The Butcher and the Immigration Bill Makers
By J. James Estrada (03/28/06)
Butcher of the Suburbs, Ronald Douglas Herrera Castellanos, was given that name by the New York Post. The headline and story appeared in the March 24th edition of the paper. On April 29th of last year, Herrera was the contractor who arrived at the Rockland County home of Mary Nagle. He was there to power-wash the Nagle family deck. Nagle’s husband was at work, the kids at school. Herrera entered the home, caught Nagle changing her clothes, and then this: "tearing her clothes off, beating her mercilessly, slashing her with the razor." Blood was everywhere. Towards the end the article, readers learn that Herrera was an immigrant from Guatemala whose visa expired in 2001.
Mary Nagle was 42. Herrera, 30. One of Nagle’s fingers “was nearly amputated as she tried to fend off her attacker.” A piece of her ear was found on the bedroom floor. Nagle’s sister came to the home to look for her and found "a scene out of a horror movie.” This “horror” could have been prevented by simple enforcement of immigration laws. Unfortunately, acts of crime by illegals in this country are not sparse. Our jails are filled with people who should have been detained, deported, or kept from coming here in the first place.
As Congress moves to accommodate lawbreakers with a new “immigration” bill, how many Mary Nagle’s are crying from the grave for sanity? How many Butchers are waiting in the shadows?
Copyright 2006 J. James Estrada
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