- Four suspects were arrested for allegedly deploying homemade tire spikes to disable U.S. Border Patrol vehicles during an immigration enforcement operation in Van Nuys, marking a rise in violent resistance against federal agents.
- The suspects – Jenaro-Ernesto Ayala, Jude Jasmine Jeannine Allard, Sadot Jarnica and Daniel Montenegro – face serious charges, including assaulting an officer and obstructing federal operations. The case is under review by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
- Assaults on immigration officers have increased by 700 percent in recent months, with incidents including armed ambushes in Texas and vandalism in Portland, signaling a dangerous escalation in anti-enforcement activism.
- Advocacy group IDEPSCA claims two suspects were documenting the raid, while DHS asserts they actively obstructed law enforcement, highlighting tensions between activists and immigration authorities.
- The DOJ and DHS vow zero tolerance for attacks on law enforcement, warning of severe penalties, as the case underscores broader national debates over immigration policy and border security.
(Natural News)—Federal authorities arrested four suspects in Los Angeles this week after they allegedly deployed homemade tire spikes to disable U.S. Border Patrol vehicles during an immigration enforcement operation. The incident, which occurred in Van Nuys on July 8, marks the latest escalation in a wave of violent resistance against federal agents tasked with securing the nation’s borders. With assaults on immigration officers skyrocketing by 700 percent in recent months, the case underscores a growing trend of radical activism aimed at obstructing law enforcement, raising urgent questions about national security and the rule of law.
Suspects face felony charges
El Centro Sector Chief Gregory K. Bovino identified the four individuals as Jenaro-Ernesto Ayala, 43; Jude Jasmine Jeannine Allard, 28; Sadot Jarnica, 54 and Daniel Montenegro, 30. All are accused of interfering with a federal operation by placing improvised tire spikes – crude but effective devices designed to puncture tires – on roads used by Border Patrol agents. One suspect allegedly assaulted an officer during arrest, compounding the severity of the charges. The case is now under review by the U.S. Attorney’s Office, though prosecutors have yet to file formal charges. (Related: San Diego Border Patrol chief: Trump’s troop deployments have transformed BORDER SECURITY.)
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Why would Debutantes attack ICE?