P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M

P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M
MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Monday, May 13, 2013

ICE Deported ( Mexican Fugitive in Indiana Wanted for Cold blooded Murder )

ICE Deported Mexican Fugitive in Indiana Wanted for Aggravated Homicide


INDIANAPOLIS – A Mexican national unlawfully in the Unites States, who is a convicted cocaine dealer, was deported last Friday to Mexico where he faces charges of aggravated homicide for shooting a woman to death.

This deportation was conducted by officers with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) in Chicago.

Efrain Rivera-Rico, 32, was deported via an ICE AIR Operations charter flight May 10 and turned over to the Mexican authorities at the Brownsville Port of Entry in Texas. The Attorney General for the Mexican State of Michoacan issued an arrest warrant for Rivera-Rico May 11, 2001, in connection with the March 2001 shooting death of a female passenger in a car he was driving.

According to the arrest warrant, on March 29, 2001, Rivera-Rico was driving a car with three passengers on the Patzcuaro-Tingambato Highway in the State of Michoacan. When a female passenger complained she was feeling ill, Rivera-Rico allegedly pulled off the road, took out a .38-caliber handgun, and shot Marce Judith Martinez-Camacho in the head. Rivera-Rico and another male passenger then allegedly removed the victim from the car, dragged her into a ditch, fired additional shots, and drove away leaving the body by the side of the highway.

Rivera-Rico entered the United States illegally at an unknown date and was residing in Seymour, Ind. On Oct. 5, 2009, Rivera-Rico was convicted of dealing cocaine in Jackson County, Indiana and sentenced to nine years in prison. ERO officers encountered Rivera-Riva at the Jackson County State Jail in February 2010 and placed a detainer on him to ensure that he would be turned over to ERO for deportation upon his release from prison.

Pursuant to the detainer, Rivera-Rico was released from Indiana Department of Corrections and turned over to ERO on April 2. In March, ICE was notified of the outstanding arrest warrant in Mexico by another federal law enforcement agency. As an illegal alien and aggravated felon, Rivera-Rico was ordered removed on April 11.

“Rivera-Rico thought he could evade justice and a possible prison sentence in Mexico by hiding in Indiana,” said Ricardo Wong, ERO Chicago field office director. “But the crimes he committed in Indiana for dealing drugs put him on our radar, and he now faces murder charges in Mexico. ICE officers help protect public safety by arresting and removing international fugitives who pose a threat to our communities.”

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