A jail in Democrat Governor Tim Walz’s Minnesota released a Venezuelan gang member from jail after just three days last November. Alejandro Coronel-Zarate, an alleged member of the notorious Tren de Aragua gang, was arrested again this month in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, after choking and beating a local woman in Madison last year.
Minnesota’s Hennepin County Sheriff’s Department had arrested Coronel-Zarate in November but, due to sanctuary city policies, refused to inform Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents of the arrest, likely preventing his deportation and releasing him before a possible arrest by Wisconsin authorities.
Coronel-Zarate entered the U.S. illegally around September 2023, crossing the border in the area of El Paso, Texas. In early November, Madison police received the report from the female victim, and Coronel-Zarate was arrested shortly after the report in Minneapolis over an alleged car theft.
While Minneapolis police did contact Wisconsin authorities, Coronel-Zarate had been released after 36 hours and fled before they could arrest him in relation to the alleged assault charges. It was not until September 2024 that police in Wisconsin were able to arrest him after he resurfaced in Prairie du Chien in late August.
TIM WALZ’S ANTI-BORDER RECORD.
Governor Tim Walz—the 2024 Democratic Party’s vice presidential nominee—has previously compared ICE enforcement actions to “terrorism.”
During a 2017 campaign event, he stated, “The week after I was elected in 2006… I drove out to Worthington as the congressman-elect, went into the basement of the Catholic Church where Father Brixius was, who asked me to look around at all the children crying, and he said, ‘This is what terrorism looks like in America today.’”
Walz was referring to an ICE action that took part in 2006 against illegals accused of stealing or buying Social Security numbers to obtain work at meat packing plants.
Vice President Kamala Harris, the democrat nominee for president and Walz’s running mate has compared ICE agents to the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) in the past as well. Speaking at a Senate hearing in 2018, Harris questioned Ronald Vitiello—the then-acting director of ICE— and pressed him on the history of the KKK and its targeting people based on their race, asking if he saw any “parallels” to the group and ICE.