Three Salvadoran illegal aliens, fresh off the failures of the Biden era’s open border policies, were just arrested in a Houston sting operation for allegedly soliciting minors online—reminding Americans yet again who pays the real price for Washington’s border lunacy.
At a Glance
- Three Salvadoran nationals arrested in Houston for alleged online solicitation of minors
- All suspects are illegal aliens; ICE has placed immigration detainers on each
- One suspect, Carlos Gomez, has a prior criminal record and previous deportation
- The arrests highlight the intersection of illegal immigration, crime, and the risks posed to American children
Illegal Immigration, Online Predators, and the Cost of Open Borders
Law enforcement in Houston arrested three Salvadoran nationals—Abner Ruiz, Carlos Gomez, and Erick Menjivar—in July 2025 for allegedly using dating apps to arrange meetings with underage girls. This was not some isolated incident; it was part of a larger and necessary sting operation by Houston Police to catch those preying on minors online. And, wouldn’t you know it, once again the suspects are not just foreigners—they’re here illegally, thanks to years of failed border enforcement and a system that prioritized “compassion” for every foreign national over the rights and safety of American families.
Three Salvadoran Illegal Aliens Arrested for Online Solicitation of Minors in Texas Sting Operation https://t.co/aU3i2lN8bm
— Bob Price
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(@BobPriceBBTX) July 26, 2025
All three men are now sitting in Harris County Jail, where ICE has lodged detainers to ensure they don’t slip through the cracks—again. Carlos Gomez, in particular, has a criminal record and has already been deported once, but somehow found it easier to come back across that “secure” border than it is for a Texan to get a fishing license. These cases are a direct result of a decade of open border policies, sanctuary city nonsense, and a government more interested in virtue signaling than protecting its own people.
How Law Enforcement Is Fighting Back
Houston, already a national hub for human trafficking and online exploitation, has seen a surge in sex crimes tied to illegal immigration. Officers have had to go undercover on dating apps, pretending to be minors, just to keep predators from targeting local children. This sting is just the latest in a string of similar operations—each time, the suspects’ backgrounds tell a story the mainstream media refuses to touch. Local police and ICE are working overtime to mitigate the damage, but with hundreds of thousands of illegal crossings and endless bureaucratic hurdles, it’s a constant uphill battle.
Local and federal agencies have stepped up their cooperation, with ICE now placing immigration detainers and tracking suspects who have previously slipped through the system. The Texas Attorney General’s office has maintained a zero-tolerance approach, insisting on publicizing these cases to warn families and put offenders on notice. But as long as the federal government subsidizes this chaos, local law enforcement is stuck playing catch-up, and American families are left to wonder why our own children come second to a never-ending flow of illegal entrants.
The Real Victims: American Families and Children
Every time a story like this breaks, Americans are reminded of the real human cost of Washington’s open borders obsession. The suspects here didn’t just break the law by crossing the border—they allegedly went on to target the most vulnerable members of our communities: our children. The immediate impact is obvious—dangerous individuals are removed from the streets and prevented from victimizing more young people. But the long-term consequences are harder to quantify: lost trust in law enforcement, increased fear in immigrant communities, and the creeping suspicion that, for too long, our leaders put foreign nationals ahead of American families.
These sting operations are necessary, but let’s not kid ourselves—they’re a band-aid on a wound caused by years of reckless policy and political posturing. While some so-called experts wring their hands about “entrapment” and “fairness,” most Americans are left asking why we’re forced to accept this as the new normal. Our children deserve better than a system that waits until after a crime is attempted to step in. They deserve borders that mean something, laws that are enforced, and leaders who put their safety first, last, and always.
Expert Analysis: Law, Ethics, and the Uncomfortable Truth
Legal experts acknowledge that while sting operations can tread a fine ethical line, the overwhelming consensus among law enforcement and child protection advocates is that these measures are essential in the face of rampant online predation. The Houston cases are not unique, but they’re a snapshot of how illegal immigration and lax enforcement create fertile ground for crime. Defense attorneys raise concerns about entrapment and due process, but those arguments ring hollow when weighed against the safety of our kids and the repeated failures of the system to keep known offenders out of the country.
Reports from local news and law enforcement confirm the facts: these men are not only in the country illegally, but at least one has a history of criminal behavior and prior deportation. The operation itself targeted online predators, not immigrants specifically, but the overlap between immigration status and criminal activity is impossible to ignore. Until federal authorities enforce the law, local agencies—and ordinary citizens—will bear the costs and risks of a problem that’s entirely preventable with political will and common sense.
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Author: Editor
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