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  1. #1
    Senior Member lorrie's Avatar
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    ICE Refused To Deport Haitian Felon, Now He’s Murdered A Woman

    ICE Refused To Deport Haitian Felon, Now He’s
    Murdered A Woman

    April 15, 2016



    The Day

    By Karen Florin
    Day staff writer

    NEW LONDON, CT – A jury in New London Superior Court found Jean Jacques guilty Monday of murdering Casey Chadwick, 25, in her Norwich apartment
    on June 15, 2015.

    The verdict brought the victim’s parents, boyfriend and close friends to tears.

    The jury had started deliberating at 2 p.m. on Friday and sent a note out at 12:25 p.m. Monday that it had reached a verdict.

    “I was pretty confident, but there was still that little bit of, ‘What if?'” said Chadwick’s mother, Wendy Hartling.

    She had been shaken during the trial by crime scene photos showing the violent death of her daughter, whose body was found in a closet with stab wounds
    to the head and neck.

    Hartling said her daughter would still be alive if immigration officials had deported Jacques, a Haitian national, after his 1997 conviction for
    attempted murder and carrying a pistol without a permit.

    “He was supposed to be deported, and ICE (Immigration & Customs Enforcement) let him go,” said Hartling. “They didn’t even try. If they did
    their job, Casey would be here.”

    Jacques faces up to 60 years in prison when Judge Barbara Bailey Jongbloed sentences him on June 6.

    Evidence at the trial revealed that Chadwick’s stabbing death was likely motivated by drugs.

    Police found crack cocaine, marijuana and Chadwick’s cellphone, all linked to Chadwick’s apartment, in a hole in the bathroom wall in
    Jacques’ apartment.

    Chadwick’s boyfriend, Jean Joseph, had admitted from the witness stand that he was selling drugs.

    “I think he did it over the drugs,” Hartling said. “I know my daughter. She’s very feisty and probably put up a fight. It wasn’t worth it. I wish she hadn’t.”

    Investigators also linked Jacques to the crime through DNA evidence and text messages.

    “I’m just glad justice was served,” said Crysta Wydra, Chadwick’s best friend and the last person to receive a text message from her at 12:40 a.m.

    Though the exact time of Chadwick’s death had not been established, Jacques had written a letter to a friend that said she died at 3 a.m.

    Prosecutor David J. Smith, who had tried the case with Inspector Rhett D’Amico, said it appeared the 12-member jury had paid close attention
    to the evidence.

    He said he hopes Chadwick’s family can begin to move on.

    Her mother, father and stepmother had attended the two-week trial along with several close friends.

    “It’s a tragedy all the way around,” Smith said.

    Jacques has maintained his innocence and is planning to appeal, according to his attorney, Sebastian O. DeSantis.

    “He didn’t do this crime,” said DeSantis, who had attempted to convince the jury that somebody else had killed Chadwick.

    Members of the Survivors of Homicide support group sat with Chadwick’s family throughout the trial.

    Attorney Chester W. Fairlie, a longtime leader of the support group, is working with the family on an investigation of the immigration policy
    that allowed Jacques to remain in the United States after serving 16 years in prison in connection with a shooting on Laurel Hill Avenue
    in Norwich
    .

    http://www.theday.com/article/20160411/NWS04/160419880

  2. #2
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    Haiti Refuses To Accept Deportation Of Illegal Alien, Is Then Arrested For Murder

    2:32 PM 04/28/2016
    Alex Pfeiffer

    An illegal immigrant convicted of attempted murder and arrested after his release for a stabbing death was not deported because his home country of Haiti refused to accept him, a congressional hearing revealed Thursday.

    Jean Jacques, 40, is a Haitian illegal alien who was first convicted in the U.S for 17 years for attempted murder in relation to a 1996 shooting. Just six months after release from prison in 2015, Jacques was arrested again, this time for stabbing and killing a 25 year-old Connecticut woman. At his arraignment for the murder, the judge said, “you had a murder conviction, and you weren’t deported? OK.”

    “It is stunning and shocking how many times the Haitian officials approved his return to Haiti and then reversed themselves and essentially pulled the rug out from under U.S officials and would not let him come home to his home country,” New York Rep.Carolyn Maloney said in hearing about criminal alien releases in the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

    “In Oct. 1, 2012, U.S officials submitted a request to Haiti to deport him. Haitian officials gave their verbal confirmation that he was approved to come back to Haiti,” Maloney continued to say. “And then they changed their minds. They told U.S officials that he was denied for removal.”

    “One week later, unbelievably, on Oct. 10 Haitian officials acknowledged to U.S officials that they had actually approved a flight to Haiti that included Mr. Jacques, he was supposed to go. But then on the very same day they reversed themselves again. They said that he could not board the plane,” the New York congresswoman said. “What in the world was going on with these Haitian officials? And by treaty they had approved that illegal aliens and certainly criminal aliens would be accepted back into their country.”

    Maloney said that again on Feb. 2, 2016 the Haitian government said it would accept Jacques, and then on the same day changed its mind.

    Sarah Saldena, director of U.S Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said, “It is tremendously frustrating. We want to send this person back, we wanted to, and there are others unfortunately in this position.”

    Saldena added that Haiti has not told ICE why it refused to accept Jacques. The ICE director said that “the Haitian government has worked with us in many instances before.”

    Maloney is a Democrat and in favor of “comprehensive immigration reform,” but she said she was wished to work together with Republicans to fix this problem of countries not accepting deportations of criminal aliens.

    “Especially when they are ‘allies,’ when we have treaties, when we are literally giving this country aid and yet three times they really made fun of the American government and said no, we are not taking him back, reversing a verbal confirmation they are taking this criminal back,” Maloney said.

    Haiti received over $350 million in aid from the U.S. in 2014.

    The mother of the woman murdered by Jacques said in written testimony, “If ICE and Homeland Security had done their job Casey would not have died and I would not be here as part of the club of Homicide Survivors which no parent wants to join.”

    http://dailycaller.com/2016/04/28/ha...ed-for-murder/
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3
    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    More extortion on USA from these cesspool countries. Do not allow ANY Haitians on our soil until these people are deported. Load him up on a plane and air drop them over Haiti!

    No more aid to Haiti...no money, no oatmeal.

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