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The lawsuit names some 35 defendants as actors in the alleged conspiracy to violate Ramirez Peyro’s constitutional rights. They include past and present employees of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the US Marshals Service and various county sheriffs in Texas and Minnesota.
In addition, the litigation accuses some of the most powerful US prosecutors in Texas of being party to the alleged conspiracy.
Ramirez Peyro, in his pleadings, claims those US prosecutors, with the assistance of the other defendants, as part of a “meeting of the minds,” conspired to imprison him for nearly six years in furtherance of a cover-up designed to conceal their complicity in the House of Death murders.
In addition, due to the informant’s Department of Justice-condoned homicidal activities, a DEA agent and his family were pulled over in the streets of Juarez by the House of Death killers [Juarez cops working with the Juarez Drug Organization] and also nearly delivered to the grave — forcing the DEA to subsequently evacuate all of its personnel from Juarez. Gonzalez, incensed by the House of Death murders and the near assasination of a fellow DEA agent and his family, wrote a letter to his counterpart at US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, denouncing the informant’s activities and the complicity of federal agents and prosecutors in the bloodshed. The informant, Guillermo Ramirez Peyro (aka, Lalo) was under the supervision of ICE as well as the US Attorney’s Office for Western Texas — then headed by Johnny Sutton — while Comey was deputy attorney general and Sutton’s boss.
The following eight men were arrested at the Falfurrias Border Patrol Station in Brooks
County Station coc aine was found on the tour bus Sunday:
• Hector Javier Rios (24) McAllen, TX
• Santos Rodriguez Maldonado (68) McAllen, TX
• Juan Antonio Gonzalez (61) Edinburg, TX
• Juan Ruben Hernandez-Luna (40) Donna, TX
• Juan Gerardo Hernandez Perez (37) San Juan, TX
• Juan Antonio Rodriguez Hernandez (31) San Juan, TX
• Rigoberto Rodriguez Hernandez (38) Donna, TX
• Cesar Rodriguez Hernandez (34) Alamo, TX
The Mexican cartels move $50 billion in bulk product and bundled cash across the border each year, and have established supply lines, distribution networks and operational cells in hundreds of communties throughout the United States. There is no way that such a well-entrenched operation could be so successfully accomplished without a little help from well-placed friends
BlubberyConspiracy
reply to post by HanzHenry
There are those who are successful and those who get caught/sold out. The ones who get caught are criminals, and the rest? They're at large.
Welcome to capitalism, where those who have money to hire lawers/minions to harass their opponents get away with much more than the average Joe.edit on 10-11-2013 by BlubberyConspiracy because: (no reason given)
HanzHenry
BlubberyConspiracy
reply to post by HanzHenry
There are those who are successful and those who get caught/sold out. The ones who get caught are criminals, and the rest? They're at large.
Welcome to capitalism, where those who have money to hire lawers/minions to harass their opponents get away with much more than the average Joe.edit on 10-11-2013 by BlubberyConspiracy because: (no reason given)
always sold out, never caught. and when sold out, still a chance to make a "deal".
if people only knew
727Sky
Like the Mexican news lady said for every gram of coke someone buys they are giving money to the Cartels for bullets and politicians.
A Mexican plane forced down and destroyed in Venezuelan territory earlier in the week was full of coc aine, President Nicolas Maduro, pictured November 7
He said that he told Foreign Minister Elias Jaua "to give all the necessary explanations" to Mexico, but should "try to make the Mexican president know that he is standing up for an airplane that was full of coc aine."
Like the Mexican news lady said for every gram of coke someone buys they are giving money to the Cartels for bullets and politicians.