Submitted by: Stewart Reeves
Illegal charged for murder of Wake County Deputy Ned Byrd ignored immigration laws contribute to deaths
| | We have updated this info with the breaking news an illegal alien has now been charged with the murder of Wake County deputy Ned Byrd. Many of the articles fail to mention the immigration status of the accused because they want to ignore how failures to enforce existing immigration laws and Biden and other Democrat immigration policies contributed to this crime.
--- Arrested Illegals questioned & charged for murder of Wake County Deputy Ned Byrd.
Ignored National Security Threats
For National Release: August 18, 2002 https://www.alipac.us/f8/illegals-questioned-murder-wake-county-deputy-ned-byrd-398596/
Alder and Auturo Marin Sotelo pictures / pictured by WRAL and WSOC TV News
UPDATED 10:30am Aug 18, 2022 Murder charge announced for illegal alien in death of Wake County deputy (Details)
-- (Raleigh, NC) WSOC and WRAL are reporting that two undocumented migrants have been arrested in Burke County, where the U.S. Marshals Service and the North Carolina State Highway Patrol arrested brothers Alder and Auturo Marin Sotelo, who are being held under federal immigration detainers for "federal offense by being in the country illegally after state troopers said they found a loaded firearm during a traffic stop in 2021."
Reports claim these men are being questioned concerning deputy Ned Byrd's murder, although neither man has been charged in connection with the Wake County shooting yet.
Some reports say Deputy Ned Byrd was fatally shot from behind with an AK-47 on a dark section of Battle Bridge Road near Raleigh, but it was not immediately clear why he stopped there. On Monday night, the North Carolina Sheriff's Association offered a $100,000 reward in this case.
There are conflicting reports where Wake County Chief Legal Advisor Rick Brown said, "These individuals have been arrested on federal detainers unrelated to the Byrd homicide... The investigation is at a sensitive point. Rumors and false information by the media to get the story out first hampers this investigation. We continue to ask for the public's assistance in identifying the person or persons responsible for this homicide."
But on police scanner traffic from Burke County--more than 200 miles away-- a call is heard saying: "SBI is requesting an assist in stopping a suspect, actually two suspect vehicles on the Wake deputy." Another source has reported that a Wake County magistrate indicated these two men are suspects in the Deputy Byrd case.
"Wake County Deputy Byrd may be one of the thousands of Americans needlessly killed each year by invading illegal aliens who display a pattern of disrespect for our borders, legal boundaries, sovereignty, laws, and law enforcers," said William Gheen, founder, and spokesman for the Raleigh based national organization Americans for Legal Immigration PAC (ALI-PAC). "Illegals like Alder and Auturo Marin Sotelo should have never been allowed into America in the first place, and when caught committing other crimes in 2021, they should have been arrested and deported as our current laws and Constitution require to protect our citizens."
ALI-PAC is conducting inquiries to determine if the illegal immigrant suspects Alder and Auturo Sotelo were set free in 2021 due to Democrat Wake County Sheriff Gerald Baker's cancelation of the 287(G) program, which was put in place by his Republican predecessor Sheriff Donnie Harrison after an illegal immigrant with prior arrests incinerated a young father and his nine-year-old son in a drunk driving crash near Clayton, NC.
The 287(G) program is popular with US citizens and unpopular with those who support open borders and illegal immigration.
287(G) allows local police to train officers to determine the immigration status of those arrested so Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) can apply immigration holds to undocumented immigrants when caught committing other crimes.
The 287(G) program protects American citizens from criminal illegal immigrants and serves as a deterrent for illegal immigration into areas where the program is in effect.
ALI-PAC was founded in North Carolina on 9/11, 2004, and works with the Angel Family victims of undocumented migrant crimes and law enforcement agencies across America. William Gheen and Americans for Legal Immigration have been sourced in almost every major media outlet in North Carolina and America. All publications, including this release posted at ALIPAC.us, are shared with US candidates and lawmakers and archived by the US Library of Congress. |
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