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Thread: Men Convicted of Raping Santa Barbara Woman Placed On ICE Detainers

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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Men Convicted of Raping Santa Barbara Woman Placed On ICE Detainers

    Men Convicted of Raping Santa Barbara Woman Placed On ICE Detainers


    By Lara Cooper, Noozhawk Staff Writer | @laraanncooper | Published on 09.23.2015 6:55 p.m.

    Two men who were convicted of raping a homeless woman at knifepoint in Santa Barbara have been place on detainers by U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, signaling they may have been in the country illegally at the time of the crimes, which took place last year.

    Juan Carlos Herrera-Romero, 31, and Gabino Andres Romero, 27, who are cousins, each had a jury during the trial, in which both men were accused of sexually assaulting a woman on East Beach in the early hours of July 16, 2014.


    Juries convicted the men
    , and Herrera-Romero faces a maximum sentence of 54 years to life in state prison, while Romero faces a maximum sentence of 36 years to life.


    The immigration status was not brought up at the trials of the two men, but Noozhawk confirmed that both men are on immigration detainers.


    Lori Haley, spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Western Region, said that the two men did not have any other contacts with the agency in the past.

    She could not share their country of origin.


    Both men are on ICE detainers, Haley said, and Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Kelly Hoover confirmed last week that both men were still in custody at the Santa Barbara County Jail.


    The detainer means ICE must be notified before the men are released from prison.


    "It means we have a reason to believe they are potentially deportable," Haley said. "These people will serve out their cases.

    After that is when we would step in and determine next steps."


    Law enforcement's process for undocumented immigrants who commit a crime has been under scrutiny since the shocking death of a Santa Maria woman in July.


    Marilyn Pharis
    was attacked in her home and died from her injuries, and one of the men arrested in connection with Pharis’s death is an undocumented immigrant with prior arrests, which has led to questions about why the man was in the country in the first place after being detained by law enforcement.


    On Tuesday, a hearing was called by Fifth District Supervisor Steve Lavagnino, who requested an overview of the policies after Pharis’s death.


    Local law enforcement have said the problems stem from conflicting federal and state laws, such as the California TRUST Act, which states that counties could be financially liable for detaining people on Immigration and Customs Enforcement orders, Noozhawk reported from the meeting Tuesday.


    ICE will place a detainer on someone who is in the country illegally and who has been convicted of a crime.


    However, ICE doesn't have a representative in the Santa Barbara County Jail 24 hours a day, and people could slip through the cracks if they are able to post bail immediately, according to authorities.

    https://www.noozhawk.com/article/men..._ice_detainers

    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


    Sign in and post comments here.

    Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  2. #2
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    About that trial.
    Trial Begins For Men Accused of Raping Homeless Woman at Knifepoint on Santa Barbara Beach

    Emergency room doctor, police officers testify in court for case of two cousins facing charges of rape in July 2014 assault


    Juan Carlos Herrera Romero leaves court on Thursday, where he and his cousin Gabino Andres Grande Romero are being tried for allegedly raping a 62-year-old woman at knifepoint on East Beach last year. (Lara Cooper / Noozhawk photo)

    By Lara Cooper, Noozhawk Staff Writer | @laraanncooper | Published on 08.27.2015 7:25 p.m.

    An emergency room doctor and several Santa Barbara police officers were called to testify Thursday as two cousins began trial for allegedly raping a homeless woman at knife point on East Beach last year.

    Juan Carlos Herrera Romero, 30, was arrested on charges of rape in concert with another by force or violence and oral copulation in concert with another, while Gabino Andres Grande Romero, 26, was arrested on charges of rape in concert with another by force or violence.

    The arrests took place on July 16, 2014, after police said the men had been charged with assaulting a 62-year-old homeless woman on East Beach adjacent to 600 E. Cabrillo Blvd. during the early morning hours that day.

    At the time of the crimes, police said the Romeros spent the evening of July 15 fishing on Stearns Wharf, where they consumed beers, discussed finding a homeless woman to sexually assault and then used knives to subdue the woman and her partner while the assaults took place.

    Their trial began on Monday in Santa Barbara County Superior Court before Judge Rick Brown, with defense attorney K.C. Williamson representing Juan Romero and Steven Powell representing Gabino Romero.

    Prosecutor Mary Barron is representing the Santa Barbara County District Attorney’s Office in the case.


    Gabino Andres Grande Romero hides his face as he leaves court escorted by a bailiff Thursday. (Lara Cooper / Noozhawk photo)

    Two juries are sitting on the case currently, and the jury box was full on Thursday as well as a good portion of the courtroom seats, where a second jury sat. Each defendant in the case has a separate jury considering the facts of their individual cases.

    Thursday’s testimony included that of Santa Barbara Police Department Sgt. Charlie Katsapis, who was working as a major crimes detective at the time of the alleged assault and recalled chilling testimony of a man who witnessed the scene.

    Several hours after the incident occurred on July 16, Katsapis was called in to interview the male partner of the female victim.
    Both had been sleeping on the beach, adjacent to the bike path, when the man was awoken by his partner telling someone to go away because they were sleeping.

    The man described seeing a taller suspect jump on top of him and pin him into the sand, Katsapis said.

    Both suspects, described as a tall man and a shorter man, brandished knives and took turns raping the female victim in a small pit of sand near the ice plant on the beach, the sergeant recalled of the man’s testimony.

    Though the man screamed for help, his face was pushed into the sand, and he reported the shorter of the subjects telling him “Go to sleep or I’ll cut you.”

    The assaults on the woman took place over about an hour’s time, the man told detectives.

    After the assault ended, the woman ran down the beach naked and ran into the lobby of the Fess Parker Doubletree Hotel to call for help, the man said.

    After looking for her for a short time, the man, who is disabled, eventually sat down on the beach, where police found him later, Katsapis said.

    Powell and Williamson each questioned Katsapis about the male victim’s testimony, with Powell pointing to the interview transcript where the man admitted his recollection of the events was fuzzy.

    There was some confusion about the beginning of the incident, when one of the assailants held the woman down on top of her partner before she was raped in the sand pit, but Katsapis said the man had been sure that both men had taken turns assaulting the woman.

    Williamson asked how much the man could have seen had he been awake, due to lack of lighting in the area.

    “I really didn’t see that much,” Williamson read from a transcript of the man’s interview.

    Also called to the stand Thursday was Dr. Angelo Salvucci, an emergency physician at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, who was working when the female victim arrived.

    Salvucci said she arrived at 5:26 a.m. that morning, with a swollen right cheek, likely caused by blunt force trauma, and abrasions to her back, chest and the tops of both of her feet.

    Salvucci said that her injuries were consistent with what she had told the doctor, “in that she was raped on the beach just as she said. I specifically recall exiting the room and speaking with the police officer and saying just that.”

    The Sexual Assault Response Team was called in to evaluate the victim and gather evidence from the sexual assault.

    Other officers who responded to the scene were also brought to the stand, including one who searched Gabino Romero’s car after he was arrested after a traffic stop on Las Positas Road near Adams Elementary School.
    Juan Romero had been located earlier in the day working at a Montecito construction site and arrested.

    SBPD Officer Bruno Peterson was one of the investigators and photographed the contents of Gabino Romero’s car, including multiple fishing poles and fishing equipment, an unopened 32-ounce can of Miller Lite, and an eight-inch folding knife in the car’s side door.

    Barron asked Peterson to remove the knife from the evidence box and show the knife to each of the juries, which the officer did.

    The trial will resume Friday morning.

    http://www.noozhawk.com/article/tria..._barbara_beach

  3. #3
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    In cases like these two, it is hard to oppose "execution by arresting officer." If that had been your Grandmother, what would you favor?

    However, America, America is not very far from being the wild, wild west again. Very easily foreseen.

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