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To: Sobieski at Kahlenberg Mtn.

ERO San Antonio Removes Known Mexican Drug Cartel Leader Wanted In Mexico For Organized Crime

https://www.ice.gov/news/releases/ero-san-antonio-removes-known-mexican-drug-cartel-leader-wanted-mexico-organized

Excerpt:

Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) San Antonio removed an illegal alien noncitizen wanted by authorities in Mexico for organized crime, money laundering and illegal possession of firearms. Deportation officers from ERO San Antonio and ERO Harlingen removed Oscar Arturo Arriola Marquez, 54, from the United States to Mexico on Nov. 1.

Arriola was the presumed leader of the Arriola Marquez cartel and was once one of the world’s most wanted fugitives.

“Individuals who commit crimes of this magnitude in their home countries will find no refuge in the United States,” said ERO San Antonio Interim Field Office Director Garrett Ripa. “We will not sit idly by and allow our communities to be overrun with criminals”

.....ERO conducts removals of individuals without a lawful basis to remain in the United States, including at the order of immigration judges with the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR). EOIR is a separate entity from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Immigration judges in these courts make decisions based on the merits of each individual case, determining if a noncitizen is subject to a final order of removal or eligible for certain forms of relief from removal.

As one of ICE’s three operational directorates, ERO is the principal federal law enforcement authority in charge of domestic immigration enforcement. ERO’s mission is to protect the homeland through the arrest and removal of those who undermine the safety of U.S. communities and the integrity of U.S. immigration laws, and its primary areas of focus are interior enforcement operations, management of the agency’s detained and non-detained populations, and repatriation of noncitizens who have received final orders of removal. ERO’s workforce consists of more than 7,700 law enforcement and non-law enforcement support personnel across 25 domestic field offices and 208 locations nationwide, 30 overseas postings, and multiple temporary duty travel assignments along the border.
******

Could ERO be used by DJT, when he returns, to remove the illegal aliens? None of the millions have a legal basis to be in the U.S. One tool for accomplishing his stated immigration objectives. Food for thought.


1,958 posted on 11/09/2023 9:14:38 PM PST by Sobieski at Kahlenberg Mtn. (All along the watchtower fortune favors the bold.)
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To: Sobieski at Kahlenberg Mtn.
Northern Georgia Mountain Trail
1,959 posted on 11/09/2023 9:16:58 PM PST by Sobieski at Kahlenberg Mtn. (All along the watchtower fortune favors the bold.)
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To: Sobieski at Kahlenberg Mtn.

Good point.


2,190 posted on 11/10/2023 6:36:24 PM PST by Bigg Red (Trump will be sworn in under a shower of confetti made from the tattered remains of the Rat Party.)
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To: Sobieski at Kahlenberg Mtn.

Loss of taste, smell resolves within 3 years of COVID-19 infection, study shows

https://www.upi.com/Health_News/2023/11/09/COVID-19-taste-smell-resolves/8331699547160/

Excerpt:

There’s good news for folks who lost some of their sense of taste and smell after a bout of mild COVID-19: New research shows this side effect largely resolves by three years after infection.

.....Italian researchers looked at post-COVID outcomes for 88 people who lost their sense of taste and smell early in in the pandemic, with everyone contracting “mild” COVID-19 during March and April of 2020. Patients averaged 49 years of age at the study’s start.

Mild COVID-19 was defined as an illness without any evidence of lower respiratory disease.

Compared to 88 people who had never tested positive for COVID-19, rates of loss of smell and/or taste (as measured by standard tests) were roughly equal three years later, said a team led by Dr. Paolo Boscolo-Rizzo of the University of Trieste in Italy.

“At the 3-year study end point, olfactory dysfunction was comparable between both groups,” the group reported Nov. 9 in the journal JAMA Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery.

As for a loss of the sense of taste (”gustatory dysfunction”), Boscolo-Rizzo’s group similarly found “no significant differences” between folks who’d had mild COVID-19 and the never-COVID-19 groups, two and three years later.

.....The bottom line, according to the researchers: Former COVID-19 patients “should be reassured that a recovery of olfaction appears to continue over 3 years after initial infection.”


2,237 posted on 11/10/2023 9:15:06 PM PST by Sobieski at Kahlenberg Mtn. (All along the watchtower fortune favors the bold.)
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