Cesar Polanco, an illegal from the Dominican Republic who was picked up in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raid in Boston last week, is the exact kind of person we don’t want living in the United States, and he’s the perfect example of why President Donald Trump and his border czar, Tom Homan, are doing what they’re doing.
While it’s unknown how long Polanco has been illegally making the U.S. his home, what is known is that he made his way to the leftist utopia known as Massachusetts, where he eventually married Judith Guevara and began a family with her. After a night of boozing and dabbling in some nose candy, Polanco murdered Judith, who was one month pregnant at the time, savagely beating her so badly around the head and face that she had no chance of survival. Oh, and he did this in front of her 5-year-old son.
Polanco pleaded guilty to second-degree murder back in 2007 and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. This being Massachusetts we’re talking about, Polanco was granted parole back in December after the commonwealth’s Parole Board found his “adjustment has been positive” and that he had “expressed remorse for his actions and reminded the Board that he called the police himself” after smashing in his wife’s face.
NEW: One of the illegal aliens recently arrested by ICE Boston is a Dominican man who beat his pregnant wife to death in front of their child. He was paroled last month by the Massachusetts Parole Board after serving just 17 years of a life sentence.https://t.co/jcnObCQ9WY
— Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) January 27, 2025
A Harvard University Law student working for the school’s Prison Legal Assistance Project (PLAP), whose stated mission includes “empowering” people incarcerated in Massachusetts, helped to secure Polanco’s parole this time around after the murderer was first denied in 2021.
Upon being granted parole, the Parole Board decided Polanco would be released on a “home plan”:
That plan states, in part, that “Mr. Polanco has a significant support system in the United States and Dominican Republic. The Board considered the support of Mr. Polanco’s sister, daughter, and friend,” the Parole Board added before they “approved” his release where he had to abstain from drugs and alcohol. […]
— Read More: redstate.com