Upwards of several hundred illegal immigrants involved in the March 21 border riot that overwhelmed Texas National Guard soldiers were released by order of a Texas state judge on Sunday. Magistrate Judge Humberto Acosta issued the ruling after the El Paso District Attorney’s Office was not prepared to proceed with detention hearings.
“So if the DA’s office is telling me that they are not ready to go, what we’re going to do is we’re going to release all these individuals on their own recognizance,” Judge Acosta said in response to a motion by Assistant District Attorney Ashley M. Martinez for a continuance. Texas state law requires that any illegal immigrant arrested without a warrant is entitled to a hearing before a magistrate judge within 48 hours of his detention. As part of his order, Acosta set a personal recognizance bond for each of the illegal immigrants to be released.
The Texas Department of Public Safety had earlier made arrests in connection to the March 21 riot, consisting primarily of asylum-seeking Venezuelan men. Some of the rioters face charges of public servant assault after attacking National Guard troops during the riot.
Video captured of the riot shows several hundred illegal immigrants charging toward the razor-wire barrier erected by the State of Texas. The group of illegal immigrants eventually broke through the border wire and rushed a permanent border barrier, also manned by guardsmen. In response to the March 21 border riot, Governor Greg Abbott (R-TX) ordered an additional 700 National Guard soldiers to be deployed to El Paso last week.