Lone AZ squad tracks fugitives here illegally

Angelhair

Senior Member
Aug 22, 2009
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Three Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers walk briskly between two buildings in a sprawling apartment complex on Tucson's south side.

As they approach a parking lot, one says, "There's the car."

The trio - wearing black bulletproof vests with "ICE" on the back - sprint toward a red car with its brake lights on. The officers surround the vehicle with their weapons drawn and begin shouting.

The man inside, wearing shorts and a Lakers jersey, exits slowly and puts his hands behind his head.

It's near dusk on an early summer day in Tucson, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Arizona fugitive operations team has just caught their man: Noe Nubes-Nidez, 35, one of about 2,500 fugitive illegal immigrants in Arizona and more than 500,000 nationwide. They are fugitives because they were issued deportation orders by an immigration judge but never showed up.

Nubes-Nidez was a U.S. legal permanent resident when he was caught with nearly 36 pounds of marijuana and $241,000 in cash in his car at the Mariposa Port of Entry in Nogales on Nov. 17, 1997. Six years later, an immigration judge ordered him deported. He appealed but lost in 2004.

While in Tucson recently, the Phoenix-based ICE fugitive operations team targeted him due to his criminal record of smuggling drugs and because they had solid information about his whereabouts. The team's priority is finding those who have committed crimes besides being here illegally.

Nationwide, arrests of people with outstanding deportation orders have increased each of the past six years - a result of the agency's increasing the number of fugitive operations teams to 104 nationwide today, up from eight in 2003.

Lone AZ squad tracks fugitives here illegally

Nubes-Nidez was a U.S. legal permanent resident when he was caught with nearly 36 pounds of marijuana and $241,000 in cash in his car at the Mariposa Port of Entry in Nogales on Nov. 17, 1997. Six years later, an immigration judge ordered him deported. He appealed but lost in 2004.

Six years later, an immigration judge ordered him deported. He appealed but lost in 2004.'

It took 6 yrs for this loser to be deported??? What is wrong with this picture??? It seems to me that any illegal who has committed a crime and found guilty should lose his right to appeal and should be deported post haste.
 
Okay, he WAS a legal resident - but - he should still have lost his right to appeal!
 

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