The war criminal formerly known as "Joventino Bermudez Arenas"
An Illegal alien, whose true identity is still unknown, murders a white college student; police call crime “random,” and refuse to reveal killer’s immigration status, while dead killer’s alleged family and Hispanic cheerleader “reporter” portray him as victim, while ignoring victim, and rev up lawsuit machine
By Nicholas Stix
The story below should about Parker Moore, a college student who was murdered by a foreign invader who used the alias “Joventino Bermudez Arenas.” It should tell of Moore’s grieving family and friends, and what he had done and hoped to do. Instead, the victim is mentioned in passing in terms of moral equivalence with his murderer and forgotten, by a Reconquista media operative who doesn’t even feign concern about him. She is concerned about the killer, whom she tries to transform into the real victim.
She interviews a man who uses the same last name as the murderer, and who claims to be his brother, but who may not be related at all. Local police have not been able to determine the identity of the killer, which means he was an identity thief. And if his name is phony, the “brother’s” name is likely also phony, as well of the then means of the other “siblings” in the house.
Everything we know about the person calling himself “Joventino Bermudez Arenas” involved crimes. He was illegally in the country, he was an identity thief, he worked here illegally, and he murdered a young American with a promising future. One thing that didn’t involve a crime: If his “family” is to be believed, while having lived in our country for several years, the killer had refused to learn a word of English.
When reconquista operative Adrianna Rodriguez promotes this cock-and-bull story, it is in order to lay the groundwork for an extortionist, illegal lawsuit. People who are in the country illegally, almost certainly themselves using stolen identities, are going to try and leverage their friend’s crime into a multimillion-dollar payday. And how much do you want to bet that Adrianna Rodriguez has already put the killer’s friends in touch with a reconquista lawyer for the Big Shakedown? Only in Obama’s America.
But it gets better. “Obama’s” illegal, unconstitutional mass amnesty, if he gets away with it, would have pardoned the killer and his friends for their crimes, and probably would have thrown in the murder, as well, on the house. For although “Obama” keeps on claiming that he would not amnesty criminals, he has been doing that all along, with no limit as to the severity of their crimes.
At VDARE.
Man accused of killing Linfield football player was turning self in when police shot him, family says
By Adrianna Rodriguez | arodriguez@oregonian.com
November 18, 2014 at 6:22 PM, updated November 18, 2014 at 8:09 P.M.
The Oregonian
Hours after he buried his [alleged] brother, [illegal alien] Horacio Bermudez Arenas said he still doesn't know exactly what happened Saturday night between his sibling and a Linfield College football player that left the two dead.
Parker Moore, 20, was at a convenience store across from the college on Southwest Baker Street when police found him with multiple stab wounds. His assailant, 33-year-old Joventino Bermudez Arenas, returned to the scene and was shot by law enforcement who said he was holding a knife and did not respond to commands to drop it, sheriff's officials said.
Horacio, interviewed Tuesday at the family's McMinnville home after Joventino's funeral, said the family is hurting and doesn't understand why Joventino stabbed Moore, as witnesses have described. The deadly encounter between Bermudez Arenas and Moore appears to have been random, police have said.
"I'm extremely sad. I will never forget everything with him."
The family says Joventino returned to the 7-Eleven to turn himself in. They also say Joventino, who only spoke Spanish, would not have understood English-speaking authorities if they had given him instructions. [And whose fault is that?]
During the interview, Horacio described what he experienced Saturday night and said he believes any gesture with the knife was probably his brother trying to give up the weapon to police.
[Garbage.]
Horacio said he and Joventino returned home about 6 p.m. Saturday from work at the Holiday Tree Farms in Sheridan. After eating, Horacio went to sleep about 7 p.m. About three hours later his sister woke him, saying Joventino returned from 7-Eleven and said there was a problem and he was going to turn himself into the police.
Horacio said he looked out a window and saw a calm-looking Joventino standing on the other side of the street looking at the scene illuminated by red and blue flashing lights.
[Why would a man who had just murdered someone be “calm”?]
He yelled at his brother to get back inside the house but didn't get any response. Joventino began to cross the street.
[So, he tried to stop his murdering “brother” from turning himself in?]
Horacio said he ran down the stairs and went toward the 7-Eleven, then the sound of three rapid gunshots stopped him. He saw his brother lying on the ground with gunshot wounds to the stomach.
[That's the only good part of the story.]
"He went to turn himself in. That's honorable. Why did they shoot?" Horacio said he wonders.
[Oh, so he was an “honorable” murderer?]
The investigation into the deaths of Moore and Bermudez Arenas is ongoing, said Yamhill County District Attorney Brad Berry.
Three McMinnville police officers involved in the shooting were scheduled to meet with investigators Tuesday to give their accounts of what happened. Sgt. Rhonda Sandoval, Officer Brian McMullen and Officer Justin James have been on paid administrative leave since the shooting.
A key part of the investigation right now is verifying if Joventino Bermudez Arenas is who family members say he is, Berry said.
Investigators have not found any public records for Bermudez Arenas, he said. Knowing more of his past could help aid the investigation, he said.
His family said Tuesday the Joventino has no documentation from any country. [That’s impossible, unless he threw away his documentation.] Before coming to Oregon six years ago to live with two brothers and two sisters, Joventino, who is one of [maybe] 11 siblings, lived in California with his uncle.
Family members said Joventino lived with his parents in Guanajuato, Mexico, before moving to California. He told his family he wanted to return next year to Mexico, where he recently fixed up a house he had bought.
Gene Carson, the business' manager at Holiday Tree Farms, confirmed Joventino worked for several hours in the shipping yard the day of the stabbing.
Joventino was working his second harvest season, which usually lasts about six weeks, Carson said. An uncle works for [sic] at the tree farm year-round and other family members worked for the company, Carson said.
"It's a sad deal," said Carson, who saw the uncle briefly Monday. "I know the family is in complete shock; they didn't see this coming at all. Who would?"
Carson said he didn't know Joventino, but his impression from other workers was that he was a quiet, hard worker.
"It really makes you wonder just what caused him to do what he's accused of doing," Carson said.
[Nothing “caused” him to murder a man. Otherwise, it wouldn’t be murder. And that’s what Gene Carson, a fellow criminal, is insinuating—that somehow, it’s the law-abiding white victim, Parker Moore (remember him?), who is the real criminal.]
Family members they still can't believe Saturday night's events.
"For me, he was a brother and a friend," Horacio said. "We feel for the other family because they are suffering like us."
[No, they’re not suffering like you. The survivors of crime victims do not suffer the way the survivors of criminals “suffer.”]
-- Adrianna Rodriguez
-- Everton Bailey Jr. of The Oregonian staff contributed to this report.
1 comment:
This sounds like the Mexican decided on death by cop. Advanced on the cops with the knife drawn so that they would shoot him.
About a half dozen to a dozen American citizens killed everyday by Mexican illegal aliens. My calculations.
Post a Comment