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Gang member murders for Jesus

Jesus necklace, A man was murdered for this Jesus necklace
  A man died for this relic. P.G. States Attorney Office.


You are standing at the bus stop. Two thugs approach. One has a gun in hand. They demand money, but you have none. They demand your Jesus necklace. You balk. Bang! You’re dead. Welcome to life in parts of gang-ridden Prince George’s County, MD.

That is how Carlos Millian’s life ended April 14, 2007, according to Prince George’s prosecutor Joseph Wright. Millian was in the United States legally. He was the sole provider for his wife and three children. The survivors are considering leaving this country for someplace safe.

The tragic incidents of the day involved lasted about four hours, a car-jacking, armed robbery, murder and convicted MS 13-gang member. Still, the P.G. police refuse to join 287(g) a federal program to speed up removal of illegal alien gang members found in the county.

Illegal alien Henry Angulo-Gil, of El Salvador, and Misael Pena first car-jacked Kenneth Thompson, according to Wright, at a gas station on the corner of University Boulevard and New Hampshire Ave. in Langley Park. They allegedly used a gun robbing a Subway. Then, they met Millian.

When police stopped the deadly duo two hours later, just a few miles away at the intersection of Chillum and Queens Chapel roads in West Hyattsville, the pistol was under Angulo-Gil’s seat. Pena pled guilty and testified against the gang member. Pena received life with a 25-year mandatory sentence. Officials claim to not know his gang or immigration status.

Earlier this month, Angulo-Gil was sentenced to life without parole after being found guilty of felony murder, using a handgun in the commission of a crime and stealing the car. Ironically, Thompson refused to testify at the car-jacking trial so the jury found Angulo-Gil guilty of theft.

The pair was found not guilty of the robbery due to a lack of evidence, Wright said.

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, DC Immigration Examiner

Andy Arnold, an awarding-winning journalist, has worked as reporter, editor and correspondent at every level of print journalism for more than 20 years.

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