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She Tried to Kill Her Own Baby — Then Walked Free
Let that sink in.
Just last month, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deported a woman who attempted to murder her newborn son on Long Island. Acting DHS Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis called her “this monster” — and she wasn’t exaggerating.
According to the New York Post, the woman tried to kill her own child the very day he was born. That’s not a crime of passion. That’s not a moment of weakness. That’s cold, calculated violence against a defenseless infant.
And yet, this woman was not only allowed to stay in the U.S. for years — she was released by the Obama administration. Then, after years of freedom, ICE finally stepped in.
But here’s the kicker: she wasn’t held under any supervision. No ankle monitor. No court order. No conditions at all. She was just… let go. Then deported.
Think about that. A woman who tried to kill her own child — and the system didn’t even track her after release.
That’s not justice. That’s not safety. That’s not what families deserve.
Why This Case Should Alarm Every American Mother
As a mother of three, I’ve held my babies in the dark, rocking them through colic, through fevers, through every tiny fear. I know the weight of a newborn — the softness, the helplessness, the sacred trust.
So when I read that a woman tried to kill her own child — not in a fit of rage, but in a deliberate act — I didn’t just feel anger. I felt fear. Real fear.
Because if this woman could walk free in our country for years, what’s to stop another like her from showing up in your town, your school, your church?
And let’s be clear: this isn’t just about one woman. It’s about a system that lets dangerous people in — and then fails to keep them tracked.
Consider this: ICE released an illegal immigrant wanted for murder in El Salvador into the U.S. without any supervision. A federal judge is now threatening to punish ICE for it.
That’s not oversight. That’s negligence.
And it’s not just violent offenders. Last month, ICE arrested an illegal alien in Las Vegas accused of torturing dogs at an animal shelter where he worked. That’s not just cruelty — that’s a pattern of violence.
But here’s the real problem: the system doesn’t seem to care about the victims. It cares about procedures. It cares about paperwork. But not about safety.
So when a woman tries to kill her baby — and the government lets her go — what message does that send to real families?
That your child isn’t safe?
Protests, Politics, and the War on Law and Order
Now, here’s where things get even more disturbing.
After ICE detained a Nigerian national, Chidozie Wilson Okeke, outside a Brooklyn hospital, a flurry of social media posts from anti-ICE activists sparked a violent protest. Around 200 people showed up. Nine were arrested.
And you know what the left did? They blamed the NYPD.
But here’s the truth: the protest was fueled by online posts from anti-ICE groups. The New York Post reported that the social media trail led straight to radical left activists.
Then, Mayor Zohran Mamdani — who has openly called to abolish ICE — doubled down. He condemned the ICE operation. He claimed the NYPD was “collaborating” with agents, even though police denied it.
But wait — he’s also the same mayor who called for abolishing ICE after protesters clashed with agents outside a hospital. That’s not leadership. That’s radicalism.
And this isn’t just about one protest. It’s about a pattern. When ICE does its job — even when it’s controversial — the left attacks. They paint agents as villains. They stir crowds. They demand the end of immigration enforcement.
But what about the victims?
What about the woman who tried to kill her newborn?
What about the child who survived?
When a mother can try to kill her own baby and still walk free for years — then be released without supervision — something is broken. Not just in the system. In our values.
Government Accountability — Where’s the Oversight?
Let’s talk numbers.
ICE released an illegal immigrant wanted for murder in El Salvador into the U.S. without any conditions. No ankle monitor. No check-ins. No supervision at all.
And now, a federal judge is considering what punishment to hand to ICE for that failure.
That’s not just a mistake. That’s a constitutional failure.
And it’s not isolated. The Bureau of Prisons recently shut down the Dublin facility after admitting it couldn’t reform a culture of abuse — including a sex abuse scandal so bad it’s called “the biggest in U.S. history.”
That’s not just a scandal. That’s a collapse of public trust.
And yet, we’re told to trust the same agencies that let a mother who tried to kill her child go free?
But here’s the real question: if we can’t hold ICE accountable for releasing a murder suspect — how can we trust them to protect us?
And if we can’t hold the Bureau of Prisons accountable for letting abuse run rampant — how can we trust them to keep our children safe?
These aren’t hypotheticals. They’re facts. Named sources. Specific cases.
Acting DHS Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis said it plainly: “This monster attempted to KILL her own child the day he was born.”
That’s not drama. That’s not political spin. That’s the truth.
And if we don’t act — if we don’t demand better — then we’re the ones who failed.
Family Safety Isn’t a Political Issue — It’s a Moral One
I’ve lived in the same town for 25 years. I’ve walked my kids to school. I’ve sat in PTA meetings. I’ve volunteered at the local food pantry.
And every time I see a story like this — a mother who tried to kill her newborn — I think: What if that had been my daughter?
What if she’d been born in a hospital where no one checked on her? Where no one noticed? Where no one stepped in?
That’s not a nightmare. That’s real. That’s happening.
And the system is letting it happen.
When ICE releases someone without supervision — when a judge threatens punishment for the agency — it’s not just about the law. It’s about our families. Our children. Our homes.
And when politicians like Mamdani call to abolish ICE — not because of policy, but because of protest — that’s not leadership. That’s surrender.
But here’s the bottom line: we don’t need to abolish ICE. We need to fix it.
We need to make sure every dangerous person is tracked. Every release is monitored. Every case is reviewed.
Because if we don’t — if we keep letting monsters walk free — then who’s protecting us?
Not the courts. Not the protests. Not the politicians who want to dismantle the system.
Only you. Only us. Only real accountability.
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KEY_TAKEAWAYS:
- ICE deported a woman who attempted to murder her newborn son — a case described by Acting DHS Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis as “this monster” who “attempted to KILL her own child the day he was born.”
- ICE released an illegal immigrant wanted for murder in El Salvador into the U.S. without any supervision, prompting a federal judge to consider sanctions against the agency.
- Protests outside a Brooklyn hospital over the detention of Nigerian national Chidozie Wilson Okeke were fueled by social media posts from anti-ICE activists, leading to nine arrests.
- Multiple cases show a pattern of dangerous individuals being released without monitoring — raising serious concerns about public safety and government accountability.
- Real families deserve safety, not political games. Accountability must come before ideology.
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Key Takeaways
- ICE activists, leading to nine arrests.
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- ICE activists, according to the New York Post, and was condemned by Mayor Zohran Mamdani — who has called to abolish ICE.
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Key Takeaways
- ICE activists, leading to nine arrests.
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- ICE activists, according to the New York Post, and was condemned by Mayor Zohran Mamdani — who has called to abolish ICE.
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This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed by our editorial team.