America’s borders are wide open—and we’re all paying the price. How much more blood must be shed before our so-called leaders put the safety of citizens above political games?
In April 2007, Juan Crisantos-Ramos, a 46-year-old Mexican national with a conviction for second-degree murder and burglary in New Jersey, was arrested in Nogales, Arizona, after trying to sneak back into the United States just months after being deported. This is not some harmless border crosser. This is a convicted killer who, after serving time for taking a life, was supposedly removed from our soil—only to return almost immediately.
Let that sink in: After a serious, violent crime, and after serving his prison sentence, Crisantos-Ramos was deported—just as the law requires. But instead of staying out, he thumbed his nose at our laws, our borders, and every family who counts on America to keep monsters like this out.
It’s a national disgrace. If a convicted murderer can waltz right back into the country, what does that say about our border security? About the politicians who refuse to enforce the law? About the activist judges and bureaucrats more worried about “compassion” for criminals than the safety of their fellow Americans? Families across the country have every right to be furious—and afraid.
According to the Arizona Daily Star, Crisantos-Ramos was taken into custody by the Border Patrol after trying to re-enter illegally. His record? Second-degree murder and burglary in New Jersey. The fact that this wasn’t his first brush with American law enforcement should make every law-abiding citizen demand answers.
How many more convicted killers are sneaking past our weak border defenses right now? How many more families have to lose loved ones before this government does its job and puts Americans first?
Final Thought
The tragic reality is this: Until our leaders take border security seriously and stop letting violent criminals exploit our broken system, these stories will keep happening. We deserve better—and it’s time to demand it.
BorderFail.trek.pub