White House shares mugshots of 'worst of the worst' illegal criminals as tensions rise
WASHINGTON (TNND) — The White House posted eight mugshots of illegal immigrants from the Department of Homeland Security’s “Arrested: Worst of the Worst” database on its X on Monday night.
“Thanks to our brave ICE agents, some of Minnesota’s worst offenders have been removed from our streets in just the past couple of days,” the post read before diving into a thread of mugshots of men who have been convicted of crimes such as domestic assault, child sex crimes and robbery.
Minnesota's "Worst of the Worst"
- Ramon Cuellar-Hernandez, a Mexican national, has multiple criminal convictions for assault, driving under the influence and fraud.
- Houa Vang , a Laos citizen, is an aggravated felon with multiple convictions for larceny, fraud/forgery of checks, vehicle theft and drug possession.
- Esdras Aaron Rodriguez-Hernandez , a Guatemalan citizen, was arrested and charged with domestic assault.
- Victor Manuel Carranza is a citizen of Honduras who has criminal convictions for larceny and identity theft. He was arrested and charged with driving under the influence.
- Chue Moua is a citizen of Laos. Felony convictions include using a computer to facilitate child sex crimes.
- Ukrainian citizen Andrey Kimchuk has a felony conviction for robbery.
- At Xayasounethone is a citizen of Laos. His felony convictions include assault.
- Ever Evelio Ramos-Lopez is a citizen of Honduras. He has criminal convictions for assault and public order crimes.
The White House first launched the database last December in an effort to highlight to the public the hundreds of illegal aliens convicted of dangerous crimes which federal agents have apprehended.
The post from the White House comes in the wake of the death of Alex Pretti, a U.S. citizen fatally shot by federal law enforcement officers on Saturday. He is the second Minnesotan in the last few weeks to be shot and killed by federal immigration enforcement agents.
Following Pretti’s death, the White House announced that Greg Bovino, the top official for Border Patrol would no longer be overseeing immigration enforcement operations in Minnesota and instead would return to overseeing California's El Centro sector along the Southern Border. Border czar Tom Homan would now be overseeing the massive immigration crackdown in Minnesota with over 3,000 federal agents deployed.
Since last summer, tensions between ICE agents and anti-ICE protesters have escalated, leading to a 1,347% increase in assaults on ICE agents and now the death of two citizens.











