03/20/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/20/2026 11:10
SAN ANTONIO - Federal prosecutors in the Western District of Texas filed 251 new immigration and immigration-related criminal cases from March 13 to March 19, announced U.S. Attorney Justin R. Simmons. Charges were brought against human smugglers and illegal aliens with past convictions for violent crimes, drug trafficking, numerous DUIs, theft, and multiple prior removals.
Among the new cases, two illegal aliens from Honduras, Edgar Osmery Castellanos-Sabillon and Fernando Josue Betanco-Montoya, are facing alien smuggling charges in El Paso. According to a criminal complaint, Texas Department of Public Safety troopers near Wichita Falls conducted a traffic stop on Castellanos-Sabillon, who was allegedly the driver of the vehicle. The complaint alleges Betanco-Montoya was in the front passenger seat, and seven additional individuals with foreign passports from Cuba, Guatemala, and Mexico were in the vehicle as well. An investigation allegedly revealed that one of the smuggled aliens was identified as a target in an Ysleta Border Patrol case after he made a social media post thanking two known smugglers and indicating that he had crossed into the U.S. illegally. All nine individuals were transported to El Paso for prosecution. The complaint also alleges that Castellanos-Sabillon and Betanco-Montoya were identified as the caretakers of a stash house in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where they housed and fed the aliens after they were transported from El Paso and before attempting to transport them to Dallas.
Mexican national Miguel Campos-Chavelas, who was deported from the U.S. in October 2024, is charged with one count of harboring illegal aliens. A criminal complaint alleges an investigation led U.S. Border Patrol agents to an apartment complex in El Paso, where they encountered Campos-Chavelas and a female co-conspirator who is a U.S. citizen. A third individual was also discovered in the apartment and determined to be an illegal alien. According to the complaint, Campos-Chavelas claimed to be engaged to the U.S. citizen and has lived with her in the apartment since 2024. He also allegedly claimed that, working with a smuggler in Juarez, Mexico, he was supposed to be paid $500 per alien housed at the apartment and had participated in the smuggling scheme on six prior occasions.
Joel Isaias Quisque Espital, an illegal alien from Guatemala, was found approximately 45 miles east of the Fort Hancock Port of Entry, near Sierra Blanca, on March 13. He has been deported from the U.S. twice, has been twice convicted of a DUI and has one prior conviction for driving without a valid license. In 2018, Quisque Espital was convicted of aggravated assault and sentenced to two years in prison.
In Austin, Mexican national San Juanita Cavazos-Torres, who is also known to go by 12 other names including Allison Francis Barron, Melissa Morales and Janie Moralez, was charged with illegal re-entry after being found in the Travis County Jail in January. Her criminal history includes multiple thefts, as well as forgery, robbery, drug possession, and grand theft. She has been removed from the U.S. five times.
Also charged for illegal re-entry in Austin are Mexican national Francisco Rojas-Lopez and Guatemalan national Evelio Eriberto Romero-Vasquez. Rojas-Lopez was found in the Travis County Jail in November 2025 and has been twice convicted for driving while intoxicated. Romero-Vasquez was convicted of both a DWI and assault causing bodily injury earlier this year.
Mexican national Eduardo Solorio-Orozco was arrested near Maverick and charged with illegal re-entry. Solorio-Orozco has been deported twice, the last being on June 18, 2025, through San Ysidro, California. He was convicted of three DUIs between 2016 and 2018, has a felony conviction for inflicting corporal injury, and was also convicted for possession of prohibited ammunition in 2021.
Mario Gonzalez-Mosqueda, also an illegal alien from Mexico, was charged in Del Rio with illegal re-entry, having been deported for the third time in November 2005. Gonzalez-Mosqueda has four felony convictions in Los Angeles, including three for drug trafficking and one for second-degree robbery.
These cases were referred or supported by federal law enforcement partners, including ICE, U.S. Border Patrol, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the FBI, the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), with additional assistance from state and local law enforcement partners.
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Texas comprises 68 counties located in the central and western areas of Texas, encompasses nearly 93,000 square miles and an estimated population of 7.6 million people. The district includes three of the five largest cities in Texas-San Antonio, Austin and El Paso-and shares 660 miles of common border with the Republic of Mexico.
These cases are part of Operation Take Back America, a nationwide initiative that marshals the full resources of the Department of Justice to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime.
Indictments and criminal complaints are merely allegations and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.
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