Police in Irondequite, New York have charged an illegal Dominican immigrant with the brutal murders of a family of four.
Police in the Rochester suburb on Lake Ontario arrested 34-year-old Julio Cesar Pimentel Soriano on Saturday in connection with a murder spree that included the killings of a 4-year-old girl and a toddler boy.
Soriano is apparently not one of President Joe Biden's “migrant” cronies who was apprehended at the border and released, but he is still one of the criminal illegal immigrants who has entered the United States and gone on a murderous spree.
Police claim he is the second illegal immigrant to commit murder here after fleeing to his home country on murder charges.
Worst case in 32 years
Police responded to the scene of the fire at the family's home at 5:20 a.m. on Aug. 31 and found 30-year-old Flame Ubaldo, 26-year-old Marangere Moreno Santiago, 4-year-old Evangeline Ubaldo Moreno, and 2-year-old Sebastian Ubaldo Moreno.
Irondequite Police Chief Scott Peters said at a Sept. 2 press conference that once inside the building, firefighters “discovered several fires throughout the building and ultimately found the deceased victim in the basement.”
Police have not disclosed the cause of death or the injuries suffered by the victims, and autopsy reports have not been released, but Peters said the family did not die in the fire and police are investigating the incident as a homicide.
Peters nearly cried as he listed his family members.
“It was a horrific sight,” he said. “I've been doing this job for almost 32 years and I've never seen anything like it.”
Peters told reporters that Ubaldo's home was “quiet” and on a “good street.”
“Parents, two siblings. That's what I want you to think about. It's Labor Day,” he said. “It should be a happy family holiday. This family no longer has that. … I mean, half the family is gone in an instant.”
The arraignment took place last week, and “Soriano was one of the 'responsible parties in the heinous attack,'” WROC reported. He's charged with four counts of first-degree murder.
The station also reported, “Investigators said Soriano is wanted for a murder that occurred in the Dominican Republic in 2019. He allegedly traveled illegally to Puerto Rico, obtained a fake New York ID and used it to enter the U.S. mainland.”
MS-13 Killers
Soriano is at least the third illegal immigrant to be arrested here after fleeing on murder charges in his home country, and the second to be arrested here on murder charges.
MS-13 gang member Victor Antonio Martinez Hernandez was charged with murdering Rachel Morin, a mother of five, in Harford County, Maryland, whose head appeared to have been smashed with a stone.
Hernandez crossed the Southwest border in February 2023 after fleeing a murder charge in El Salvador. He then assaulted a 9-year-old girl and her mother in California. DNA from the crime scene matched DNA found on clothing left behind in Maryland.
Police arrested him inside a bar in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Leader of the Lost Killers
In August, agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Gianfranco Torres Navarro in Endicott, New York, about 190 miles northwest of New York City and across the Pennsylvania state line.
Torres Navarro, whose illegal immigrant girlfriend was also arrested, is the leader of the vicious gang Los Killers.
Border Patrol arrested him near Rome, Texas, on May 16, as The New American reported at the time of his arrest, citing Fox News' Bill Melgin. But like many other criminals, he was released with a “notice to appear” before an immigration judge, in accordance with Biden's standing orders.
Meryugin continues:
It took nearly two months for federal authorities to learn that he was wanted in Peru on approximately 20 murder charges. After receiving the call, Buffalo-based ICE deportation officers located and arrested him on August 14. He is currently in ICE custody.
The Associated Press detailed Torres Navarro and his gang (officially known as Los Killas de Ventanilla y Callao), reporting:
Six leading members of Los Killers, a group formed in 2022 in a region along Peru's Pacific coast that is home to the country's main port, were arrested in a series of raids in June and charged with murder, contract murder and extortion.
Torres Navarro, a former member of another dangerous gang, was known as “Gianfranco 23” after the number of one of his murder victims.
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