Immigration Officials, Crime Stoppers Team Up to Nail Child Sex Offender
By Jim Kouri, CPP
MichNews.com
Aug 20, 2007



The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Fort Worth, Texas Safe City Commission Crime Stoppers jointly announced the arrest of a 41-year-old convicted child sex offender who had been deported for that crime, and was also wanted for parole violations.

Hilario Soto-Hernandez, a citizen of Mexico residing in Fort Worth, was arrested by ICE officers yesterday after coordinating with Crime Stoppers and Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office.

The recent investigation first started when Crime Stoppers published Soto-Hernandez’ information on its Most Wanted List July 22. ICE coordinated with Crime Stoppers and Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office, and determined from ICE databases that Soto-Hernandez was a previously deported aggravated felon. The Sheriff’s Office also received an anonymous tip leading to identifying his residence and work addresses. ICE officers arrested Soto-Hernandez Aug. 1 while he was working at a restaurant in Justin, Texas.

Soto-Hernandez was originally convicted in June 1995 for aggravated sexual assault of a child under 14 years old. According to court records, Soto-Hernandez sexually molested a 7-year-old girl repeatedly for more than six months in 1991 while she and her mother were living with him. He routinely referred to the girl as his stepdaughter. However, Soto-Hernandez also had a wife living in Mexico at the time.

Soto-Hernandez was convicted and sentenced to 10 years deferred adjudication. He violated the terms of his parole and has been wanted since April 2004. However, he was finally deported in December 2003 after years of appealing his deportation order. Aggravated felons who reenter the United States after having been formally deported commit a felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

Soto-Hernandez is currently in the custody of the Tarrant County Sheriff for parole violations. The US Attorney's Office, Eastern District of Texas, has also accepted the case for prosecution on the charge of reentry after deportation.

“ICE is determined to make our communities safer for everyone, especially our children,â€