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Another ‘Isolated Incident,’ Right on Schedule

On March 22, 2026, federal agents were reduced to publicly begging Illinois politicians not to release Jose Medina-Medina, a 25-year-old Venezuelan national charged with the cold-blooded murder of 18-year-old Loyola University student Sheridan Gorman. Medina-Medina didn’t slip through the cracks — he was ushered through them. Caught and released at the border in May 2023, he was arrested and released again in Chicago just a month later despite an active warrant. His case is the flashpoint for a 72-hour window this week, where the “delayed harvest” of an open border became a lethal reality in six different cities. The nightmare of this broken filter continued on March 23, as ICE scrambled to block the release of Jesus Alejandro Ramirez-Padilla in Salt Lake City, a Mexican national accused of slitting a woman’s throat multiple times in a barbaric alleyway attack. Simultaneously, a Salvadoran national was arrested on Long Island for the horrific sexual assault of a five-year-old girl — another “legacy” arrival from the 2021-2024 mass-entry window. (RELATED: In Defense of Mass Deportations) In Dallas, a multi-day targeted operation ending March 23 had to claw back predators already embedded in the community, including Jhonny Colmenares-Sepulveda, a member of the bloodthirsty Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang released into the U.S. in 2023, and Fernando Avilez-Romero, a self-admitted MS-13 member with a violent rap sheet for drugs and assault. These cases were capped by the March 21 arrest of Alejandro Cuatla-Torres in New Jersey, an illegal alien with a prior record now convicted of attempted murder. This cluster of violence proves that the “11 million” is no longer an abstract policy statistic; it is an impossible math problem that has officially broken the back of American law enforcement. For years, the state prioritized administrative throughput over the basic social contract of vetting. We are now facing an ICE non-detained docket that has swelled to a record 662,000 criminal illegal aliens-a figure that includes 13,000 convicted murderers, 15,000 sex offenders, and 62,000 violent attackers currently unmonitored in the interior. (RELATED: Why ICE Exists) This is a structural collapse where the sheer scale of the population has outpaced law enforcement’s physical capabilities. Even with advanced, tech-assisted tools, it is statistically impossible to monitor or vet this volume of people once they have been absorbed into the population. The crisis is only guaranteed to worsen as more data materialize linking “clean” entries from the previous tenure to new violent offenses. Law enforcement is effectively attempting to drain an ocean with a thimble; by the time the system flags a predator, the crime has already been committed. (RELATED: After the Illegal Immigrant Surge) As these millions remain embedded in our neighborhoods, the risk to communities nationwide will only continue to amplify. The state has traded its first duty of protection for administrative speed, leaving American families to serve as the involuntary shock absorbers for a system that has fundamentally lost control of the map. The bill for a broken filter eventually comes due, and as this week proves, it is being paid at the doorsteps of the innocent. READ MORE from Kevin Cohen: Tactical Tourism: How Young Extremists Acquire Skills Abroad The First Signs of an Iranian Exodus Cartel War, American Consequences