New evidence reveals how the Biden administration allowed another murderer into the U.S. Documents released by the House Judiciary Committee show the man charged with killing college student Sheridan Gorman in Chicago last month was let in to the country by the Biden DHS in 2023, despite having no valid asylum claim. The illegal alien, 25-year-old Jose Medina-Medina of Venezuela, crossed the southern border in May 2023 and reportedly had no ID or point of contact in the U.S. He also told officers he did not fear harm or persecution if he returned to his home country, according to DHS documents. Still, DHS released Medina-Medina into the U.S., despite admitting he would be "likely to abscond" from immigration proceedings.
Now an innocent young woman is dead at the hands of someone who had no legal right or claim to be in this country. "These predators came here and preyed on these young girls," says April Aguirre, crime victims advocate. "We saw the same thing here in Houston with Maria Gonzalez and Jocelyn Nungaray...what these cases have in common is the criminals were allowed in to this country under these soft, asylum-seeking loopholes."
"And what did they do with the opportunity to come to America? They murdered and preyed on young girls."
Despite clear evidence the Biden administration allowed violent and dangerous people to stream into our country resulting in the deaths of innocent Americans, there is unlikely to be any real accountability. "You saw the way Biden was signing all those pardons," says Aguirre. "So, most likely the people that have the blood on their hands will never face prosecution, because he made sure that when he left he pardoned everybody."
With Biden officials fleeing the scene of the crime, it's now up to the Trump administration to deal with the consequences. "People need to remember why ICE is doing their job at the magnitude they are," says Aguirre. "Because the Biden administration opened the flood gates, and they let in everybody...the good, the bad, and the ugly."
"And now it's time that we clean it up."
Photo: Department of Homeland Security