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Wanted Gang Member Found in Eagle Pass Hotel Stash House
Tip Leads Troopers to an Eagle Pass Hotel Room Texas…
Tip Leads Troopers to an Eagle Pass Hotel Room Texas Department of Public Safety troopers say a tip led them to a hotel room in Eagle Pass, where a woman inside allowed them to search the room. Once inside, they found a strong smell of marijuana and four people hiding under blankets. It was not exactly the kind of scene that screams normal weekend travel. Two Gang Members Were Found Inside Troopers said two of the men were identified as gang members: Joseph Angel Gusman and Daniel Castillo Dionisio, both 21. DPS said both had entered the United States illegally more than once. Dionisio was also wanted in New Orleans on felony warrants for aggravated assault with a gun and armed robbery. He was booked into the Maverick County jail, while the other three immigrants were turned over to Border Patrol. Two Americans Were Charged in the Stash House Case DPS said two people in the room, 27-year-old Juella Monet Brown and 26-year-old Starr Ricki Drake, were charged with running the stash house and were also booked into the Maverick County jail. The case fits a familiar border pattern, where hotel rooms become hiding spots and local officers end up…
Obama-appointed judge blocks Trump freeze on 39 high-risk countries
What the ruling changedU.S. District Chief Judge John J. McConnell…
Trump pardoned man jailed 7 years for fixing his truck
Trump describes a seven-year repair caseSpeaking at an agriculture roundtable…
Trump describes a seven-year repair caseSpeaking at an agriculture roundtable in Wisconsin, Trump said he had pardoned a man who was sentenced to seven years in federal prison after being caught fixing his own truck or tractor. He told the crowd he asked what the man had done, then repeated that the answer was simple: he was repairing his vehicle. The story, if told accurately, is a sharp reminder of how quickly ordinary work can turn into a federal drama once rules, forms, and officials get involved. Common sense often arrives late, usually after a long meeting.Right-to-repair becomes a political fightTrump used the moment to praise right-to-repair efforts, arguing that owners should be able to work on their own equipment without running into legal trouble. That message lands with farmers, truckers, and anyone who has ever paid a shop bill and then needed a small miracle to pay the next one. The larger issue is control. When a machine breaks, who gets to decide what happens next, the owner, the maker, or a regulatory class that treats a wrench like a threat? The answer matters a lot once the repair tab starts climbing.https://twitter.com/nicksortor/status/2063012752201863545?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw Diesel rules and the usual regulatory messTrump…
US Attorneys launch multiple election fraud investigations in Los Angeles
Federal officials move into the ballot center Federal attention has…
Senate bypasses Democrats to pass $70 billion for ICE
Senate clears the bill after an overnight slogThe Senate approved…
Lawler targets Dem linked to Twin Towers bombing terrorist
Hamawy Wins, and the Questions Start Winning TooDr. Adam Hisham…

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