CBP Arrests Three Sex Crime Fugitives at Texas Border Crossings in 24 Hours

May 07, 2026 - 20:06
Updated: 26 days ago
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CBP Arrests Three Sex Crime Fugitives at Texas Border Crossings in 24 Hours
Photo source: https://www.foxnews.com/us/child-sex-predators-among-3-fugit...

Three fugitives wanted for sex crimes, including a man accused of predatory sexual assault against a child, were arrested at Texas border crossings in a single 24-hour period, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Thursday.

The arrests highlight the dangerous suspects agents encounter at the southern border. Among those taken into custody was Pedro Garcia Martinez, 44, a Mexican citizen wanted in New York on felony warrants including first-degree rape and predatory sexual assault against a child.

CBP officers at Laredo's Juarez-Lincoln Bridge referred Garcia Martinez, a southbound bus passenger, for secondary inspection on April 30. Officers used biometric verification and federal law enforcement databases to confirm his identity and active warrants out of Sullivan County, New York.

Garcia Martinez was processed for federal immigration law violations and transported to a detention facility with detainers to ensure extradition to New York after final adjudication of the immigration violations.

In a separate arrest the same day, officers at the Juarez-Lincoln Bridge stopped Allan Josue Cabrera Maradiaga, 49, a Honduran citizen and southbound bus passenger wanted on an active felony warrant for sexual assault out of St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana.

A third suspect, Jesus Hernandez Resendez, 53, a U.S. citizen, was arrested at the Anzalduas International Bridge after arriving from Mexico as a vehicle driver. He was wanted in Hidalgo County, Texas, on a first-degree felony charge of aggravated sexual assault of a child.

"Put simply, you can run, but you can’t hide," said Donald R. Kusser, director of field operations for CBP’s Laredo Field Office.

"These are among the most heinous offenses we encounter," Kusser added.

CBP said the Department of Homeland Security is fulfilling President Donald J. Trump’s mandate to secure the border and stop dangerous criminals from entering the country.

CBP officers routinely rely on biometric screening and federal databases, including the National Crime Information Center, to identify individuals wanted for crimes such as homicide, sexual abuse, drug trafficking and robbery.

The agency noted that criminal charges are allegations and defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty.

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