The lawsuit of the Homeland Security Secretary of the Homeland Security that the immigrant, who threatened the life of President Donald Trump, began to reveal.
Noem announced the arrest of a 54 -year -old man who illegally lived in the US, saying he wrote a letter threatening to kill a short and then return to Mexico. History received media attention and was emphasized by the White House and Trump’s allies.
However, the investigators actually believe that the man may have been framed to be arrested and exiled from the US until he had the opportunity to testify to the victim of the trial as a victim of the attack, the person who was familiar with the issue told the Associated Press. The person could not publicly discuss the details of the investigation and talked to the AP with anonymity.
Law enforcement officials believe that the man Ramon Morales Reyes never wrote a letter in which Noem and her department shared with a pale blue ink, expressing anger at Trump’s deportations and threatening him to shoot his head at the rifle at the rally. Noem also shared a letter “X” along with a photo of morals Reyes, and the White House also shared it on his social media accounts. The letter was sent to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Service together with FBI and other agencies, the person said.
As part of the investigation, the officers contacted Morales Reyes and asked for a handwriting sample and completed his handwriting, and the threatening letter did not match and that the threat was not reliable, the person said. It is unclear why homeland security officials still decided to send a cord by making this action.
In a statement submitted, asking for information about the letter and new information about morality Reyes, the Homeland Security Department said “the threat investigation was continued. During the investigation, the person was identified illegally in the country and that he had a criminal record. He would remain in custody.”
His lawyers said he was not subject to current accusations and had no information about sentences in his record.
Immigration and customs enforcement records show that Morales Reyes takes place in a county prison in Juneau, Wisconsin, northwest of Milwaukee. The Voches de la Frontera, which was in favor of his release, said he was arrested on May 21. The lawyer, Cain Oulahan, who was hired to fight his deportations, said he had a court hearing in Chicago’s immigration court next week and hopes he would be released.
Morales Reyes was a victim of another man who is waiting for a judge for the attack on the attack on the Wisconsin, the person who became aware of the matter. The trial is scheduled for July.
Morales Reyes works as a dishwasher in Milwaukee, where he lives with his wife and three children. He recently filed an application for a U – visa, which was illegally cut to the people of the country who are becoming victims of serious crimes, said lawyer Kime Abduli, who submitted that application.
The Milwaukee Police Department said it was investigating identity theft and the victim’s intimidation incident related to the issue, and the county district law firm said the investigation was underway. Milwaukee police said no one was accused at the moment.
Abduli, Morales Reyes’s lawyer, says he couldn’t write a letter saying he did not receive official education and cannot write Spanish and does not know how to speak English. She said it was not clear whether he was arrested for letters.
“It is certainly not the case that it could be even remotely true,” Abdul said. “We ask you to explain and correct the DHS to clear the name of Ramon what it has to do with that.”