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Press Release

Federal Judge Sentences Guatemalan National To Two Years In Prison For Illegal Reentry After Deportation and Harboring Illegal Aliens

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of North Carolina

ASHEVILLE, N.C. – U.S. District Judge Martin Reidinger sentenced today Omar Abisai Ramirez-Ramos, 34, of Guatemala, to two years in prison and three years of supervised release on illegal reentry after deportation and harboring illegal aliens charges, announced Jill Westmoreland Rose, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina. Ramirez-Ramos pleaded guilty to the offenses in December 2016.

 

U.S. Attorney Rose is joined by Nick Annan, Special Agent in Charge of ICE/Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in Georgia and the Carolinas and Sheriff Donald J. Hill of the Polk County Sheriff’s Office.

 

According to today’s sentencing hearing and court documents filed in the case, on October 9, 2016, a Polk County deputy conducted a traffic stop of the vehicle Ramirez-Ramos was driving. Over the course of the traffic stop, law enforcement determined that Ramirez-Ramos was an illegal alien who had been previously deported three times from the United States. Law enforcement also determined that eight passengers of the vehicle were also illegal aliens. Court records indicate that Ramirez-Ramos told law enforcement that he was being paid $1,000 to transport the eight individuals from Phoenix, Arizona to Charlotte, N.C., and that he did not know their countries of origin.

 

Ramirez-Ramos is currently in federal custody and will be transferred to the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons upon designation of a federal facility. All federal sentences are served without the possibility of parole. The defendant will also be subject to deportation proceedings upon the completion of his federal sentence.

 

In making today’s announcement, U.S. Attorney Rose thanked ICE-HSI and the Polk County Sheriff’s Office for their investigation of this case.

 

Assistant United States Attorney John Pritchard, of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Asheville, prosecuted the case.

 

Updated July 6, 2017