House Judiciary releases report on four Venezuelan migrants who allegedly attacked Chicago man
The report was the latest in the committee's "Consequences of the Biden-Harris Administration's Open-Borders Policies" series, which highlights the criminal activity carried out in the United States by migrants who are in the country illegally.
Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday released an interim report detailing how four Venezuelan illegal immigrants allegedly attacked a Chicago man on a train in February.
The report was the latest in the committee's "Consequences of the Biden-Harris Administration's Open-Borders Policies" series, which highlights the criminal activity carried out in the United States by migrants who are in the country illegally.
Lawmakers alleged the four Venezuelan migrants attacked and robbed a 49-year-old man of $400 and his cellphone while on a Chicago Transit Authority train in February. The man was allegedly threatened with a knife and placed in chokehold that caused him to pass out.
Three of the four men, who have been identified as Carlos Carreno-Carreno, Yonnier Guasamucare-Garcia, Johandry Loyo-Rodriguez, and Wilker Gutierrez Sierra, were previously arrested for shoplifting.
"The disastrous immigration policies of the Biden-Harris Administration have had real world consequences for American citizens," the committee wrote in a news release. "The effects of those policies will be felt for years to come, with criminal aliens in American neighborhoods harming families and hurting public safety across the country."
The release continued: "The man assaulted on a Chicago train will never be the same because the Biden-Harris Administration allowed the illegal aliens to enter the country."
The report comes as Democrats gather in Chicago for their party's convention this week. New York Democratic Rep. Tom Suozzi is expected to speak about immigration in his address on Wednesday night, per Politico.
Misty Severi is an evening news reporter for Just The News. You can follow her on X for more coverage.