Tuesday, July 8, 2025

IS HISPANIC RED WAVE FOR TRUMP STARTING TO CRASH?

By Rachel Monroe
New Yorker

Javier Villalobos, the mayor of McAllen, a city in the Rio Grande Valley, has noticed a change in his community in the past few weeks, after a series of ICE raids across the region, which is situated in the southern tip of Texas. “You go to some subdivisions that are being constructed, and it’s empty. You go to Home Depot, and there’s nobody around there,” Villalobos told me. “It’s weird. It feels like ‘The Walking Dead.’ ”

The Valley, a longtime Democratic stronghold, has in recent years been used as evidence of Donald Trump and his MAGA movement’s appeal to nonwhite voters. In 2021, when Villalobos was elected, Republicans celebrated the win as a sign of good things to come.

 “Amazing news! McAllen, Texas is a major border town of 140,000 people. 85 percent Hispanic—and just elected a Republican mayor,” Steve Cortes, a former Trump adviser,  posted on Twitter. “The macro realignment accelerates in South Texas, and elsewhere, as Hispanics rally to America First.” 

In last year’s Presidential election, Trump won every county in the Valley, including one where Hillary Clinton had beat him by forty points, in 2016. McAllen had the second-biggest shift in party share of any large city in the nation, trailing only Laredo, another Texas border community. “In the Rio Grande Valley, the Red Wave Makes Landfall,” the Texas Observer declared, calling the 2024 election a “bloodbath” and wondering whether Texas Democrats were “doomed.”

But Trump’s tariff policies have put economic strain on a region that’s heavily dependent on trade with Mexico. Then, in mid-June, Trump posted on Truth Social that, “by notice of this TRUTH,” ICE officers were ordered to “do all in their power to achieve the very important goal of delivering the single largest Mass Deportation Program in History.” 

In attempting to meet a quota of thousands of deportations a day, the Trump Administration has targeted cities run by Democrats, most notably Los Angeles. But Texas has not been spared, despite Governor Greg Abbott’s crucial role in helping to get Trump elected. McAllen is a city with roughly the same percentage of noncitizens as Los Angeles. Raids have been reported at night clubs, restaurants, and immigration hearings in the area.

When I visited a popular flea-market complex, it was unusually subdued; it had been raided recently, a plant vender told me. Since then, he estimated, traffic had decreased by ninety per cent. The wide-reaching impact of the raids is making some Republicans concerned that, as Villalobos told me, “we’re shooting ourselves in the foot.”

Last month, at an event in San Antonio hosted by the South Texas Business Partnership, Villalobos vowed to “ruffle feathers” about the raids. “Supposedly, they were going to be deporting murderers, rapists, criminals. That’s not what’s going on,” he said. Instead, “it’s like a dragnet—it’s going to affect us all.”

One day in June, the heat was already punitive by mid-morning, but the McAllen Convention Center had a refrigerated chill. Villalobos, dressed in a snappy cobalt-blue suit, walked in a half hour before the fifty-second annual Mayor’s Prayer Luncheon, an event that aims “to promote greater understanding in our community and to ask for God’s divine guidance in conducting the affairs of our City.”

A crowd of people in church dresses and felt cowboy hats milled around tables with decorations featuring an image of a dove with an olive branch in its beak. The day before, Villalobos noted on Facebook that he had been discussing “the hot topic of immigration enforcement and how it is negatively affecting all sectors of our economy” with Congress members from Texas, including the Democrats Henry Cuellar and Vicente Gonzalez. 

“Together, Republicans and Democrats thinking logically and with common sense, can solve this,” he wrote. “God bless and save the USA!” Online, the reaction had been mixed (“I wish more Republicans shared your viewpoints on the matter”; “Americans first period”), but at the convention center people were uniformly supportive.

 A woman in a patterned dress pressed Villalobos’s hand and thanked him for his efforts. “It’s not about being Republican or Democrat. It’s about doing the right thing for our economy and our civilization here,” she told me.

Roel Moreno, Jr., wore a black dress shirt with a gold saint’s medal pinned to the lapel. Moreno owns a company that does commercial and residential construction in the Valley. In the wake of the raids, he said, many of his employees were afraid to show up to work. “Most of the time, you have four to ten people at a home that’s being worked on, but right now we’re anywhere from zero to two. Yesterday, I only had two people working, and that’s because they were my friends, and they came down from Corpus to help me hang Sheetrock,” he told me.

Moreno said that he called a worker and asked, “ ‘Hey, can you come to start a house?’ He’s, like, ‘Roel, I’m scared to go. I came over at the age of three—you know, DACA, but now DACA’s not even good.’ He’s, like, ‘My wife, my kids are here, my parents are here, my grandparents are here. If I get sent to Mexico, I have nowhere to go. This is home.’ ” Moreno added that, like many people in the Valley, he had “conservative values”:

 “We believe in family, God, preserving our property values, and protecting our people.” He declined to say whether the raids would have an impact on his politics. “I mean, I keep the faith strong. I believe that God created us all equally, and that things are going to get better,” he said. “We’re going to need to continue to extend our hands out to our friends and neighbors.”


DREAM A LITTLE DREAM OF ME...


 

Monday, July 7, 2025

CITY MAKES A KILLING WITH UNPLEASANT MONDAY SURPRISE


 (Ed.'s Note: A lot of drivers who parked downtown today got an unpleasant Monday morning surprise in the form of parking tickets courtesy of the City of Brownsville. At $10 a pop, the city made a killing. Some have commented that there is little notice to visitors from outside the city and many are not warned that the pay kiosk is located in the middle of the block. Side streets have no kiosks but are inside the parking zones and are ticketed as well.  Drivers beware.)

THE NEWS JUST GET WORSE IN CENTRAL TEXAS FLOODING




CBS News
At least 82 people are dead and at least 41 more are missing after devastating flash floods slammed Texas Hill Country, with water rescues taking place along the Guadalupe River, which rose rapidly early Friday morning to the height of a two-story building. Almost a dozen are still missing from Camp Mystic in Kerr County, a children's summer camp, officials said Sunday.
(Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp, confirmed that at least 27 campers and counselors had died, calling the floods an “unimaginable tragedy.”)

Of the fatalities so far, 68 have occurred in Kerr County, its sheriff, Larry Leitha, said at a news conference Sunday afternoon — an increase from 43 deaths reported the previous night. The dead include 40 adults and 28 children, with 18 of the adults and 10 of the children unidentified.

At least 10 Camp Mystic campers are missing, along with one counselor, Leitha told reporters. This is the first solid number officials have provided regarding campers who remain unaccounted for, after estimating Saturday that it could be as high as 27. There were about 750 children at Camp Mystic when the floods hit, the sheriff said earlier.
A view inside of a cabin at Camp Mystic, the site of where at least 20 girls went missing after flash flooding in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025.RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP via Getty Images

BROWNTOWN'S 77 FLEA MARKET WARNING: I.C.E. NEED NOT APPLY

ROOTS OF ANTI-BLACK, BROWN PREJUDICE GOES BACK A LONG TIME

GET READY FOR THE FALLOUT OF THE "BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL"

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The new “Big Beautiful Bill” was just signed, and here’s the quick breakdown:

Good news:
• Bigger tax refunds for most working families
• More credit for kids, seniors, tips & overtime
• Some families may see up to 20–27 percent more in tax savings

BUT
… here’s the catch:
• Cuts to Medicaid and food stamps (SNAP)
• Stricter rules to qualify for health care or food help
• Some people might lose benefits if they don’t meet new work or paperwork requirements

What to do now:
• Keep your income records & work history up to date
• Stay in touch with Medicaid/SNAP offices in case rules change in your state
• Don’t throw away letters about your coverage—read everything!
• Ask for help from local programs or non-profits if you’re unsure

It’s a mix of good and bad—so be ready, stay informed, and protect your benefits. Here are some trusted local and state resources in South Texas that can help with food, utilities, bills, and legal support:

Whether it’s groceries, light bills, or rent—there ARE resources out there for us. Here’s a full list of local churches, non-profits, and Texas state programs that offer assistance for families in the RGV.

Covering McAllen • Pharr • Edinburg • Mission • San Juan • Alamo • Hidalgo

 Churches & Food Pantries
• St. Anne’s Church – Pharr |  956-787-8122
• St. Jude Thaddeus Parish – Pharr |  956-781-2489
• Madre Cabrini Parish – Pharr |  956-787-3554
• Center Church Pantry – Pharr |  956-702-3372
• United Methodist Church – Pharr |  956-787-4529
• Feed My Sheep / Baptist Temple – McAllen |  956-686-5296
• Holy Spirit Catholic Church – McAllen |  956-631-5295
• St. John’s Episcopal Church – McAllen |  956-687-6191
• Sacred Heart Church – McAllen |  956-686-7711
• First United Methodist Church – McAllen |  956-686-3784
• Christ Covenant Church – McAllen |  956-682-6424
• St. Joseph the Worker Pantry – McAllen |  956-994-0809
• St. Mark United Methodist Church – McAllen |  956-682-1481
• St. Vincent de Paul (St. Joseph’s Parish) – Edinburg |  956-383-7993
• Holy Family Church – Edinburg |  956-383-5472
• Abundant Grace Community Church – Edinburg |  956-381-0622
• First Lutheran Church – Edinburg |  956-383-2647
• Church at Bethany – Alamo |  956-781-6191
• Primera Iglesia Bautista – Alamo |  956-781-2325
• St. John Baptist Catholic Church – San Juan |  956-783-1196

 Food Bank RGV Emergency Help
• Food Bank RGV – Pharr Main Office |  956-682-8101
• Mission Resource Center – Mission |  956-585-3542

 Utility & Bill Assistance
• Pharr Emergency Utility Assistance Program |  956-402-4190
• Hidalgo County Community Service Agency (LIHEAP) |  956-383-6240
• Community Action Corp. (CEAP – Harlingen) |  956-423-1100
• Community Action Corp. (CEAP – Brownsville) |  956-435-0379
• Salvation Army – McAllen |  956-682-1468
• Catholic Charities – San Juan |  956-702-4088
• Silver Ribbon Community Partners – McAllen |  956-664-4892
• ARCH Housing Resource Center – McAllen |  956-631-4277

 Free Legal Help
• Texas Legal Services Center (TLSC) |  1-800-622-2520
• Texas RioGrande Legal Aid (TRLA) | Search them online by name


 State Hotlines & Programs
• Statewide Utility Assistance (LIHEAP/CEAP) |  2-1-1 or 877-399-8939
• Texas Utility Help Program | Search: “Texas Utility Help”
• Texas Housing & Rent Help | Search: “TDHCA Help for Texans”

 TIP: Call first, bring ID, proof of income, proof of address, and a copy of your bill or lease if applying for help.

Sunday, July 6, 2025

VALLEY FIREFIGHTERS RESPOND TO FLOODING TRAGEDY IN CENTRAL TEXAS

Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on Saturday. The camp has been run by the same family for almost a century.Credit...Carter Johnston for The New York Times

New York Times Staff
Various Sources

The search for those who were swept away by devastating floods in Central Texas grew increasingly desperate as the death toll jumped to 52 on Saturday night and the likelihood of finding more survivors appeared to diminish.

In Kerr County, where waterways gorged by thunderstorms tore through a Christian girls’ camp, trapped families inside trailer homes and swept people into the currents, the authorities said that some two dozen campers remained unaccounted for, and that there was “no cap” to the broader tally of the missing. 

State and local officials said the search was now a race against time, but they refused to relinquish their hope that more survivors would be found.

(The Brownsville Fire Department has joined emergency response convoys heading north to assist Texas communities impacted by widespread flooding. According to a post from the department, firefighters are en route and prepared to provide support wherever needed. The deployment is part of a larger statewide effort to respond to severe weather that has caused extensive damage and displacement across several regions. Officials say the team is equipped and trained to handle flood-related emergencies and is committed to helping fellow Texans during this time of crisis. Source: Brownsville Fire Department)

(Fire departments across the Rio Grande Valley have sent firefighters and other staff to assist in the rescue and recovery efforts going on in the Texas Hill Country. According to McAllen Fire Chief Juan Gloria, the McAllen Fire Department has sent three firefighters as part of a Texas A&M Task Force 1 water board squad.

Brownsville Major John Cowen announced on social media, the Brownsville Fire Department will also be sending aid.

“The City of Brownsville is also contributing to the response. Yesterday afternoon, a crew of three along with an ambulance and a strike team leader was deployed to support the ongoing rescue and recovery efforts,” Cowen said.”

Roxanne Lerma, a City of Edinburg spokesperson, told ValleyCentral that the Edinburg Fire Department deployed two firefighters to Central Texas as part of Texas A&M Task Force 1, supporting the state’s response to ongoing flood recovery efforts.)

The flooding threat from slow-moving thunderstorms in Central Texas is expected to continue overnight. Six million people there remain under flood watches until Sunday afternoon or evening. An additional two to four inches of rain are possible across the Hill Country, with pockets of up to 10 inches, and excess runoff may cause flash flooding in low-lying areas, the National Weather Service said.

Crucial positions at the local offices of the National Weather Service were unfilled as severe rainfall inundated parts of Central Texas on Friday morning, prompting some experts to question whether staffing shortages made it harder for the forecasting agency to coordinate with local emergency managers as floodwaters rose.

Texas officials appeared to blame the Weather Service for issuing forecasts on Wednesday that underestimated how much rain was coming. But former Weather Service officials said the forecasts were as good as could be expected, given the enormous levels of rainfall and the storm’s unusually abrupt escalation.

Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas said late Saturday that the girls’ camp and an adjacent river had been “horrendously ravaged in ways unlike I’ve seen in any natural disaster,” and that rushing waters had reached the tops of cabins.

“We won’t stop until we find every girl who was in those cabins,” he said on social media.

As the death toll continued to climb, investigators were trying to identify victims. Among them were 8-year-old and 9-year-old campers, and a 27-year-old man who died trying to save his family by punching a window through their trailer so they could escape the rising waters.

Most of the deaths occurred in Kerr County, an area northwest of San Antonio that has experienced the worst of the flooding. Officials said that 43 people had died; 15 were children. Elsewhere in the state, four people were killed in Travis County, three in Burnet County, one in Kendall County and one in Tom Green County, the authorities said. Thirteen people were also missing in Travis County, which includes Austin.

Here’s what we’re covering:

  • Victims: Officials are still identifying those who were killed, but early portraits of some of them have emerged. Here’s what we know about some of them ›

  • An agonizing wait: Many of the missing are girls who were at Camp Mystic, the Christian summer camp in Kerr County, when the floods hit. Stories of rescues have begun trickling in, but many parents are still anxiously waiting for news. Read more ›

  • Beauty and danger: Kerr County is in a part of Texas known as the Hill Country, where many residents have been lured by natural splendor and a rustic vibe. But the region has also become known as “Flash Flood Alley.” Read more ›

  • A harrowing rescue: A 70-year-old man in Center Point, Texas, helped rescue a young woman sitting in a tree above dangerous floodwaters on Friday. She had been camping at a site 20 miles up the river when she was suddenly swept away and carried downstream. Read more ›


USA MNT VS. MEXICO'S TRI DIVIDES LOYALTIES ON BORDER

(Ed.'s Note: As usual, the Copa de Oro classic between USA and Mexico's national teams divides fans along the border with some rooting from the USA and others cheering on the mother country. Some years ago, we hit on the idea of combining two jerseys to come up with a soccer compromise: cheer them on both.

If you think about it, it's a win-win situation. You really can't lose.
We took the idea to a tailor who used to have a shop across the alley behind the old federal courthouse – where the late Herald photographer Joe Hermosa's dad used to have a photo shop and Joe eventually took over – to see if he could come up with a combination of two jerseys, one from Mexico and the other from the USA.
 
He did and his work has outlasted him because he succumbed to COVID a few years later. This year both teams are in the final for the Gold Cup trophy and we get a chance to wear his creation. One of the combination jerseys went to Miguel Angel, our middle child. The other to yours truly. May the best team win today!)

Saturday, July 5, 2025

FIRST ANNUAL STARBASE FIREWORKS GALA LIGHTS UP BOCA CHICA

(Ed.'s Note: Cars from all over the Rio Grande Valley lined up both sides of Boca Chica Beach Friday for the City of Starbase's First Annual Fourth of July Fireworks celebration hosted by the city and District 27 Texas State Senator Adam Hinojosa. The massive turnout heard a band playing on the beach and then saw an awesome display of fireworks that were fired from the SpaceX lau8nch pad. 

The success of the event is leading city officials and Hinojosa to declare that they will try to establish it as an annual patriotic celebration that will show that the public's access to Boca Chica beach will still be respected. After the pyrotechnic show, many visitors stayed and camped overnight. Portable baths and a water station were provided by SpaceX and the city.)

Friday, July 4, 2025

MAGA FANS, BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISHED FOR...

MAY YOU LIVE IN INTERESTING TIMES...HAPPY 4TH OF JULY


La Cebolla


President Donald Trump’s budget megabill passed in the House of Representatives after being narrowly passed by the Senate. Here are the key items in “The One Big Beautiful Bill Act.”

Funding for something called “The Facility” somewhere in an alligator-infested swamp. 

Smaller, phone booth–sized detention boxes on every American street corner for every American to have a do-it-yourself concentration camp.

Coupon for “buy two get one free” 12-packs of Coca-Cola products or near-beer at the Dollar Tree

A few new mean nicknames for Joe Biden.

A map of California inside a red circle with a cross through it.

A glossy centerfold photo of a hot woman who is about to lose her health insurance. You want some of this Big Boy?

The end of treatment for those currently receiving CPR. Sink or swim.

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s world-famous moose tracks ice cream recipe, with a healthy dose of back-pedaling.

Moderate cuts to Medicaid compared to what’s coming. Take two aspirins and see if you make it until the morning.

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

TRANSMIGRANTE PRICE-FIXING CONSPIRATORS SENTENCED


U.S. Attorney's Office
Southern District of Texas

McALLEN, Texas – Three Texas residents have been sentenced in connection with a long-running and violent conspiracy to monopolize the transmigrante forwarding agency industry in the Los Indios border region, located near Harlingen and Brownsville, announced U.S. Attorney Nicholas J. Ganjei.

They and others controlled the transmigrate industry through fear, monopolization and extortion of competitors and laundered proceeds from the conspiracies.

Pedro Antonio Calvillo Hernandez, 50, McAllen, and Mireya Miranda, 59, San Antonio, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to illegally fix prices and allocate the market for transmigrante forwarding agency services and conspiracy to monopolize the transmigrante market. 

Hernandez also admitted to conspiracy to interfere with commerce by extortion and received 37 months, while Miranda was ordered to serve 10 months on home detention. Jose de Jesus Tapia Fernandez, 47, Brownsville, was sentenced to 31 months in prison after pleading guilty to a money laundering conspiracy through which extortion proceeds were laundered.

Hernandez and Miranda must also pay a $75,000 fine, while Fernandez was ordered to pay $50,000. Restitution will be determined at a later date.

“The danger and the harm to the American people by the use of violence and extortion to fix prices and monopolize the market for an essential service in the Texas border region cannot be understated,” said Assistant Attorney General Abigail Slater of the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division. 

“Today’s sentences demonstrate the Antitrust Division’s commitment to pursuing incarceration for both white-collar and violent criminals who seek to exploit America’s free markets.”

“The FBI remains committed to combatting the use of threats, violence and corrupt business practices such as price-fixing that harm honest business owners and undermine fair competition,” said Special Agent in Charge Aaron Tapp of the FBI’s San Antonio Field Office. “Together with our law enforcement partners, we will leverage each other’s expertise and capabilities to dismantle every facet of transnational criminal organizations.”

“These sentencings reaffirm our unwavering commitment to safeguarding economic integrity at our nation’s borders,” said Special Agent in Charge Craig Larrabee of Immigration and Customs Enforcement - Homeland Security Investigations (ICE-HSI) San Antonio. “By dismantling an enterprise that thrived on extortion and price fixing, we are ensuring that honest businesses can compete on a level playing field. This case exemplifies how corruption in niche industries can have far-reaching effects, and HSI will continue to pursue those who abuse the system for profit.”

Transmigrantes transport used vehicles and goods from the United States through Mexico for resale in Central America. Only a few U.S. border crossings, including the Los Indios Bridge, allow transmigrantes to enter Mexico.

Transmigrante forwarding agencies are U.S.-based businesses that help clients complete customs paperwork to export vehicles into Mexico. Co-conspirators fixed prices for forwarding services and created a centralized entity, known as the “pool,” to collect and divide revenue among conspirators. They used the pool to eliminate competition and raise prices.

Some also conspired to force forwarding agencies to pay money to the pool and to pay other extortion fees including a “piso” for every transaction processed in the industry as well as a fine for operating in the market outside of rules. The conspirators perpetrated acts of intimidation, coercion and violence in furtherance of the antitrust and extortion conspiracies.

To date, five others have been convicted, four of whom have already been sentenced in the case, including the leader - Carlos Martinez, 39, McAllen, who received an 11-year prison term.

Three others - Rigoberto Brown, Miguel Hipolito Caballero Aupart and Diego Ceballos-Soto were also charged in the superseding indictment and remain fugitives. Anyone with information about their whereabouts is asked to contact the Antitrust Division’s Complaint Center at 888-647-3258, or visit www.justice.gov/atr/report-violations.

The Justice Department’s Antitrust Division, the Criminal Division’s Violent Crime and Racketeering Section (VCRS), U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas, ICE-HSI and FBI conducted the investigation.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Alexander L. Alum prosecuted the case along with Trial Attorneys Anne Veldhuis, Brittany E. McClure and Michael G. Lepage and Senior Litigation Counsel John Davis of the Antitrust Division and VCRS Trial Attorney Christina Taylor.

Anyone with information in connection with this investigation should contact the Antitrust Division’s Complaint Center at 888-647-3258, or visit www.justice.gov/atr/report-violations.

THEN AND NOW: THE MAJESTIC THEATER IN DOWNTOWN B'VILLE

By Victoria Brito Morales
The Newsroom-UTRGV

RIO GRANDE VALLEY, TEXAS – It’s official! UTRGV now owns one of downtown Brownsville’s most iconic buildings – the Majestic Theatre.

Built in 1948, The Majestic will be renovated to serve as a much-needed Performing Arts Center for the Brownsville Campus.

UTRGV officially closed on the building Nov. 15, 2023 purchasing the facility from The Roy F. and Joann Cole Mitte Foundation. The UT System Board of Regents had granted purchase approval earlier this fall.

Dr. Jeffrey Ward, dean of the UTRGV College of Fine Arts, said he is excited about what this purchase means for the future of performing arts at UTRGV and especially for students on the Brownsville Campus.

"The purchase of the Majestic Theatre and its future renovation into a state-of-the-art performance hall is an amazing investment by UTRGV in our College of Fine Arts students as well as in the community," Ward said.

The center will provide performance, rehearsal and instructional space for the College of Fine Arts as it works to expand its offerings in music, dance and theater.

UTRGV President Guy Bailey said buying the Majestic Theatre has numerous benefits, not just in providing a working and learning space for UTRGV’s performing arts students and faculty, but also by supporting Brownsville itself.

“The added activity will help support local businesses in the downtown area,” Bailey said. “The building and its restoration have historical significance, yes, but this new Performance Arts Center also signifies a big collaborative step into the future for our university and our community.

“We are excited to finally and officially purchase the Majestic Theatre for our wonderful performing arts program,” he said.

UPDATE ON THE VISUAL ART FACILITY

In addition to the new building for performance arts, UTRGV is working on a plan for a new Visual Art facility in Brownsville. UTRGV currently is leasing Rusteberg Hall from Texas Southmost College. To date, UTRGV already has purchased new equipment and furniture for a future facility, and further details will be made available as plans progress.

MORE ABOUT THE MAJESTIC THEATRE

The Historical Marker Database website (HMdb.org) says the Majestic was built in 1948 and was part of Karl St. John Hoblitzelle’s Interstate theater chain. Interstate was an influential vaudeville and later movie theater company in the South, opening Majestic Theaters in Dallas and San Antonio before coming to Brownsville. The building has stylistic influences of the modern architectural movement, and the interior features Art Deco murals, stairway and terrazzo floors. Portions of the original facade, including the theater marquee, remain.

OUR COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF AS SEEN BY THE EUROPEANS...

I HOPE YOU CAN SWIM FASTER THAN THE ALLIGATORS!

By Rachel Treisman
NPR

President Trump visited Florida on Tuesday to tour what's been dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz,"  a controversial migrant detention center in the Everglades that officials say is poised to start filling its bed in a matter of hours.

The president was joined by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and other state emergency management officials as he toured the makeshift facility, which the state put together within days of receiving federal approval last week.

"I thought this was so professional, so well done," Trump said after touring the center, which features rows of fenced-in bunk beds and a razor-wire perimeter. "It's really government working together."

The facility is situated within the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, an isolated, 39-square mile airstrip located within the wetlands of the Big Cypress National Preserve, next to Everglades National Park.

The site's nickname — coined by Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier — references its proximity to the predators of the marshy Everglades, from pythons to alligators to mosquitoes.

"What'll happen is you'll bring people in there, they ain't going anywhere once they're there unless you want them to go somewhere, because, good luck getting to civilization," DeSantis said at an unrelated news conference on Monday. "So the security is amazing — natural and otherwise."
Speaking to reporters before departing for Florida, Trump described the facility as "an East Coast" version of the infamous island prison off the San Francisco coast. When asked if the idea was for detainees to get eaten by alligators if they try to escape, Trump replied "I guess that's the concept."

"Snakes are fast but alligators — we're going to teach them how to run away from an alligator. Don't run in a straight line, run like this," he said, waving his hands in a zigzag. "You know what, your chances go up about one percent."

...DeSantis said the first arrivals are expected sometime on Wednesday, after a security sweep. Noem said that could be within 24 hours.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is overseeing the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration, including by ramping up deportations and arrests and setting a daily quota of 3,000 arrests.

The administration wants to more than double its existing number of beds for detaining migrants nationwide to 100,000 and has framed Florida's newest detention facility as a key part of that effort.

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

IT LIVES! IT LIVES! VALDEZ NOT DEAD, SENT TO JAIL

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

For the last few days, Ivan Valdez, a well-known homeless person who frequented downtown Brownsville, often sleeping on the sidewalk and doing small jobs for local businesses to buy food and other more intoxicating pursuits, had gone missing, leading some to speculate that he might have been a victim of foul play.

Rumors soon abounded that his body had been found in an alley behind the Colonia Hotel often frequented by prostitutes, both male and female. People were on tenterhooks. News of his demise, apparently, were greatly exaggerated 

Well, the mystery is now solved. Valdez was jailed last Thursday on a warrant issued for Failure to Appear at his hearing for Criminal Trespass from February 28, 2024. Records show that Cameron County Court-at-Law III Judge David Gonzalez issued the warrant which was served last Thursday. 

He is now residing in a slightly safer place, the Rucker-Carrizales Correction Center in Olmito operated by the Cameron County Sheriff's Department.

Since we posted this it has come to our attention that Valdez would lie down in front of businesses' doors skimpily dressed and would leave only after they had given him food or money. If they refused he would make a scene until he got something from the owners. The Main Street Deli and Morning Glory restaurant were some of his frequent victims 

TRUMP FACES BACKLASH FROM FARMERS OVER TEMPORARY LABOR

From enCyberCuba

The president of the United States, Donald Trump, suggested the creation of a temporary pass for immigrants working in agriculture, but made it clear that he will not stop the immigration raids by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) nor will he soften his deportation policy.

In an interview with Fox News, Trump stated that his team is "working on it right now" to implement some type of permit that allows agricultural workers to continue working legally, while employers retain some degree of control.

The idea, as explained on the Sunday Morning Futures program, is to prevent the authorities from “coming in and taking everyone away,” referring to immigrants who have been working in the field for years.

“We are going to work to ensure that there is some kind of temporary permit where people pay taxes, where the farmer can have some control,” Trump said. “When you go to a farm and someone has worked with him for nine years... and you end up destroying a farmer because they take all the people away. It’s a problem.”

His statements come after weeks of contradictory signals from the administration regarding the enforcement of immigration law in sensitive sectors such as agriculture, hospitality, and restaurant services, where thousands of immigrants perform essential jobs.

In mid-June, ICE had briefly ICE had briefly paused raids in these sectors. However, days later, operations resumed, highlighting that the tightening of immigration policy remains a priority.

A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) emphasized to CBS News that “there will be no safe spaces for industries that harbor violent offenders or attempt to undermine the efforts of ICE,” and stressed that operations will continue to focus on networks of illegal employment which, they argue, affect American workers and economic stability.

Despite Trump's apparent attempts to show sensitivity to the needs of farmers, who have raised concerns about the difficulty of replacing experienced workers, the White House reiterated that anyone in an irregular immigration situation is subject to deportation. 

Trump also mentioned in April the possibility that some immigrants could leave and legally return to the country, hinting at improvements to the H-2A and H-2B temporary programs for agricultural and hospitality workers.

However, so far, no concrete details or formal proposals regarding the implementation of these changes have been presented.
Frequently Asked Questions about the Temporary Pass for Migrants in the U.S.

What does President Trump propose with the "temporary pass" for migrants?

President Trump proposes a "temporary pass" for undocumented workers in agriculture and hospitality, allowing them to work legally while their employers maintain certain oversight. This pass aims to prevent authorities from conducting mass raids that impact these key sectors of the U.S. economy.


STARBASE HOSTS 1ST ANNUAL 4TH OF JULY FIREWORKS CELEBRATION

Place: Boca Chica Beach

The City of Starbase invites the Rio Grande Valley community to our inaugural 4th of July Fireworks Celebration, proudly hosted by Senator Adam Hinojosa, Representative Janie Lopez, and SpaceX.
Date: July 4, 2025
Location: Boca Chica Beach
Parking: Drive and park directly on the beach
Event Schedule:
7:00 PM – Live Band Performance
7:55 PM – Welcome Remarks from Senator Adam Hinojosa & Representative Janie Lopez
8:45 PM – Fireworks Show Begins
10:00 PM – Band Performance Ends

Please note: No food or beverages will be available for purchase onsite. Attendees are encouraged to bring their own refreshments. Temporary restrooms and a water station will be set up and available on the beach.

Monday, June 30, 2025

B'VILLE, WORTHINGTON, MN., AND TARGET: TIES THAT BIND

By Juan Montoya

The other day we had occasion to visit the local Target store.

While in there, we sat for a spell and drank a cup of their Starbucks coffee after the shopping was done.
A few acquaintances were in the store, including a friend from the old neighborhood whose son was up north working at a pork slaughterhouse in Worthington, Minnesota. 

His son had experienced domestic problems and he signed up with Swift and Co., the pig slaughter outfit, when its labor recruiters came to the Cameron County Workforce Center.

He said junior was in the southwest corner of that state a few miles north of the Iowa-Minnesota state line near Sibley, Iowa, and some 40 to 50 miles east of the South Dakota border on the west. It is a rural town with only about 13,000 population. Many of the workers at the Swift (ConAgra) pork slaughterhouse are from outside of the area, including some recruited in South Texas, some Central Americans, Asians, and even some Ethiopians and Somalis.

Some are here in the United States legally. Many are not. In a recent ICE raid, many were found to have passed the E-verification test for employment using "papers" they had purchased from an outfit in California that provided Social Security numbers, a driver's license and a birth certificate belonging to real people, that is, identity theft, or "papeles chocolates."

(They could be had for $250 a pop, he said. As incongruous as it may sound, there were all these short, dark Guatemalans (chapines) with names like Edwin, Wendy, etc.)

Yet, underlying the reason so many outside minorities are there is because the local population base cannot provide the workers needed at the plant. Across the border in Iowa there is a beef slaughter plant and further east in Windom, on the Minnesota side, there is another beef slaughterhouse. Poultry processors also dot the landscape in the region. The work is hard, tedious and dangerous. No locals want their kids to work there.

In fact, a majority of the elementary-school population in Worthington is made up of minority children, sons and daughters of the Swift company workers, a fact that is resented by the older southwest Minnesota generation who  have to pay property taxes.

"Did you know that the founder of Target stores was from Worthington, Minnesota,?" he asked
us.

We didn't know, of course, and he sat down to tell us how how that came to be.

It seems that when Minnesota was considered to be in the northwest frontier, George Dayton, in about 1883, was sent to the frontier by his well-to-do parents to try his hand at business.

He started buying mortgages and soon became one of the city's leading fathers, presiding over the Bank of Worthington and founding a real-estate company.

In 1890 Dayton built a large home on eight lots one one of his subdivisions designed by Sioux falls (S.D. ) architect Wallace Dow. His northeastern upbringing is reflected in the inclusion of a widow's walk into the house's design.

Dayton lived by his religious principles improving his community and dedicating himself to the service of others; he served on the Worthington Board of Education, and was church clerk, elder, and trustee of Westminster Presbyterian Church, teaching Sunday School and hosting church events at his home.

According to a book written by one of his grandsons, his ancestor was a firm believer in adding value to the agricultural products raised on the frontier. Instead of just raising corn, he encouraged them to raise pigs and other animals that they could sell for more than the corn. Over time, Worthington had a Campbell Soup and turkey plant, and much later, Swift's.

Worthington's fame as the self-proclaimed "Turkey capital of the World" was challenged by Cuero, Texas, and an annual "turkey trot" race resulted between their two turkeys into an annual event. In fact, a delegation of turkey racers from each town trek to each others' towns each year to race the birds. He said that as daffy as that sounds, it is an annual event in both towns.

In 1902, Dayton moved to Minneapolis and founded
Dayton's Dry Goods store, later to become Dayton's Department store. Dayton continued to donate significant sums of money to the Worthington church and he established The Dayton Foundation, dedicated to promoting the welfare of mankind. 

In 1926, he served on the finance committee for the Community Fund, a predecessor of today's United Way. The Dayton family, sons David Draper Dayton (1880–1923) and George Nelson Dayton (1886–1950), continued their father's business and his commitment to the community.

Then the Daytons built Southdale Center in Edina, teamed up with Marshall-Fields and Mervyns and in 1962 began the Target discount store chain. In fact, the Daytons have been at the center of progress in Minnesota and the original Dayton was great-grandfather to Mark Dayton former U.S. Senator and Governor of Minnesota.

"So Dayton was right that a little corn and a few pigs go a long way," we told him as we stood up to leave. "Is the house he built still standing?"

"Oh, yes," he answered. "It has been restored and is now a bed-and-breakfast and used for community events. We've visited our son and it's still quite a sturdy building. And we went there during the King Turkey Trot. It was a lot of fun."

Sunday, June 29, 2025

FELLOW SAILOR ARRESTED IN ANGELITA RESENDIZ MURDER

(Copeland is pictured here receiving a certificate from an unidentified Navy officer.)

Ashleigh Banfield, David Johnson 
NewsNation

(NewsNation) — Marshall Griffin, a former JAG officer now representing the mother of deceased Seaman Angelina Resendiz, a Brownsville native,  said Navy prosecutors confirmed the suspect is Jeremiah Copeland, a fellow sailor assigned to Resendiz’s ship.

Resendiz, 21, went missing May 29 while her ship was docked in Norfolk, Virginia. Naval Criminal Investigative Service agents found her body 10 days later, 10 miles from her barracks. Her remains were returned to her family in Texas in a flag-draped coffin.

The Naval Criminal Investigative Service said a suspect was in pretrial confinement and that charges were pending but has released little information in the case, including Resendiz's cause of death.

“The name of the game in the military is discretion,” Griffin told NewsNation. “Officers in the military have a lot of discretion on what they do and don’t do.”

The retired Coast Guard commander says military prosecutors confirmed they can hold a suspect for up to 120 days before arraignment under military justice rules.

Griffin explained that under Rule for Court Martial 707, military authorities have 120 days to arraign a suspect and must conduct an Article 32 hearing — the military equivalent of a grand jury proceeding — within that timeframe.

IN THE CRADLE OF TEJANOLAND, WHY THEIR EXCLUSION?

By Rolando BriseƱo
Another View
San Antonio Express News

There are only five out of 12 Tejano heroes’ names inscripted in bronze in the Alamo chapel. This shameful exclusion must be corrected before anything else is done at the mission. 

The descendants of the Tejanos, the original settlers of Texas, and most Mexican-Americans do not feel welcome at the Alamo. 

The exclusion of the Tejano names in the chapel and on the Alamo Cenotaph is evidence of why Latinos feel ostracized. Under the Daughters of the Republic of Texas and their curator, the story of the Alamo did not include the truth about these individuals and their part in the fight for independence from Mexico.

The Tejanos settled on this land about 120 years before the Battle of the Alamo, and these mixed-race people are the ones who have given Texas its identity. They brought the longhorn from Spain, and they originated the cowboy boots and hat, as well as the vaquero, or cowboy, culture that is still popular today. They also made their mark early by giving Spanish names to geographical formations such as rivers, creeks and mountains.
It will be shameful if this conscious effort to sublimate the Tejanos who lost their lives is not corrected at this time. San Antonio de Valero, the Alamo, will be going through a big transformation soon with the help of state funding. What would have happened if the UNESCO delegates had looked into the cultural history of exclusion that has been prevalent at the Alamo?

Included in the plans to upgrade the mission grounds should be a plan to erect a monument or public artwork dedicated to the Tejanos. It should illustrate the history of the original setters and clearly state the history of this land. This artwork will serve to revise the Alamo narrative to be all-inclusive.


As stated in an Express-News article (“Rampage fallout felt in Texas; State is not transfixed by its Confederate past,” front page, June 23), “Texas was different, by birth and by destiny. ... Texas has come to venerate a different set of heroes ... those who defended the cause of Texas independence at the Alamo.”

Well, Jim Bowie was a swindling slave trader, and under the law of this land at that time blacks were free in Mexico. But they were re-enslaved when Texas won its independence from Mexico. Many re-enslaved people escaped to Mexico where they founded Nacimiento de los Negros in Coahuila, Mexico. 

In Texas up until the civil rights laws, Mexican-Americans were the African-Americans of the South. In Travis Park there is a monument to the Confederate dead. The Confederacy was for slavery, pure and simple. This monument should be rededicated to the Tejanos to make a wrong, on many fronts, right.

ICE RAID AT OMAHA MEAT PROCESSING PLANT CLOSES BUSINESS; POINTS TO "BROKEN" E-VERIFY SYSTEM



Quora
NBC News

Q: A meat packing plant in Nebraska was raided by ICE and lost 76 employees, all illegal aliens. Two days later, their waiting room was packed with Americans, filling out job applications. What happened to, "Americans won't do the jobs illegal aliens do?"

A: Pretty much all lies.

The Omaha meat packing plant complied 100 percent with E-verify to make sure their employees were here legally.

Then White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller revoked the work permits of 200,000 migrant workers, instantly making them “illegal aliens”

Then sent ICE to the plant to round them up.

Gary Rohwer, the owner of the plant called his representative to complain. Don Bacon, the U.S. representative laid the blame on Miller, and even said “ICE is a victim in this too.”

Two days later, the plant was getting a lot of applications. FROM IMMIGRANTS.

**UPDATE June 20, 2025**

“The Omaha meat-packing plant raided by ICE On June 10, 2025 ceased operations and closed their doors due to not having enough workers to keep the plant in operation.

Glen Valley Foods employed over 200 people, who now have no jobs.

Restaurants and retail grocery stores in the area lost their primary source for fresh beef, and will have to get it from other processors, resulting in higher prices. (Some residents protested the ICE raid and its effect on local industry.) 

Immigration authorities raided the Omaha meat production plant Tuesday morning and took dozens of workers away in buses, leaving company officials bewildered because they said they had followed the law.

The raid happened around 9 a.m. at Glenn Valley Foods in south Omaha, an area where nearly a quarter of residents were foreign born according to the 2020 census.

A small group of people came out to protest the raid, and some of them even jumped on the front bumper of a vehicle to try to stop officers in one location while others threw rocks at officials’ vehicles as a white bus carrying workers pulled away from a plant.

Chad Hartmann, president of the food packaging company, said the front office was stunned by the aggressive nature of federal officials’ raid and confused by why the company was targeted.

“My biggest issue is: Why us?” Hartmann said. “We do everything by the book.”

The plant uses E-Verify, the federal database used to check the immigration status of employees. When he said as much to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers who carried out the raid, they told him the E-Verify system “is broken.”

“I mean, what am I supposed to do with that?” Hartmann said. “This is your system, run by the government. And you’re raiding me because your system is broken?”

Omaha police and the Douglas County sheriff said immigration officials had warned them about their plans, and their departments helped block off traffic around the neighborhood where many food production plants are located while ICE officers worked.

Meatpacking plants rely heavily on immigrant workers who are willing to do the physically demanding work. The industry has not yet been the focus of President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement efforts, but the administration has been intensifying its efforts in recent weeks. Trump called out the National Guard this week to respond to ongoing protests in Los Angeles over his immigration policies.

CEO and owner Gary Rohwer told WOWT in Omaha he wasn’t made aware of the operation ahead of time. He said federal agents entered the plant with a list of 97 people they wanted to screen.

“Of course not. It’s a raid,” said Rohwer, whose company makes the Gary’s QuickSteak brand of ready-to-grill steak.

Estefania Favila, a supervisor at Glenn Valley Foods, said she was in a morning meeting when federal officials began banging on the plant’s doors and yelling, “Homeland Security!”

“They just came in and said that it was a raid and we had to get everybody out of production,” Favila said. Employees were separated by those who had documents showing they were U.S. citizens, those who had valid work documents and those who did not have documents, she said.

About 70 people were taken away in buses with the windows blacked out, Favila said. Among them were two of her cousins who immigrated from Honduras, she said.

ICE officials confirmed in an email the raid at Glenn Valley Foods, saying it was “based on an ongoing criminal investigation into the large-scale employment of aliens without authorization to work in the United States.” They said it was likely the largest ”worksite enforcement operation” in Nebraska since the start of Trump’s second term.

Hartmann, the company president, saidthe ICE raid sought to investigate stolen identities and that “ICE verified that Glen Valley Foods complied with E-Verify 100 percent..."

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