"It’s all misinformation in the media about me. They’re defaming me. They’re misrepresenting me in the news."
Illegal immigrant Leonel Moreno, who became a “migrant influencer” for telling illegals to squat in US homes, was recently ordered to be deported by an immigration judge — even though the likelihood of that happening is very low, the New York Post reported in an exclusive.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested Moreno in March. Almost immediately, his wife complained that she was unable to visit him in jail.
An Ohio-based immigration judge reportedly ordered the 27-year-old Venezuelan illegal to be deported by Sept. 9, according to Post sources. Moreno, who made a short career out of flaunting the largesse of the Biden-Harris administration towards illegal immigration, first entered the US illegally via Eagle Pass, Texas, on Apr. 23, 2022. He was captured and released but like millions of other illegal migrants, did not report for a hearing with ICE.
However, Moreno’s return trip to Venezuela is no sure thing because President Nicolás Maduro’s administration is no longer accepting flights bearing deported illegals from the US or Mexico. This decision is in retaliation to American economic sanctions placed on Venezuela over Maduro’s disputed reelection victory, the Wall Street Journal reported. There aren’t even any direct commercial flights between the US and Venezuela because of the civil unrest in that country.
The Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua has created a lot of civil unrest in the US, especially in Aurora, CO where criminal illegals have taken over apartment buildings and are extorting money from residents.
Moreno has expressed no regrets about illegally entering the US or receiving government handouts that American citizens aren’t eligible for. “I didn’t cross the Rio Grande to work like a slave,” Moreno said on Instagram clip while brandishing $100 bills, according to the Post. He had a child in the US and said the hospital bills were all paid for with the compliments of “Papa Biden.”
The illegal immigrant told the Post last April that he was a victim of unjust persecution. “I came here to the United States because of persecution in my country… But they’re doing the same thing to me in the United States — persecuting me,” Moreno said.
“It’s all misinformation in the media about me. They’re defaming me. They’re misrepresenting me in the news… I am a good father, a good husband, a good son, a good person, humble, respectful to people who respect me,” he insisted.
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