Texas woman robbed, pistol-whipped in ritzy Dallas area by illegal Venezuelan migrants with gang ties: report
After a Texas woman was tied up, robbed at gunpoint and pistol-whipped in her Dallas home in late September, multiple Venezuelan men have been arrested and charged in connection with the incident.
The robbery occurred around 10 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 21, after the woman returned from dinner to her home in Bluffview, a neighborhood in Dallas where the average home price is more than $880,000, according to Zillow.
The men are accused of targeting the woman in her driveway, forcing her into her home and tying her up while pointing guns at her head, according to police records obtained by FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth. The men allegedly hit her in the head with a gun and threatened to cut off her fingers.
The suspects allegedly used Google Translate to communicate with the victim and made off with $75,000 worth of jewelry, a Gucci purse, a Ferragamo handbag, a Judith Leiber handbag, the victim's phone and coins from a wooden box, FOX 4 reported.
TEXAS MAN SUSPECTED OF AGGRAVATED ROBBERY AND THREATENING TO CUT OFF WOMAN'S FINGER ARRESTED
On Sept. 28, Dallas police arrested and charged 28-year-old Manuel Hernandez-Hernandez with aggravated robbery in connection with the incident, the department told Fox News Digital.
On Oct. 3, the Dallas Police Fugitive Unit executed an arrest warrant in Irving, Texas, with the assistance of Irving Police SWAT and Dallas Police SWAT, and arrested three other male suspects in connection with the same crime.
'MOST RUTHLESS' MEXICAN CARTELS OPERATE IN ALL 50 STATES, BRING TURF WARS TO US: DEA
Those suspects are 20-year-old Yean Brayhan Torrealba-Sanabria, 34-year-old Carlos Alberto Martinez-Silva and 27-year-old Wilmer Jesus Colmenares-Gonzalez, who are also each charged with aggravated robbery.
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) spokesperson told Fox News Digital that Hernandez-Hernandez is a citizen of Venezuela and entered the United States in March near the El Paso border "without being inspected, admitted, or paroled by an Immigration Officer."
On May 21, Hernandez-Hernandez pleaded guilty to driving while intoxicated and was sentenced to three days' confinement, ICE said. Hernandez-Hernandez was also arrested by Colleyville police on Sept. 19 and released a day before the robbery occurred.
After his arrest on Sept 28, ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Dallas placed an Immigration Detainer, Notice of Action, Form I-247 on Hernandez-Hernandez.
BLOODTHIRSTY VENEZUELAN STREET GANG SPARKS FEAR IN US AMID MIGRANT SURGE: WHAT TO KNOW
An ICE spokesperson said Torrealba-Sanabria entered the country illegally at or near Eagle Pass, Texas, on Dec. 12, 2023.
The next day, authorities served him a notice to appear and released an order of recognizance, pending a hearing with the Executive Office for Immigration Review in Dallas on Jan. 27, 2025.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers first encountered Colmenares-Gonzalez at or near Brownsville, Texas, on May 6, according to ICE.
On May 6, 2023, Colmenares-Gonzalez, Wilmer Jesus, a citizen of Venezuela was encountered by U.S. Border Patrol Officers at or near Brownsville, Texas.
He received a notice to appear to a master hearing with the Executive Office for Immigration Review on Jan. 27, 2025, and officials released him.
On July 7, CBP officers encountered Martinez Silva at or near the San Ysidro, California, port of entry at the pedestrian west facility, according to ICE.
Authorities issued Martinez Silva a notice to appear on Aug. 1, and he was paroled into the United States pending immigration proceedings.
On Oct. 3, ERO Dallas placed an Immigration Detainer on Colmenares-Gonzalez, Wilmer Jesus after Dallas Police arrested him for Aggravated Robbery.
Dallas initially police linked Hernandez-Hernandez to the robbery after apparently finding his fingerprint on the wooden box from which the suspects allegedly stole several coins, according to FOX 4.
He allegedly admitted to the robbery and gave police the nicknames of the other suspects involved, but said he did not know their real names. One of the other suspects apparently contacted Hernandez-Hernandez via Facebook and asked him to meet up before the robbery occurred.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Hernandez-Hernandez further stated his belief that the other men were part of the El Anti-Tren criminal street gang, according to the documents obtained by FOX 4.
Dallas police did not confirm gang ties to Fox News Digital. The investigation remains ongoing.