
'Second-class
citizens': Angel Families describe two-tiered justice system for illegal
immigrants
"Angel
Families" refers to those who have lost loved ones to violent crimes
committed by individuals who are in the United States unlawfully or have a
history of illegal entry. Despite President Donald Trump's focus on illegal
immigration in his second term, many families are still seeking justice for
their loved ones.
By
Ashe Short justthenews.com 7-2-26
President
Donald Trump has made fighting illegal immigration the centerpiece of his
second administration, but for too many families across the country, finding
justice has been elusive.
Many
illegal immigrants who have committed crimes have escaped justice under the
Biden administration, while the families of the victims faced ineffective
investigations, protracted legal cases, and, in some cases, saw the
perpetrators receive light prison sentences.
“These
people are shown so many privileges in this country and American citizens are
really considered, in my opinion, second-class citizens when it comes to crimes
committed against them by illegals,” says Mary Ann Mendoza, whose police
officer son was killed in 2014 in a head-on collision by an illegal immigrant.
Families torn apart by illegal
immigrants who were never caught
Mendoza,
who founded Angel
Families, spoke to Just the News about the Inman family, who were
irreparably broken after a fishing trip in 2000 in which an illegal immigrant
crashed into their
car, killing 16-year-old Dustin and the family dog. Dustin’s mother, Kathy,
was in a coma for weeks following the crash, and remained in a wheelchair until
she died in 2021 from complications caused by the car accident. The Inman
family says that Dustin’s father, Billy, was in the hospital so long he wasn’t
able to attend his son’s funeral. He died of a heart attack in 2019, which
Mendoza believes was caused by the stress he faced in the decades following the
crash and death of his son.
The
illegal immigrant who caused the crash, Gonzalo Harrell-Gonzalez, fled to
Mexico after the crash but continued to cross between the U.S. and Mexico for
several years without being arrested. He was
indicted by a grand jury in January 2001 and was placed on ICE’s “Most
Wanted” list before being removed during the Biden administration, as
noted by the Center for Immigration Studies. He is still a fugitive.
The
Inmans are not alone when it comes to a lack of justice. Joe Storie, 51, was
killed on October 5, 2011, when Luis Alberto Rodriguez-Castro ran a
flashing red light and hit Joe, his sister, and his wife. Joe’s sister and wife
survived the crash but were critically injured. Rodriguez-Castro was also injured
in the crash and taken to a nearby hospital, where he escaped from police
supervision but was later recaptured. Even though Rodriguez-Castro was deemed a
flight risk by the prosecution, a Georgia superior court judge granted
him a bond reduction, and he was allowed to remain out of prison. He
subsequently missed a court date and vanished. Rodriguez-Castro remains on
ICE’s “Most Wanted” list.
Blake
Zieto, 20, was killed in a 2006 head-on crash by Mexican national Jesus
Maltos-Chacon, who fled and has remained a fugitive for the past 20 years.
Maltos-Chacon’s name was removed from the ICE “Most Wanted” list under the
Biden administration but re-added
on April 27, 2026. He remains at large.
The high emotional cost to Angel
Families in sanctuary states
Hailey
King was just 18 years old when she was riding on the back of her friend’s
scooter on November 7, 2016. According to a crash reconstructionist hired by
her mother, King and her friend were hit by an illegal immigrant driving 71
miles per hour in a 35mph zone. Hailey ended up on the hood of Sergio
Rodriguez-Larios’ truck, while her friend, David, was pinned underneath. David
lost both of his legs in the accident and died a few years later. Hailey died
at the scene.
Her
mother, Kathy Hall, tells Just the News that the black box was never
recovered from Rodriguez-Larios’ truck, and no autopsy was performed on Hailey.
Rodriguez-Larios was initially charged with second-degree murder and faced 58
years in prison, but was allowed to plead guilty to manslaughter and received just
17 years – 10 years for killing Hailey, 5 for injuring David, and 2 for
fleeing the scene of the crash.
Rodriguez-Larios
was one-and-a-half years into his sentence when he first came up for parole.
Now Hailey’s family has to go to a new parole hearing every other year to
ensure he actually remains in prison for his crimes.
“There
is no justice in that,” Kathy tells Just the News. “We have not been
able to heal because we can’t stop reliving it.”
In
a similar case, Patti Fox’s daughter Carissa was riding on the back of her
friend’s motorcycle in 2025 when they were hit by an illegal immigrant who had
run a stop sign and crossed three lanes of traffic. The illegal, Valeria De Los
Angeles Bermudez Marcano, and the passengers in her car got out after the crash
and quickly fled, abandoning the vehicle, according to Fox.
Carissa
was flung into a concrete barrier, which “obliterated” the left hemisphere of
her brain, Fox tells Just the News. The grieving mother also says that
the driver of the motorcycle Carissa was on was given a breathalyzer test, but
when Marcano turned herself in the next day, she refused to take a breathalyzer
and was never tested. She was released within days without the district
attorney's or victim’s advocate’s knowledge, Fox says.
Fox
also says she was told initially that the occupants of the other vehicle were
U.S. citizens, but after months of not hearing about any advancements in the
case, she learned that ICE was involved.
Over
many months, Marcano would receive seven continuances, have five charges
reduced to one, and only be required to pay restitution to the driver of the
motorcycle, not Carissa, who remains in a wheelchair, is non-verbal, and
requires a feeding tube. During Marcano’s eighth arraignment, Fox says she
brought Carissa to the court so that they could see her daughter’s condition.
At that time, Marcano took a plea deal, which was not discussed with the
victim’s families, according to Fox.
“I
don’t think Americans realize how different the experiences are between
citizens and when they’re charged versus illegal aliens and when they’re
charged,” Fox says.
She
also says that she and her husband had been in a car accident shortly before
Carissa, but the U.S. citizen in that case had “the book thrown” at him. He
received multiple charges and the case was resolved in a matter of weeks,
unlike her daughter’s case with an illegal immigrant.
Fox
realized that, in a sanctuary state like Colorado, Marcano likely wouldn’t see
any serious prison time for her crime, so she says she reached out to the Trump
administration’s hotline for families impacted by illegal immigrants and
“within days,” Marcano was deported.
Chrishia
Odette was 13 years old when she was hit by an illegal immigrant with
outstanding warrants. Her father, Chris, tells Just the News that the
only charge Ramiro Guevara received for killing his daughter was a ticket for
driving without a license, for which he was already wanted. He reportedly
spent a mere 35 minutes in jail and posted a cash bond. He remained free for
years and became a fugitive from ICE.
"Court system like a revolving
door" for illegal immigrants, Angel Mom says
“I
grew up believing the justice system was meant to put killers behind bars. I
served the country believing in law and justice,” Chris tells Just the News.
Lacey
Marie Ferguson was fatally shot on August 24, 2003, outside a convenience store
in Modesto, California, by an illegal immigrant gang member. Her case went cold
but was reopened in 2014 following pressure from her mother, Boni Driskill. The
suspect, David
Aguilar, had been arrested around a dozen times prior to Lacey’s murder. He
was
convicted in 2018 and sentenced to 61 years to life, plus life, Boni tells Just
the News.
“He
went through the court system like a revolving door, being repetitive with
another crime, another crime, another crime, and I found twelve times where
they could have at any point, you know, saved my daughter’s life,” Boni tells Just
the News. “And they failed to do it.” I understand something will fall
through the cracks once, twice, maybe even three times, but 12 times is wanton
disregard.”
Fentanyl poisonings part of border
security but not investigated
Fentanyl
and other synthetic opioids account for nearly 70% of all
overdose deaths in the U.S., according to the National Center for Drug
Abuse Statistics. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says that Mexico
and China are the primary source countries trafficking fentanyl into the U.S.,
yet so many fentanyl deaths are not fully investigated.
Families
of those who have died due to fentanyl poisoning are included in the Angel
Families definition because it is a trafficked substance and thus part of
border security.
Laura
Woody lost her son Jimmy in 2021, telling Just the News that his death
wasn’t investigated because her son was a drug addict. She found evidence that
the coroner called her son “just a druggie,” and the people who sold him the
substance were never found. “Having a substance use disorder does not void a
person’s right to justice,” Laura says, adding that the judicial system treats
drug addicts as “less than human.”
She
says that a police report wasn’t even written for her son until a week after he
was found dead when she asked for the report. She also says it was full of
incorrect information that was written from memory, and questions why these
deaths aren’t investigated to find the dealers and those above them responsible
for trafficking fentanyl.
“Every
death could have been prevented if the previous one had been investigated,” she
tells Just the News.
Debbie
Santini also lost her son to fentanyl, but says the circumstances surrounding
his death are suspicious, yet police didn’t conduct a full investigation. Her
son, Jesse, died on February 16, 2022, just five days after entering a recovery
house. Even though there were 10 people in the house besides Jesse, only four
were interviewed, and Jesse’s name was spelled incorrectly throughout the
police report.
“They
did not even care to spell my child’s name right,” Debbie tells Just the
News.
Debbie
dealt with rotating investigators and never found the answers to how her son
died in a house full of people without any drugs around him. She also says her
son was shy and wouldn’t have used drugs in such a crowded house, that he would
have gone to his vehicle or another private place, yet her suspicions were
never answered.
"Living with a permanent hole
in our lives"
The
men and women who make up the Angel Families have previously
written to Congress seeking a border fence, more Border Patrol agents and
deportations, detention expansion, and screening of unaccompanied minors for
gang ties.
“Every
single one of us is living with a permanent hole in our lives because an
illegal immigrant, who never should have been in this country, was allowed to
stay and take an innocent life,” the families
wrote through the American
Border Story, a conservative-leaning 501(c)(4) nonprofit that tells their
stories. “These were preventable tragedies.”