Gov. DeSantis claims murder suspect was dumped in Jacksonville by Biden administration

3 years ago
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Florida lead representative says the Biden organization is employing private workers for hire to carry undocumented travelers to Jacksonville.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Florida Governor

DeSantis says a man blamed for homicide in Jacksonville was unloaded here in the center

Of the night by the Biden organization during a public interview Thursday.

The man, later recognized as 24-year-old Yery Noel Medina Ulloa, was found strolling around Jacksonville canvassed in blood a month ago. The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office says he at first lied about his name and age.

He was accused of second-degree murder in the demise of his uncle and proof altering.

"There was the report in The New York Post

About… . Biden organization's doing there, they're flying in individuals who came unlawfully, unloading a ton in Jacksonville in the evening," said DeSantis. "… this individual (Medina Ulloa) has been kept, ought to have never been in this nation in any case, and most certainly ought not have been unloaded in the province of Florida."

He says these 'center of the night flights' are going on without notice to the state, and that the Biden organization is recruiting private project workers to bring undocumented people here.

The article by the New York Post, that DeSantis references, asserts that the plan is essential for President Biden's arrangement to discreetly resettle underage transients the nation over.

"This isn't the manner in which you protect individuals, it's careless, and it's off-base," said DeSantis. "… I will perceive what we can do from chief, we have, obviously, have a forthcoming claim against the by the organization testing their catch and delivery strategies. Be that as it may, this is the thing that happens when you take part in crazy arrangements."

At his arraignment hearing Thursday, Medina Ulloa entered requests of not blameworthy on second degree murder and proof altering charges, through a translator.

The state is currently looking for a prosecution from a terrific jury for first-degree murder. Medina Ulloa's next pretrial hearing is set for Nov. 30.

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