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United States News Title: Crazed Illegal Alien Murders 5 REVEALED: Feds missed TWO chances to deport illegal alien accused of gunning down five people in Kansas and Missouri Pablo Antonio Serrano-Vitorino is charged with killing five men in a spree He was captured on Wednesday, but authorities haven't revealed a motive It has emerged immigration authorities missed two chances to deport him Serrano-Vitorino was freed after authorities sent a detention order to the wrong county when he was faced domestic battery charges in June The 40-year-old slipped through the net in September after a traffic arrest He had been deported in April 2004, but managed to re-enter the country Authorities missed two chances last year to deport an illegal alien who is accused of gunning down five men in Kansas and Missouri this week. Pablo Antonio Serrano-Vitorino, 40, is charged with killing a neighbor and three other men with an AK-47 on Monday night in Kansas, then gunning down another man at his home about 170 miles away in rural Missouri on Tuesday morning. He was captured on Wednesday morning. Authorities have not released a motive for the rampage. Now, it has emerged that he slipped through the net of U.S. immigration authorities twice last year one after he faced domestic battery charges in June and following a traffic arrest in September. A spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said the agency regrets the error that allowed Serrano-Vitorino to remain in the country illegally, the Daily Caller reports. The agency had sought to detain the Mexican national In June last year, but they sent the detention order to an agency that didn't have him in custody. Officials from a Kansas county, where Serrano-Vitorino faced domestic battery charges, had asked federal immigration officials about him because he was born outside the country - but ICE didn't respond before the county let him go. Serrano-Vitorino was booked on a misdemeanor domestic battery charge in Kansas City. The Wyandotte County Sheriff's Department sent ICE an overnight query about him, sheriff's Lt. Kelli Bailiff said on Wednesday, but when ICE did not respond within the required six-hour period, Serrano-Vitorino was released. ICE said the query, which did not involve his fingerprints, required the agency to interview Serrano-Vitorino, something it wasn't able to do between when the sheriff's office sent it at 1.30am and released Serrano-Vitorino at 7.30am. Months later, Serrano-Vitorino - who has been living in Kansas City - eluded authorities yet again. He was fingerprinted on September 14 last year at the Overland Park Municipal Court after being cited for traffic violations. That triggered an ICE order to have him detained. But ICE said it sent the order to the Johnson County Sheriff's Office instead of the Overland Park Municipal Court. Court administrator Robin Barnard said Serrano-Vitorino showed up at the court the following month to pay a $146 fine. He was never in custody of any local authorities for the traffic violations. ICE said that had its order been sent to an agency that had Serrano-Vitorino in custody, it would have sought to deport him. Even more surprising, the 40-year-old had been deported in April 2004, but re-entered the country at some unknown time, according to ICE. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Bridge at Remagen (#0)
Another triumph of cultural diversity...
Suggest some water boarding to discover how he slipped the net, before giving him a caribbean holiday with his terrorist friends
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