5 illegal aliens from Mexico and Honduras allegedly kidnapped teenage Indiana girl who thought she was meeting online friend



Missouri police arrested five illegal immigrants from Mexico and Honduras after they allegedly kidnapped a teenage girl from Indiana who thought she was meeting someone from social media.

Indiana police said they were alerted to a report of a missing 14-year-old by the girl's father from their home in Cass County just before 2 a.m. He told police that he saw her get into a strange vehicle very early in the morning on Sunday, which was Father's Day.

She thought she was meeting someone whom she had gotten to know online.

Missouri State Highway Patrol said they were notified about the missing girl on Monday.

Court documents indicated that the Cass County Sheriff's Office pinged the girl's phone and found her location in Hannibal, Missouri. After informing local authorities, the highway patrol was able to locate a vehicle matching the description and initiated a traffic stop.

Police said they found the girl in the vehicle with five males, and she told them that she was the missing teenager. After an investigation, they arrested the five men for kidnapping and endangering the welfare of a child.

The five men were booked into the Macon County Jail and identified by police as Marlon Aguilar and Carlos Funez of Honduras and Arturo Eustaquio, Noe Guzman Hernandez, and Daniel Ruiz Lopez from Mexico.

The men are being held without bond because prosecutors say they are a flight risk due to their immigration status.

The girl reportedly told police that she thought she was meeting someone whom she had gotten to know online.

Investigators believe the vehicle was heading to California. Each of the five suspects could face up to seven years in prison if convicted for kidnapping.

The girl is reportedly safe and back home with her family.

Experts have warned parents that they should carefully monitor their children's behavior on social media and limit their access to prevent online predators from targeting them.

'Fear and uncertainty.'

Illegal immigrant crime is a growing concern among voters ahead of the November presidential election. While former President Donald Trump has continued his promises of deporting illegal immigrants, border crossings have skyrocketed during the Biden administration.

On Tuesday, President Joe Biden announced executive action that would implement the greatest amnesty for illegal immigrants since the DACA order during the Obama administration. Critics accused him of unconstitutionally changing policy without the approval of Congress, which was also a challenge lobbed against former President Barack Obama's amnesty order.

"They've been living in the United States all of this time, in fear and uncertainty," said Biden at the announcement. "We can fix that, and that's why I'm gonna do today!"

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Man who allegedly kidnapped 12-year-old and murdered her mother and brother is an illegal alien and had been previously deported to Mexico



The man accused of kidnapping and torturing a 12-year-old girl after murdering her mother and brother was illegally in the U.S. and had been previously deported to Mexico in 2014.

On Monday, a motorist spotted the young girl wandering down a road in Dadeville, Alabama, and picked her up. Police said that she had been kidnapped, bound, and drugged.

She led police to the mobile home where she said she had been tied to a bed but managed to escape by chewing through her restraints.

At the home, police found two decomposing bodies they later identified as the child's mother and her brother. The mother had been in a relationship with the suspect, who was identified as 37-year-old Jose Paulino Pascual-Reyes.

On Friday, the Department of Immigration and Customs Enforcement confirmed to the Daily Caller that Pascual-Reyes was in the country illegally at the time of the alleged crime and that he had been previously deported to Mexico in 2014.

Tallapoosa County Sheriff Jimmy Abbett also said that the victim, Sandra Vazquez Ceja, and her two children had been apprehended in 2017 and were classified as on "parole pending asylum." They were awaiting an asylum hearing.

Pascual-Reyes was not the father of the two children. He is being held without bond and was charged with three counts of capital murder, two counts of corpse abuse, and one count of kidnapping.

Arrest warrants indicated that investigators believed Pascual-Reyes smothered Ceja with a pillow and beat her son to death with his hands and feet. Their bodies were also cut into pieces hide the evidence of the crime, police said.

“She’s a very strong young lady,’’ Abbett said about the 12-year-old. "She's a hero, she's safe now."

The girl was hospitalized and was doing well.

Here's more about the insidious case:

12-year-old Alabama girl escapes captivity, leads police to 2 bodies resulting in arrestwww.youtube.com