South Carolina, who says the police, was seen in a “annoying” video, facing a Latin man in a pickup truck and telling him that he will be sent to Mexico has been arrested on charges that included impersonating the ice officer’s personality.
Philadelphia police said that the arrest followed a similar case the next day at the University of Temple, where a 22 -year -old man and two other people were charged with falsely identifying themselves as officers with the United States for Migration and Customs.
Issues come amid the enforcement of aggressive immigration by the Trump administration on the US -Mexican border and the main American cities, creating an environment called the Latin Civil Laws Group.
“I think this is the beginning is just the beginning, unless we object to that, unless we come out and other people see how this noble man will be tried here,” said Roman Balomares, the national president of the Latin American Citizen Association. For the man who was arrested in South Carolina.
Sean Michael Edrich Johnson, 34, was arrested on Friday after he surrendered himself to the Sullivan Island Police Department. He was booked to investigate the charge of kidnapping a felony, and the personality of the law enforcement officer and two other misdemeanors. On Monday, the police administration said it had received the accusation orders Johnson on two other charges.
Police chief Monte said to. Anders that three Latin men were in the Beck August truck. He said that none of them was charged, and their names were not fired.
Johnson was released on Saturday after publishing Bond, according to prison records, and is scheduled to be in the court next month. It cannot be accessed to comment on Monday on a phone number.
Sullivan Island police responded to a call about a person running a car without a license on Wednesday. Later, they said in a press release, they were briefed on the “annoying” viral video, which prompted a criminal investigation into the caller 911, which Johnson knew.
They said: “This video presented possible criminal procedures by the caller, the police were not informed at the beginning during the scene.”
Anders said that the video lasted a few minutes and “not the entire accident,” but he said he could not comment more.
In the video widely Common on social media, A white man, whom the police known as Johnson, standing in the window of their driver with a car with Latini in the driver’s seat. The video was recorded by a man in the passenger seat.
The window is broken, and the white man asks the person in the driver’s seat, whether he is from Mexico and tells him: “You go back to Mexico.”
The video also shows the white man out of the keys to ignite the truck, hangs from it in front of the driver and tells him in a fake tone: “You cannot drive. You have no driving license.”
“You are back,” he says, and the man tells that the police are on its way and that he cannot drive a car without a license.
At one point, the man in the driver’s seat carries a mobile phone to the top of the man at the window, and the man responds: “No, no, it is over. End.”
The man in the driver’s seat, with a mobile phone in front of himself, can be heard while speaking the Spanish. Then the man says in his window, “Hey, El Chapo.” The driver continues to speak Spanish, and the man in his window tells him, “Do not talk about that Latin pig in my country F ——, his brothers.”
“Don’t talk about that Latin pig here,” he adds. “This is America. We speak English in America.”
Then the mobile phone is slapped from the man’s hand and says again: “We are speaking English and English.”
“Hapla Engels? No,” then tells the man in the driver’s seat, adding later: “This is my job. This is my truck. I have this country.”
Another man stands near the car window also tells that the man in the driver’s seat “has no license” and says twice, “I got his key.”
The police department said that after a “extensive video review” and interviews with witnesses, the orders of Johnson, who lives in Hugger were obtained, about 30 miles from Charleston.
Andrez, deputy police chief, said Johnson does not face charges of hatred because South Carolina is one of the few states without hate crime laws.
Andes said on Monday: “The charges that we have fully fully filed could be under the law,” Andes said on Monday.
Palomares, from LULAC, praised the police station to make the utmost charges.
“This is an example of the dangerous climate that our society faces there,” Palomaris said.
In the case of Pennsylvania, Esidan Stijan was accused of conspiracy to impersonate the personality of a government employee, and the court records indicated. A spokesman for the Philadelphia police said that two men who knew themselves as an Ice graphic officer on Saturday night to enter the Temple University residence hall.
Police said a third man arrived, and the three left together.
Minutes later, the police received a report that three men were defining themselves as snow agents in the insomnia -bound cooking store nearby. Two men who left in the SUV, but Steigelmann was arrested.
The police did not specify the other men. They said that the three were wearing “black shirts with the” police “on the front and” ice “on the back.
The University of Timbel said in a statement that the three men in the cookie store were the same men who were deprived of reaching the residence hall in Johnson and Hardwick earlier in that night.
The school said that two men committed suicide from law enforcement officers and recorded the third reaction. The school said that a student had been detained and put on a temporary comment awaiting the investigation. The student did not specify.
The school said: “The Public Safety Department in Temple nor the Philadelphia Police Department has no reports of the presence of federal ice agents on the campus.” “It is a matter of hope and disappointing to know such behavior that is said to have happened on our university campus.”
Steigelmann represents the Philadelphia Defender Association, which refused to comment on Monday.