – at her home and demanded 1.5 million pesos
(approximately $116,000) in ransom from the victim's relatives.
"Mr.
Quintero-Cisneros will now have to face justice for this alleged horrific
crime," said M. Yvonne Evans, field office director for ERO Washington.
"My office is committed to working closely with our foreign law
enforcement partners to remove and return individuals like this, who are wanted
for violent crimes in their home countries."
Quintero-Cisneros
entered the United States
illegally on an unknown date and at an unknown location. On Aug. 22, ERO's
fugitive operations team apprehended Quintero-Cisneros at his residence in Danville, Va., based on
his illegal status in the United
States.
On
Nov. 1, an immigration judge in Arlington,
Va., granted Quintero-Cisneros
voluntary departure under safeguards. Due to the active warrant in Mexico, ERO
escorted him back to his home country and turned him over to the custody of
Mexican law enforcement officials.
Quintero-Cisneros
was flown via an ERO Air Operations Unit (IAO) charter flight to Valley International
Airport in Harlingen,
Texas, and then escorted by ERO San Antonio's
special response team to the Gateway International Bridge Port of Entry in Brownsville, Texas.
Prior to his removal, Quintero-Cisneros was being held in ERO custody at the
Hampton Roads Regional Jail in Portsmouth,
Va.
Since
2006, the IAO Unit, headquartered in Kansas
City, Mo., has
supported ERO by providing mass air transportation and removal coordination
services to ERO field offices nationwide. Staffed by ERO officers, these air
charters enable the agency to repatriate large groups of deportees in an
efficient, expeditious and humane manner.
Since
Oct. 1, 2009, ERO has removed more than 500 foreign fugitives from the United States
who were being sought in their native countries for serious crimes, including
kidnapping, rape and murder. ERO works with ICE's Office of International
Affairs, foreign consular offices in the United States, and Interpol to
identify foreign fugitives illegally present in the country.
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