St. Cloud, MN: Ho Hum Another Somali in Trouble with the Law

Here we have another young African man we most likely raised on the taxpayers’ dime (virtually all Somalis in the US came in through the UN/US Refugee Admissions Program or are the children of those who did).

I just checked the State Department’s Refugee Processing Center*** and learned that nearly 7,000 Somalis were placed directly in Minnesota in the last ten years.  1,373 were placed in St. Cloud.  But, this number does not show how many Somalis have arrived in St. Cloud as secondary migrants.

Secondary migrants is State Department lingo for those who were placed elsewhere in America and then picked up and moved to Minnesota to be with their own kind of people.  Working to make Minnesota the first Somali state in America?

Anyway, here is the latest example of the ‘diversity is strength’ myth the Left is always peddling.

Believe it or not, there are other things happening besides the virus crisis including ‘new American’ criminal creeps going about their business as usual.

From Alpha News:

St. Cloud Man Charged after Alleged Home Invasion Burglary, Assault

 

A St. Cloud resident has been charged after authorities say he and a group of others chased another man into a residence and attacked him.

Abdinajib Muhumed Mohamed—ahhhh the joys of multiculturalism in the American heartland!

Abdinajib Muhumed Mohamed, 20, has been charged in Stearns County with one count of felony first-degree burglary in the case filed in that county on Friday.

The criminal complaint states that Mohamed and a group chased a man into a residence and attacked him, according to a report on the incident. When police arrived, they found a man bleeding from his head and lip.

The victim told police that Mohamed and the others confronted him outside, and one person in the group shouted, “get him” and Mohamed pointed a gun at him.

[….]

Mohamed was convicted in July on fifth-degree assault related to a 2018 Benton County robbery case. Two felony charges of aiding first-degree aggravated robbery and aiding third-degree assault were dismissed in the case. Mohamed was placed on probation and given credit for 54 days already served in jail and was released.

Court records show that two warrants for Mohamed’s arrest have been issued since the July conviction. One for an alleged probation violation and one for failure to appear at a hearing related to the probation violation. Mohamed was released on zero bail following separate arrests on both warrants, most recently on January 10.

More here.

*** See this morning’s post at RRW about the latest numbers at the Refugee Processing Center.

DC Open Borders Group Explains What is in COVID-19 Recovery Stimulus for Refugees/Immigrants

Editor: I’m not planning on posting anything today because I must try to answer some of your many e-mails and comments.

(Cross-posted from RRW)

 

However, I just came across this information from the Refugee Council USA (the lobbying arm of the refugee industry) that explains in great detail (and with links) how trillions will be distributed and how immigrants and refugees can get their piece of the pie.

See it here.

See my extensive archive on RCUSA by clicking here.

West Virginia Food Stamp Fraud Case with Interesting Twist; Yes! Deport Them!

It has been awhile since I’ve seen an interesting food stamp fraud case which was one of my driving interests when I first started writing ‘Frauds and Crooks.’  

For over ten years I had noticed that much of the SNAP fraud involved trafficking in benefits at mom and pop convenience stores owned or managed by ‘new Americans.’  I wrote about a lot of cases at RRW before launching ‘Frauds and Crooks.’

I’m not seeing as many juicy cases these days, but this one caught my eye because the perps wanted to be deported to their “native country” instead of serving time in the slammer.

Sheesh! And, you would know it—it took a long time to find out exactly which was their “native country.”

Here is the news from this week at the Herald-Dispatch from Huntington, WV:

Brother in food stamp scheme transferred to federal custody, faces revocation

HUNTINGTON — A Huntington man who admitted to food stamp fraud as part of an organized criminal enterprise three years ago has been transferred to federal custody to face possible supervision revocation after he was accused of committing those crimes while under federal supervision.

Tallozi brothers originally busted in 2016. Their food stamp fraud scheme caused an increase in crime in the neighborhood said county prosecutor.

Basim Tallozi, 64, and Samir Tallozi, 67, admitted in a Cabell County courtroom in 2017 that together, and with employees of the former Save Way gas station in the 1300 block of Madison Avenue, customers would be given lists of items needed to stock the store in exchange for 50% of the items’ cash value. On at least one occasion, items were brought to the brothers’ home. On some occasions, customers were taken to different businesses to make the purchases.

The business had a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy as to how the items were purchased. Only a receipt was required for the transaction to prove the items were not stolen.

Basim Tallozi admitted to giving drugs, including meth and marijuana, to beneficiaries four times in place of the 50% cash value.

Their scheme came to a crashing halt in 2016 after Cabell County agencies raided their homes and business. An uprising in theft, drug trafficking and prostitution at and near the West Huntington neighborhood business was a direct result of the illegal trading and food stamp fraud, Cabell County assistant prosecutor Joe Fincham previously said.

Both brothers said during their plea hearings that they did not understand what they were doing was against the law at the time of their arrest.

Basim Tallozi’s attorney had requested at the time of his Cabell County sentencing that he be allowed to voluntarily give up his citizenship and be deported back to his native country as punishment instead of costly imprisonment, but Cabell Circuit Judge Paul T. Farrell declined.

[….]

As a result of his state charges, federal agents issued a warrant for his arrest and made a request to revoke his supervision.

[….]

Samir Tallozi has also been released from state prison.

I don’t know what exactly that means but I don’t think it means they will deport him.  His brother is already free!  What the heck! They were sentenced to over a decade in prison. Why are they out so soon?

Here we go!  Ah the joys of diversity!

Took me a while to find it, but here we are!  They are Jordanian!

This is the first time I have ever seen any mention of deportation for food stamp fraud.  It is too bad the judge turned it down.

Again, from the Huntington Herald-Dispatch from April 2017:

Brothers facing stiff sentences or deportation

HUNTINGTON — Although they were sentenced Tuesday to serve decades in prison for their participation in an organized criminal enterprise, the Tallozi brothers could soon return to their native country of Jordan.

The Save Way benefit fraud operation’s leader, Samir Tallozi, 64, was sentenced to 10 years, and his brother, Basim Tallozi, 61, was sentenced to 16 to 20 years in prison. Both brothers additionally were sentenced to $25,000 in fines each for the scheme they orchestrated in the Central City neighborhood of Huntington.

The brothers admitted on Monday together, and with employees of the former Save Way gas station in the 1300 block of Madison Avenue, that customers would be given lists of items needed to stock the store, which they could purchase with government benefit cards in exchange for 50 percent of the items’ cash value. On some occasions, customers were transported to different businesses to make the purchases.

Samir Tallozi pleaded guilty Monday to engaging in organized criminal enterprise and benefit fraud.

Huntington WV is on the border of Ohio and Kentucky.

Basim Tallozi pleaded guilty to eight counts including conspiracy, engaging in an organized criminal enterprise, recruiting members to join an organized criminal enterprise and benefit fraud. He also pleaded guilty to three counts of delivery of marijuana and one count of delivery of crystal meth.

The brothers still face deportation at their May 18 reconsideration hearing. Samir Tallozi holds a green card to live in the United States, while Basim is a naturalized American citizen who has lived in the country for 35 years, raising two children. He also obtained a college degree in civil engineering.

Basim Tallozi’s attorney, Kerry Nessel, presented an offer at the sentencing hearing: He told Cabell Circuit Judge Paul T. Farrell, who often bans out-of-state offenders from returning to Cabell County, that his client would willingly turn over his citizenship to the United States and return to Jordan in return for no jail time.

“I’m dead serious about this. You would be making a great statement to the people of the state by sending them back there. Let them take care of him,” he said. “Nobody’s benefiting by sending him to prison.

We aren’t sending them across the river over to Ohio to where he could get across the bridge.”

More here.

Don’t ask me why they are out so soon, but deportation is the punishment I’ve long advocated for crooks like these.

If you are interested, you can read all the details of their crimes here.

Huntington authorities bust ”organized retail theft operation’

 

 

New Mexico: Teen Wrestling Champ Tackles Wannabe Kidnapper

This is a story to bring a smile to your face.

Obviously ignoring admonitions about safe distancing, a teenage wrestling champion body-slammed and pinned a man attempting to kidnap children in what had to be a bizarre scene at a Las Cruces gas station.   Thanks to ‘meanymom’ for spotting the story from last week.

From KOB-4 News:

Deputies: Teen wrestling champ stops kidnapping of children

LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP) — A 16-year-old wrestling champion helped stop a kidnapping and assault near Las Cruces, New Mexico, by pinning a man to the ground until deputies arrived, authorities said.

Canaan Bower won the District 3-5A championship in the 285-pound (129-kilogram) heavyweight division on Feb. 16

Mayfield High School student Canaan Bower was being lauded as a hero after controlling suspect Daniel Arroyo Beltran, 22, of Phoenix.

Dona Ana County deputies arrested Beltran Wednesday after witnesses told authorities he tried to kidnap three children at a gas station.

The mother told authorities that she got off at a bus stop with her children, ages 9, 2 and 1, and was waiting for an Uber driver to arrive when a man grabbed her 2-year-old child and demanded the woman turn over her children.

Witnesses told authorities the man punched the woman and others who tried to intervene before the woman was able to rush inside the store with her children. Witnesses said the attacker followed, continuing his demands.

“Punches were being thrown and (he could hear) screams of terror, so he jumped in his truck and went across the street,” Canaan Bower’s dad Troy Bower told the Las Cruces Sun-News. “By the time he got there, they had gone inside and so he got out of his truck and went inside.”

Daniel Arroyo Beltran doesn’t look like he weighs more than a hundred pounds wet!

Troy Bower added that his son told him he body-slammed the man and got him in a chokehold until deputies arrived.

Canaan Bower won the District 3-5A championship in the 285-pound (129-kilogram) heavyweight division on Feb. 16, and later competed at the state tournament.

[….]

There’s no indication in police reports that the man knew the mother or her children.

Beltran was charged with battery, assault, child abuse and kidnapping and remained jailed Friday.