Results 1 to 2 of 2
Like Tree2Likes

Thread: Obama: Guilty of Human Trafficking - Girls Rented & Raped

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    South West Florida (Behind friendly lines but still in Occupied Territory)
    Posts
    117,696

    Obama: Guilty of Human Trafficking - Girls Rented & Raped

    Joe the Plumber

    Young female refugees raped on the way to the Texas border are just collateral damage in the Democrats push for Amnesty: [STORY BELOW]




    Obama: Guilty of Human Trafficking – Girls Rented & Raped: Part II

    Posted by Rodney Lee Conover on Jul 2, 2014 in Amnesty, Email Featured

    Politicians who directly encourage the travel of thousands of children through a rapists valley – all in the name of bending American citizen’s to their political will – are guilty of human trafficking and an accessory to the torture and gang-rape young girls coming to cross the Texas border from Central America must endure. Period. by Rodney Lee Conover

    This is ground zero in a very real War on Women:

    A War on Children, no-less as young girls from Central America – some with parents, some without – travel on the death trains and trails through Mexico toward awaiting DHS lawyers, food, shelter, court dates, underwear, and the promise of Disneyland are being rented out, raped and abused along the way.
    It’s repulsive, evil and orchestrated in the quest for political power.
    Texas is the quickest route (and conveniently the reddest State) to enter through and border authorities there are overwhelmed. This, despite a Nostradamus-like request back in January by DHS on the BizOpps website seeking “Escort Services for Unaccompanied Alien Children.”
    U.S. law is clear: Once a child from a foreign country reaches American soil, they must be processed and released into the country with friends or relatives to await an appearance in deportation court. Let me ask you a rhetorical question:
    Let’s say you’re a mom and you just dragged your little girls through the deserts of Central America and Mexico; hopped a few moving trains; watched your precious babies be raped and abused; paid extortion money; were raped and abused yourself; maybe saw one of your kids lose an arm or a leg trying to jump off a rape train; made it across the Rio Grande to America and got issued a court date to determine if you’re all there illegally and should be returned:

    - would you show up to court?

    The message has been clear to people in Central America: Get your child and yourself across the border and Obama will let you stay. One federal judge slammed the Department of Homeland Security for “completing a criminal conspiracy” by placing a recently smuggled child with the undocumented immigrant parent who had hired the smugglers.
    Now let me be clear: Once a child is here on American soil – I don’t care where they’re from – we should take good care of them. Period
    It’s not their fault they’re here anymore than it’s their fault that they were gang-raped by vile, smelly, desert pedophilistas. But they shouldn’t be coming here in the first place and a secure border would stop the flood immediately. I know, good luck with that one..
    If Republicans and Democrats did their Constitutional duty, the message gets back quickly that you can’t come in illegally and there would be no exodus for the Texas border.
    Our leaders are all complicit in these children’s living nightmare of cruelty, unspeakable pain and lifelong suffering. They come because they’re getting the green-light from this Obama Administration and their enablers in the Republican Chamber of Amnesty Commerce House of Zuckerberg Main Street Partnership SuperPAC Party. Oh, shut-up – I just invented that.
    Miami is one of 10 cities where the children are being sent for immigration proceedings as border shelters fill up. The stories are the same, however.
    From the Miami Herald:
    Soon after crossing into Mexico from Guatemala, 17-year-old Ana became separated from the group of Hondurans with whom she had been traveling. She wound up alone in a mountain cottage where she was repeatedly raped by strangers. “The only thing I was thinking was that they were going to kill me, that I was going to die..”

    Ana was the youngest in a group of 12 Hondurans, including adults, who boarded buses and cars to reach the U.S. border: “It was early morning and dark, and when we reached a cottage in a mountain, the men grabbed me after my group disappeared,” she recalled.

    After raping her, the attackers left. At sunrise, her group found her, and resumed their trip toward the U.S. border.
    So off they go, back on their road trip toward DHS lawyers, new underwear and America to “feed the vote-hungry appetites of Amnesty supporters” as Colonel Allen West so correctly nailed it.

    I wonder – will this be the last time Ana is raped and tortured by filthy sub-human predators, out hunting for their jollies? They know thousands upon thousands are coming into Mexico en route to Obama’s Promised Land; so for the scumbags, pedophiles, rapists and monsters looking to satiate your wickedness? Just follow the Yellow Rape Road..
    Or are you going to tell me this was just Ana’s bad luck – a tragic exception? I’ll tell you exactly what Ana and thousands of young girls being ravaged by sociopaths are:
    Collateral damage in the Leftist’s War on the Constitution.
    The horror these girls endure are the price paid for Obama’s fundamental changing of America and all who enable this – including Republicans standing by while Executive Orders scoff at the Separation of Powers – are complicit in their traumatized, bloody, raped and abused nightmares.
    Because this eradication of our border and abdication of duty, Americans are now pitted against little children flooding their cities and stressing their local resources as Immigration officials process and bus the kids off to cities around the South. Mayor Pro-Tem of Hemet, Ca.; Shellie Milne, pointed out to me that it’s quite a coincidence these kids and their “escorts” are almost exclusively being bussed to Republican strongholds such as her district.

    Indeed, three buses holding 140 undocumented who were being taken to Murrieta, CA; Tuesday afternoon were greeted by angry protesters and turned away from its intended destination. Even so, Murrieta may receive an additional 140 immigrants every 72 hours for several weeks – making residents there look exactly how the Obama Administration and the media wants them to look.
    That’s what’s really sick – this whole thing is part of the big Amnesty Bill picture. Obama, the Dems and the GOP all want their Amnesty - how many different ways can I say it?
    Todd Starnes at Fox News now reports a government-contracted security force threatened to arrest doctors and nurses if they divulged any information about the contagion threat at a refugee camp housing illegal alien children at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas.
    Here comes the scary stuff, folks: According to medical staff at the base, the Security forces called themselves the “Brown Shirts.” In spite of the threat, several former camp workers broke their confidentiality agreements and shared details with Starnes about contagious diseases and the risks the children pose to Americans:
    “It was a very submissive atmosphere,” the counselor said. “Once you stepped onto the grounds, you abided by their laws – the Brown Shirt laws.”

    She said the workers were stripped of their cellphones and other communication devices. Anyone caught with a phone was immediately fired. “Everyone was paranoid,” she said. “The children had more rights than the workers.” She said children in the camp had measles, scabies, chicken pox and strep throat as well as mental and emotional issues. “I would be talking to children and lice would just be climbing down their hair.”

    Both the counselor and a former nurse said their superiors tried to cover up the extent of the illnesses. “When they found out the kids had scabies, the charge nurse was adamant – ‘Don’t mention that. Don’t say scabies,’” the nurse recounted. “But everybody knew they had scabies.
    These are Obama’s Weapons of Mass Destruction.
    -30-READ PART I: “Girls Rented and Raped on Way to Border:”email Rodney Lee Conover: kowenhoven@gmail.com
    Sugar? No thanks, I’m sweet enough..



    http://joeforamerica.com/2014/07/bar...raped-part-ii/
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Heart of Dixie
    Posts
    36,012
    The DHS is doing and illegal alien family reunification. they call the parents, and then fly the kids to them? The Mexican orphanages are full of kids that were dumped when their parents jumped the border.

    This is not ANYWHERE in the law that the Democrats are trying to use.

    I question the foreign aid sent to these countries and the loans they are getting from the World Bank for their infrastructure when they are guilty of gross human rights violations. I have to wonder if the money they are receiving is being sent to get more of their citizens into the country in order to get more in remittances back. JMO

    Teens tell tales of traveling — without parents — across U.S.-Mexico border



    Most interviewed in Miami are from Central America and say gang violence and domestic abuse drove them from their native countries.

    D


    Denia Vanessa Zelaya, a 31-year-old Honduran, showed up at the Francisco Morazán Honduran Organization office in Little Havana seeking help in finding her 16-year-old daughter, Ana Vanessa Medina Zelaya, and her 3-year-old granddaughter, Emily Yailín

    BY ALFONSO CHARDY

    ACHARDY@ELNUEVOHERALD.COM

    Soon after crossing into Mexico from Guatemala, 17-year-old Ana became separated from the group of Hondurans with whom she had been traveling. She wound up alone in a mountain cottage where she was repeatedly raped by strangers.

    “They threatened me, saying that if I ever said something about this they were going to kill me,” Ana said amid tears during an interview in a Little Havana home. “The only thing I begged them was not to harm me. The only thing I was thinking was that they were going to kill me, that I was going to die.”

    Ana’s ordeal was the most extraordinary in a series of harrowing stories told by minors from Central America, part of the unprecedented exodus of thousands of unaccompanied children crossing the Mexican border into the United States.

    Miami is one of 10 cities where the children are being sent for immigration proceedings as border shelters fill up.
    Though unaccompanied children have arrived in the United States for decades, the number has reached levels never seen before — with the majority coming from Central America, largely Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala.

    The number of unaccompanied children jumped from an annual average of 6,800 from fiscal years 2004 to 2011 to more than 13,000 in 2012 and to more than 24,000 in 2013, according to a November 2013 report from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. About 50,000 unaccompanied children have arrived since Oct. 1, according to U.S. officials.

    While each child might have his or her own reasons for making the perilous journey, immigration attorneys and activists who represent the children say the main reason they are fleeing is intensified gang violence in their home countries as well as abuse and physical violence in their own homes.

    Karen, another Honduran teen, said physical violence by her father and threats from gangs propelled her to leave her country. She said she tried to find safety by moving out of her hometown to other parts of Honduras, but she concluded that the United States was the only safe place for her.

    Gangs in Honduras and other Central American countries are widespread, posing national-security threats because they have become efficient criminal organizations similar to the Mexican drug-trafficking cartels.

    Interviews in Miami last week with half a dozen unaccompanied minors who reached the United States show that escaping gang violence is a prime factor in the exodus. Some, like Andrea from El Salvador, also hoped to join parents who had emigrated earlier.

    But Andrea herself also cited gang threats as the primary reason for her trip. All of the minors interviewed asked that their last names not be published because of the sensitivity of their cases and pending immigration proceedings.

    Ana’s fateful journey began in Honduras in February.

    “I was threatened by the gangs of Honduras and, because of the gangs, my 17-year-old brother was killed three years ago,” Ana recalled. “The gangs also threatened to kill me if I didn’t join them.”

    Ana was the youngest in a group of 12 Hondurans, including adults, who boarded buses and cars to reach the U.S. border.
    After crossing into Mexico from Guatemala, Ana suffered the worst experience of her young life — the rape by several men who abducted her after she became separated from her group.

    “It was early morning and dark, and when we reached a cottage in a mountain, the men grabbed me after my group disappeared,” she recalled.

    After raping her, the attackers left. At sunrise, her group found her, and resumed their trip toward the U.S. border.
    The group reached the Rio Grande on the Mexico-Texas border one morning in February, and crossed to the U.S. side on a raft made of inner tubes
    .
    “We got out of the raft and walked for about 10 minutes, and then the Border Patrol stopped us,” she said.

    She arrived later in Miami, where she rejoined her older sister. She is now seeking asylum, and is represented by Miami immigration attorney Wilfredo Allen.

    She is also receiving assistance from the Independent Honduran Unity organization.

    Karen, the other Honduran teen, is represented by Elizabeth Sánchez Kennedy, staff attorney at Catholic Legal Services in Miami.

    In an interview at the Catholic Legal Services office in downtown Miami, Karen recounted her trip.

    She, too, crossed the Rio Grande on a raft one cold, moonlit night when she was 17.

    She traveled on foot, buses and vans through Guatemala and Mexico to reach a border point near Reynosa, Mexico, which is across from McAllen, Texas.

    In her own words, this is how Karen, now 19, describes her reasons for leaving Honduras:

    “I was fearful of my father’s physical mistreatment of me, and fearful of the gangs. They killed my cousin and my aunt,” she said.

    “I think it’s very important for people to understand that this young lady’s case is a very typical case, and that they embark on this very perilous and dangerous journey only as a last resort,” said Randolph McGrorty, executive director of Catholic Legal Services of the Archdiocese of Miami.

    “She really tried to seek safety in her own country on many different occasions,” he said. “She didn’t take this journey lightly. She didn’t take it on the promise of a work permit. She took it to save her life.”

    While many of the unaccompanied children are arriving from Honduras, there are also significant numbers from El Salvador and Guatemala.

    Andrea, who was 14 when she crossed the border, traveled from Sensuntepque, about 40 miles northeast of the capital, San Salvador.

    She said she fled El Salvador because gang members were pressuring her to join. Andrea’s mother, Sandra, said she encouraged her daughter to come to the United States so the family could be together.

    “It is very hard for us as parents to expose our children to the dangers of these journeys,” Sandra told reporters in explaining why she had allowed her daughter to come to the United States by herself. “It is not easy for a parent to do this, but it is necessary to keep a family together.”

    Andrea, now 15, said that for a month earlier this year she endured hunger, cold and seemingly interminable walks to make it across the border at last.

    “I was very scared,” said Andrea. “I thought I was never going to arrive, that something bad was going to happen to me.”
    After being detained in a shelter near the border, immigration authorities released her. She flew to Miami and rejoined her mother at Miami International Airport.

    Andrea said her goal now is to stay in the United States, study hard and “achieve something in life.”

    Other South Florida parents are still awaiting the arrival of children who recently crossed the border.

    Last week, Denia Vanessa Zelaya, a 31-year-old Honduran, showed up at the Francisco Morazán Honduran Organization office in Little Havana seeking help in finding her 16-year-old daughter, Ana Vanessa Medina Zelaya, and her 3-year-old granddaughter, Emily Yailín Medina Zelaya.

    Denia said she got a call from an immigration official recently saying that both Ana Vanessa and Emily Yailín were in a detention center near McAllen, Texas, but she said she had not heard from them directly and did not know when they might be released.

    http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/06/2...traveling.html


Similar Threads

  1. Girls Rented and Raped on Way to Border: Shame on Those Luring Them
    By AirborneSapper7 in forum General Discussion
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 07-04-2014, 01:25 AM
  2. Obama: Guilty of Human Trafficking – Girls Rented & Raped: Part II
    By AirborneSapper7 in forum General Discussion
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 07-04-2014, 01:24 AM
  3. MI. defendant pleads guilty in human trafficking scheme
    By JohnDoe2 in forum illegal immigration News Stories & Reports
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 09-13-2011, 06:53 PM
  4. 20 girls rescued during Juárez human trafficking sweep
    By JohnDoe2 in forum illegal immigration News Stories & Reports
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 07-25-2011, 01:32 PM
  5. Human Trafficking of Immigrant Women, Girls on Rise in North
    By stevetheroofer in forum General Discussion
    Replies: 18
    Last Post: 01-24-2011, 05:55 PM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •