Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 18, 2017
Seattle good boy didn’t do nothing?
A Seattle area man detained by immigration agents despite his participation in a federal program to protect those brought to the U.S. illegally as children admitted to having gang ties, the U.S. Justice Department said in court documents filed Thursday.
However, Daniel Ramirez Medina’s lawyer Mark Rosenbaum said in a conference call late Thursday that the documents fail to provide even one piece of evidence that Ramirez is affiliated with any gang.
“It is a blatant falsehood that defames this young man, I suppose, to justify what was a mistake at the beginning,” Rosenbaum said of the 23-year-old’s arrest and detention by immigration agents Friday.
The government said in documents filed in U.S. District Court that Ramirez “stated ‘no, not no more,’ when asked if he is or has been involved with any gang activity.”
The court documents also said Ramirez, who is Mexican and arrived in the U.S. at age 7, was asked by authorities who arrested him about a tattoo described in the documents as a “gang tattoo.”
Ramirez responded that he hung around members of the Surenos gang in California, fled the state to escape gangs and also hung out with gang members in Washington state, the documents said.
Ramirez’s arrest last week thrust him into a national debate over the immigration priorities of President Donald Trump. Some saw the detention as the opening salvo in an attack on former President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, while federal authorities suggested it was simply a routine exercise of their authority.
Rosenbaum said the federal allegations were false and that authorities misidentified the one tattoo on Ramirez’s body.
“Mr. Ramirez did not say these things because they are not true,” Rosenbaum said. “And while utterly implausible and wholly fabricated, these claims still would not be sufficient evidence that Mr. Ramirez is a threat to the public safety or national security.”
The court documents blacked out a picture of the tattoo, but lawyers for Ramirez said it reads “La Paz BCS.” La Paz means “Peace” in Spanish and is also the capital of the Mexican state of Baja California Sur, where Ramirez was born.
Rosenbaum also accused Imigration and Customs Enforcement officials of doctoring a form filled out by Ramirez asking to be transferred out of the gang unit at the detention center. Ramirez wrote on the paper that he is not a member of a gang and that’s he’s never been involved in gang activity, Rosenbaum said. But when Ramirez was denied the move and got a copy of the paper back, Rosenbaum said, some of the words had been erased, making the statement appear as though Ramirez had written that he was in a gang.
“You can see that there are words that have been erased. That is serious and criminal conduct,” Rosenbaum said.
I’m just going to trust Rosenbaum on this one. I just can’t believe god’s chosen people would lie to us.
And just look at him:
If that’s not a face you can trust, then I don’t know what the hell is. You can just read the choseness all over it.
If he says three letters tattooed on someone who admits to being in a gang isn’t a gang affiliation, I’m just going to go with it.
And assume this Mexican-American
“If you walk like a duck, talk like a duck and look like a duck, you’re a duck,” said Jesus Villahermosa Jr.Villahermosa is a retired Pierce County sheriff’s deputy and current owner and president of Crisis Reality Training Inc.
“We’re going to look at self-proclamation, tattoos, clothing in connection with the tattoos, not just blue, red, black or orange. We’re going to look at the whole picture, the context. By the way, who’s he with? Is he an associate? Has he been jumped in? Is he being courted?” asked Villahermosa.
The former deputy says that’s what ICE agents likely did when they encountered Ramirez. They say he’s a self-admitted gang member with a gang tattoo to boot.
“There’s really no reason for these ICE agents to make this up. They sure as heck couldn’t have made up the tattoo,” said Villahermosa.
In these court documents, it alleges Ramirez has a specific tattoo. It’s a nautical star with letters.
…
Villahermosa said, “My understanding is that if he’s self-proclaimed and said, ‘Yeah I used to run with the Surenos back in California,’ which that’s my understanding, that’s a self-proclamation. The tattoo matches that. BCS is Baja California Sur. Sur is short for Surenos which means Southerners.”
Villahermosa says contrary to common thought, most gang members are proud of their standing and brag about it. He says it’s not a secret even when law enforcement is around.
Villahermosa, while being a Mexican by heritage, does not have a face you can trust.
In fact, he appears to be white – the most untrustworthy race of all.