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⚖️Law & Order Crimes and trials

So that white woman who called the black boy who stole from her toddler a nigger and has raised over half a million for her defense becuase blacks are threatening to murder her and her baby.....Did we discus sthat?

If you've seen the video, the guy filming her kept harassing her about it and posted the video to shame her. Welp, turns out that cameraman is a Somalian pedophile.....who was hanging out at the playground videoing kids. Why isn't the left outraged over that?
 
So that white woman who called the black boy who stole from her toddler a nigger and has raised over half a million for her defense becuase blacks are threatening to murder her and her baby.....Did we discus sthat?

If you've seen the video, the guy filming her kept harassing her about it and posted the video to shame her. Welp, turns out that cameraman is a Somalian pedophile.....who was hanging out at the playground videoing kids. Why isn't the left outraged over that?
Over $700k now.
 

“To see a man not just sleeping in my bed, but completely naked sleeping in my bed … I was shocked,” he said. “Like Goldilocks from the Three Bears, and someone’s sleeping in my bed instead of the little bear.”

As if the break-in wasn’t enough, the intruder helped himself to the resident’s kitchen and ransacked the home in a bizarre way. The man clogged the toilet with towels, ate a box of ice cream sandwiches, ate a box of Beyond Beef burger patties and raided Duarte’s stash of chewing gum.

“I had a fresh pack with 60 inside unopened,” he said. “He opened it up, chewed all of them and then spit a big wad of gum about … the size of a softball.”

The intruder also killed a possum on the back patio by using a statue.
 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/immi...ration/2025/05/28/davicito-song-ice-detained/ (archive):

He begged Trump not to deport him in a viral song. ICE detained him.

By María Luisa Paúl
2025-05-28 18:56:01GMT

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Claudio David Balcane González, one of the musicians who recorded “Donaltron,” is now being held in Dodge Detention Facility in Wisconsin. (Courtesy of Claudio David Balcane González)

In the music video, a Venezuelan man is pinned to the ground under mock arrest by immigration officers. In Spanish, one of the singers pleads: “Donald Trump, don’t deport me … I just want a chance to stay.”

The song “Donaltron” — a riff on how the president’s name is pronounced in Spanish — became a viral hit amid the administration’s sweeping immigration crackdown, drawing millions of listeners on TikTok and streaming platforms.

About two months after the song’s release, one of the Venezuelan artists behind the track says that he lived a scene similar to the one depicted in the video. Claudio David Balcane González, known as Davicito59, says immigration agents shoved him to the ground outside a friend’s apartment in Chicago and took him into custody. The 26-year-old is accused of having ties to a Venezuela-based gang, which he denies. He could now face deportation.

Balcane, now held in Dodge Detention Facility in Wisconsin, hopes to make the same case in immigration court that he made in the song: that he deserves a shot at the American Dream.

“I’ve never been involved in anything bad,” said Balcane, who arrived in the United States legally in 2024 and filed an asylum claim this year, court records show. “Since I was a kid, everything I’ve done has been cultural — skateboarding, graffiti — until I found music. And once I did, I was completely hooked.”

‘I tried telling them I was a singer’
A senior DHS official said in a statement to The Washington Post that Balcane was detained because he is an “illegal alien and public safety threat with ties to Tren de Aragua” — a reason the Department of Homeland Security has increasingly cited while detaining and deporting Venezuelans. A search by The Post did not find any federal, state or local criminal charges filed against Balcane.

As Balcane’s detention raises fears among his fans — and a growing movement of Venezuelan artists — about whether he was targeted because of his music, the official said that “any assertions that Claudio David Balcane Gonzalez was targeted because of a Tik Tok video, a song, or any attempted clickbait are false.”

Balcane has his doubts. On April 8, he was in the back seat of a car, minutes after posting on Instagram that he was heading to the studio to record music. He had been staying at a friend’s apartment in Chicago — an address, he says, that wasn’t listed on any of his immigration or personal documents. But as the car began to pull away around noon, a black van swerved in front of them, cutting them off, he said.

About eight plainclothes agents surrounded their vehicle with guns drawn, Balcane said. He was pulled from the car and thrown to the ground before officers handcuffed him with a knee on his neck, Balcane said. The agents asked him about his tattoos and took photos of them, Balcane said. He said they didn’t initially answer when he asked why he was being detained.

“I tried telling them I was a singer,” Balcane recalled. “They told me they knew exactly who I was — and that’s why they were there.” Three witnesses — all Venezuelan nationals with varying immigration statuses, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they fear being targeted for deportation — confirmed Balcane’s account of the detention and interactions.

While the officers drove him to a detention center, Balcane said they played the music video and mocked him.

The DHS official declined to provide evidence linking Balcane to the gang, saying the agency was “confident in our law enforcement’s intelligence” and that its officers “followed their training to use the minimum amount of force necessary.” They did not respond to a question about whether they played the “Donaltron” video or taunted Balcane.

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Claudio David Balcane González, who performs as Davicito59, alleges that immigration agents shoved him to the ground outside a friend’s apartment and took him into custody. (Courtesy of Claudio David Balcane González)

‘Hitting it big’
A confluence of economic and political crises in Venezuela drove Balcane to flee the country in 2016, when he was 18. He settled first in Colombia, then Peru, singing on buses with backing tracks on a speaker to survive. After his son was born in 2023, Balcane said he felt more urgency to turn his music into a career. He headed north the next year and crossed the Darien Gap, a lawless stretch of jungle that has become a symbol of migrant desperation.

In April 2024, Balcane presented himself at the U.S.-Mexico border for an appointment secured through the Biden administration’s CBP One app, designed to manage legal entry requests. He said he was questioned about his tattoos but allowed to enter the country after several hours.

Balcane settled in Wisconsin and kept posting freestyles — verses that mixed the slang of the streets with the trauma of the trail north. His songs started to take off on TikTok, with some of his videos reaching millions of views.

Balcane was a rising star of dembow, a Caribbean genre known for its fast rhythm and raw storytelling that has become the language of a generation of Venezuelans both at home and in exile. He was starting to fill shows with hundreds of people in Chicago.

The “Donaltron” song — a collaboration with artists known as Luxor and Junior Caldera — sparked a big online debate when it was released. The upbeat track pairs a plea to be spared from deportation with a warning to fellow migrants not to break the law.

“I pay bills. I pay rent. I pay taxes every week,” Balcane sings in the video. “Donald Trump, Donald Trump, Donald Trump — say yes to immigrants and no to deportation. Donald Trump, Donald Trump, Donald Trump — I just want a chance to stay. I’m out here chasing the bag.”

In the video, a person in a Trump mask dances through Chicago alongside twerking women. Some praised the video as a satirical reflection of immigrants’ fear. Others tagged President Donald Trump and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Balcane’s social media posts, calling for his deportation.

As the song took off, “everything was finally happening,” said his producer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he has a pending asylum case and fears retribution from the Trump administration. “He was in the studio, getting booked, hitting it big.”

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Claudio David Balcane González is one of the performers on the song “Donaltron” — a riff on how the president’s name is pronounced in Spanish. (Courtesy of Claudio David Balcane González)

Fears for the future
After his detention, Balcane said he was taken to a processing center in Chicago and questioned about whether he had connections to Tren de Aragua. He said he repeatedly denied it. “I have never, ever, ever been part of a criminal group — or anything that could someday compromise my freedom,” he said.

While the Trump administration has cited national security and gang concerns in its deportations of Venezuelan migrants, recent immigration operations have ensnared people with no criminal records — some of whom have open asylum cases or legal protections that would typically shield them from deportation, a Post investigation found.

Balcane said immigration officers at the detention center asked him about the fact that he was born in the Venezuelan state of Aragua, where the gang was founded, and his tattoos.

In recent months, Venezuelans who are from Aragua or have tattoos have been detained under suspicion of gang ties — often with no formal charges or evidence. ICE has previously said that tattoos were “one of many indicators” that an individual belongs to the gang, though several experts on the gang told The Post that Tren de Aragua does not use tattoos to signal membership.

Balcane says none of his tattoos — which include a Maggie Simpson character and a Tupac-inspired image of an AK-47 with the phrase “loyalty” — are gang-related.

Balcane is scheduled for a hearing on Thursday. His lawyers plan to seek his release on bond — but that depends on whether they can find a U.S. citizen or lawful resident to sponsor him. He fears being sent back — in part because he has taken a critical stance against the Venezuelan government in some of his songs.

As his case moves through immigration court, it has sent a chill through the U.S. community of Venezuelan artists, said the Chicago-based producer, who helped build a music camp for newly arrived migrants from the country last year.

Back then, he said, the goal was to give them space — to write, to record, to dream out loud. Now, many are afraid to perform, release new music or even post on social media, calling the phenomenon “the Davicito effect.” Since Balcane’s detention, another “Donaltron” performer, Junior Caldera, has had his visa revoked.

“We thought the worst that could happen was no one listening. Turns out, it was someone listening too closely,” the producer said
 
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