El Paso, Texas (Border Report) – A man named Christo Jesus de Nazareth has an appointment on April 22 in the US Federal Court after the judge’s judge in Texas ordered him to detention without support for immigration, weapons and ammunition.
Jesus – the last name referred to in court documents – was arrested by members of the United States border horse unit on April 14 while the farm was running to Market Road 170, East Presidio, Texas.
Border agents noticed the muddy and exhausting man’s clothes and went to him for a migration examination. Al -Baqa is not north of Rio Grande, a dedicated entry port, and it is well known for border agents for the activity of smuggling migrants.
He claimed that Jesus, who also said he was also known as Christo Rapa de revenus, admitted that he illegally crossed the river from Mexico to the United States and not being an American citizen.
The agents came out of their horses and started the man’s retreat. They found an unknown caliber pistol under multiple layers of clothing, according to the complaint certificate submitted on Thursday at the American District Court of the Western Region in Texas.
“The defendant admitted the seizure of the pistol in Mexico and the crossing of the border between the United States and Mexico with the pistol,” said Seth Davison, a border opponent, in the written certificate.
Based on more interrogation, Jesus knew himself as a citizen in Mexico. He spent three days in detention until he was summoned to the Federal Court Hall in the Alps, to respond to the charges of being illegally entering the United States and being an illegal foreigner in a firearm and ammunition possession.
He was appointed a general defender after confirming that he could not bear the costs of a lawyer. He is detained without a bond and has a detention session scheduled for Tuesday.
The Border Report on the Great Friday is called the Federal Defense Office in the Alps to try to confirm the name of Jesus, but it did not receive a response.
A federal official at El Paso reported the border report that it is not unusual for immigrants to provide a fake identity when arrested by border agents. The official said: “The motivation is different to hide the identity, and the most common is the presence of illegal entry or a previous crime or violation,” the official said.
Years ago, before most migrants were hunting or had other biometric information registered on a computer, it was not customary to mention names or celebrities such as Mexican singers Vicente Fernandez or Juan Gabriel, he said in Victor Manager Junior.
“This still happens, but they use some modern names,” said Manjars. “Sometimes you hear the name of an actor like Mario Moreno.