Recent ICE tweets highlight arrests of non-citizens convicted of serious crimes

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Todd M. Lyons, Acting Director, U.S. Immigration And Customs Enforcement | Official website

Recent ICE tweets highlight arrests of non-citizens convicted of serious crimes

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) reported a series of recent arrests involving non-citizens convicted of serious crimes, according to statements posted on its official Twitter account on May 5, 2026.

On April 29, ICE arrested Ricardo Nava-Daniel, described as a child sex offender from Mexico, during an operation in Jackson, New Jersey. According to the agency’s tweet posted at 01:05 UTC, "ICE arrested child sex offender Ricardo Nava-Daniel, of Mexico, during a targeted operation in Jackson, N.J., April 29.

Monmouth County convicted him of endangering a child with sexual conduct and sentenced him to 287 days in jail in 2015. Three years later, he pleaded guilty to https://t.co/tENnc7o7JB".

Later that day at 13:02 UTC, ICE announced another arrest involving Gerardo Diaz-Tecroseno from Mexico. The agency stated that "Robeson County, N.C., convicted Gerardo Diaz-Tecroseno, of Mexico, of FELONY NEGLIGENT VEHICULAR HOMICIDE in 2023 and handed him a 38 to 58-month sentence.

ICE took custody of him at a correctional facility in North Carolina April 29, thanks to an honored detainer.

No need https://t.co/WV6ZpiLPw1".

In another post at 16:05 UTC on May 5th, ICE detailed the arrest of Victor Jose Parra-Subero from Venezuela. The tweet read: "ICE arrested Victor Jose Parra-Subero April 30 upon his release from prison in Alden, N.Y., where he was doing time for grand larceny.

He’s a criminal illegal alien from Venezuela with an existing removal order who entered the country through EL Paso, Texas, on an unknown https://t.co/dZBCz4P8Q3".

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is responsible for enforcing federal laws governing border control and immigration. Its Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) division routinely apprehends individuals deemed removable under U.S. law following convictions for crimes such as those cited above.