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August 2012 (67)
Staff
-Eagle Pass
This Thursday marked the beginning of the school year for thousands of EPISD employees as they were required to descend on the Sports Complex Gymnasium where board members and administration welcomed them back in order to re-focus and prepare for the 2012-13 campaign.
The Community Council of South Central Texas, Inc. (CCSCT) is a non-profit community action agency established in 1965. CCSCT has expanded its service area to include Dimmit, LaSalle, Maverick and Zavala Counties. CCSCT is assisting low-income customers with either their electric, gas or propane bills. Maverick County contact Michelle Rodriguez ,CCSCT County Coordinator at 830-757-6665 to schedule an appointment. Customers must bring the following information for each person living in the household to the appointment: Driver license, social security card, proof of income for the previous 30 days and current utility bill.
EAGLE PASS, Texas
Crimes of Moral Turpitude, Warrant Land Men in Lockup
U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers at the Eagle Pass Port of Entry, in separate incidents, recently detained two men – one destined for removal from the country due to being a known sex offender, the other wanted for violating probation following a narcotics conviction. On Saturday, CBP officers at the Camino Real International Bridge inspected a 2008 Chevrolet Cobalt as it arrived from Mexico. The driver of the vehicle, Jose Arroyo Paulin, 35, of Eagle Pass, presented the inspecting officer with a temporary I-551 (green card). Initial records checks revealed Arroyo to be a registered sex offender. CBP officers queried government databases, which indicated Arroyo has a criminal history that includes a 2003 conviction in Los Angeles for lewd or lascivious acts with a child under 14. Officers received authorization to initiate removal proceedings on grounds of “crimes involving moral turpitude.” Arroyo, who is currently serving in the U.S. Navy, stationed at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, was transported to a detention facility pending removal proceedings. In an unrelated incident on Monday, a U.S. citizen wanted for probation violation on a narcotics conviction, was taken into custody. Adrian Alejandro Salinas, 28, surrendered himself to CBP officers at the pedestrian lane of Eagle Pass Bridge No. 1, Monday afternoon. CBP officers discovered that Salinas had been wanted since 2006. Records checks revealed an outstanding warrant for probation violation, stemming from a conviction for possession of five kilograms of cocaine. Salinas was turned over to the U.S. Marshals Service. “Our frontline CBP officers have the ability to check arriving travelers, using law enforcement databases,” said Cynthia O. Rodriguez, CBP Port Director, Eagle Pass. “This is an important tool for detecting anyone wanted on outstanding warrants or who might be subject to removal from the country based on inadmissibility standards.”