comparemela.com

Caceres Cruz News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Sitting ducks for organized crime | News

Sitting ducks for organized crime | Nation and World

“How many days have you gone without food?” she asks into the phone. Tani, her younger sister, is heard sobbing. “Help me,” she gets out. Cruz Caceres assures her: “I am going to pay today. I’ll make another deposit.” The April 1 call ends abruptly, and Cruz Caceres stops recording. A week before the recording, Cruz Caceres, a single mother from Honduras who won asylum in Tennessee, had gotten another call that upended her already precarious life: Kidnappers in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, had abducted her pregnant sister Tani and Tani’s 4-year-old son, and they wanted more than $20,000, according to a video recording of the call and messages reviewed by the Los Angeles Times. The family asked The Times not to use her sister’s last name, for fear of retribution from the kidnappers in Mexico and gangs back home.

Sitting ducks for organized crime : How Biden border policy fuels migrant kidnapping, extortion - U S

WASHINGTON (Tribune News Service) With shaking hands, Karen Cruz Caceres manages to hit record on the call. “How many days have you gone without food?” she asks into the phone. Tani, her younger sister, is heard sobbing. “Help me,” she gets out. Cruz Caceres assures her: “I am going to pay today. I’ll make another deposit.” The April 1 call ends abruptly, and Cruz Caceres stops recording. A week before the recording, Cruz Caceres, a single mother from Honduras who won asylum in Tennessee, had gotten another call that upended her already precarious life: Kidnappers in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, had abducted her pregnant sister Tani and Tani’s 4-year-old son, and they wanted more than $20,000, according to a video recording of the call and messages reviewed by the Los Angeles Times. The family asked The Times not to use her sister’s last name, for fear of retribution from the kidnappers in Mexico and gangs back home.

Sitting ducks for organized crime : How Biden border policy fuels migrant kidnapping, extortion | Nation/World

“How many days have you gone without food?” she asks into the phone. Tani, her younger sister, is heard sobbing. “Help me,” she gets out. Cruz Caceres assures her: “I am going to pay today. I’ll make another deposit.” The April 1 call ends abruptly, and Cruz Caceres stops recording. A week before the recording, Cruz Caceres, a single mother from Honduras who won asylum in Tennessee, had gotten another call that upended her already precarious life: Kidnappers in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, had abducted her pregnant sister Tani and Tani’s 4-year-old son, and they wanted more than $20,000, according to a video recording of the call and messages reviewed by the Los Angeles Times. The family asked The Times not to use her sister’s last name, for fear of retribution from the kidnappers in Mexico and gangs back home.

Biden s Title 42 fuels migrant border kidnappings, extortion

“How many days have you gone without food?” she asks into the phone. Tani, her younger sister, is heard sobbing. “Help me,” she gets out. Cruz Caceres assures her: “I am going to pay today. I’ll make another deposit.” Advertisement The April 1 call ends abruptly, and Cruz Caceres stops recording. A week before the recording, Cruz Caceres, a single mother from Honduras who won asylum in Tennessee, had gotten another call that upended her already precarious life: Kidnappers in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, had abducted her pregnant sister Tani and Tani’s 4-year-old son, and they wanted more than $20,000, according to a video recording of the call and messages reviewed by the Los Angeles Times. The family asked The Times not to use her sister’s last name, for fear of retribution from the kidnappers in Mexico and gangs back home.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.