
Texas Border Business
U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of Texas
HOUSTON – In support of Operation Take Back America, the Southern District of Texas has filed another 353 cases in immigration and border-security related matters.
Of those charged from April 3-9, 114 are alleged to have illegally entered the United States, while another 212 face allegations of felony reentry after prior removal. Many have prior felony convictions involving narcotics, violent crimes and immigration offenses. An additional 25 people are accused of engaging in human smuggling, while the remaining three cases relate to other immigration crimes.
One illegal alien charged this week has a prior conviction for assault of a public servant, according to the charges. Authorities allegedly found El Salvadorian national William Alexander Morataya near Roma, despite having been removed March 3.
Charges also allege law enforcement found three others, all from Mexico, near the McAllen area without legal authorization to be in the United States. Omar Alejandro Valdez-Ornelas and Jose Antonio Romero-Uribe were previously removed Feb. 2 and March 13, respectively, according to court records. Criminal complaints allege Valdez-Ornelas has a prior felony sexual offense conviction, while Romero-Uribe allegedly assaulted a family member. Authorities had previously removed Javier Alegria-Ortega Oct. 19, 2025, following a conviction and sentence for bank fraud, according to his charges. However, law enforcement allegedly discovered him near Havana.
If convicted, all four men face up to 20 years in federal prison.
In addition to the new cases, another Mexican national who had illegally reentered the United States received a 495-month sentence for distributing drugs and machine guns from his South Texas residence. Carlos Alberto Garcia-Guajardo acted as a broker for selling narcotics and machine guns. The court heard how he emulated the “gangster” lifestyle and saw images of a Scarface poster hung in Garcia-Guajardo’s bedroom. In handing down the sentence, the court noted Garcia-Guajardo’s illegal status, the number of drugs and weapons involved, that he was a leader in this criminal enterprise and the dangerousness of his actions to include discharging firearms near children and from moving vehicles.
Another illegal alien was sentenced for her role in a multi-year cartel-linked human smuggling conspiracy. Giovana Lozano Hernandez served as the organization’s de facto chief financial officer, managing payments and records while working with Cartel del Noreste to smuggle more than 1,900 illegal aliens for profit. Authorities tied her to multiple smuggling incidents, including one involving 101 illegal aliens found inside a trailer, several of whom reported difficulty breathing and feared for their lives. A search of her residence uncovered cellphones, ledgers, more than $36,000 in proceeds and digital evidence documenting transportation, housing and payment tracking.
Also in Laredo, Guatemalan human smuggler Daniel Zavala Ramos aka Dany ZR pleaded guilty in a scheme tied to a tractor-trailer crash that killed more than 50 people and injured over 100 more. He and others transported illegal aliens, including unaccompanied minors, from Guatemala through Mexico to the United States. They recruited individuals, collected payment and arranged travel via foot and various other forms of transportation. In some cases, they provided scripted language if authorities apprehended them. He faces up to life at the time of his sentencing.
In Corpus Christi, Christopher Henson received 36 months for smuggling aliens in a disguised fishing trip. The investigation revealed Henson used his boat to bypass interior Border Patrol checkpoints while transporting illegal aliens along coastal waters. He posed trips as fishing excursions, sailing south to pick up illegal aliens at Port Mansfield, then traveling north to dock at locations beyond the checkpoints.
Also of note was the sentencing of Mexican national Miguel Carreon in Houston. The court imposed a 57-month sentence, noting how he chose to reenter the United States illegally and commit other crimes. Carreon has a previous conviction for conspiracy to distribute meth and was first removed in 2016.
These cases were referred or supported by federal law enforcement partners, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement – Homeland Security Investigations, ICE – Enforcement and Removal Operations, Border Patrol, Drug Enforcement Administration, FBI, U.S. Marshals Service and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives with additional assistance from state and local law enforcement partners.
The 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 and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime.
Under current leadership, public safety and a secure border are the top priorities for this district. Enhanced enforcement both at the border and in the interior of the district have yielded aliens engaged in unlawful activity or with serious criminal histories, including convictions for human trafficking, sexual assault and violence against children.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas remains one of the busiest in the nation. It represents 43 counties and more than nine million people covering 44,000 square miles. Assistant U.S. Attorneys from all seven divisions including Houston, Galveston, Victoria, Corpus Christi, Brownsville, McAllen and Laredo work directly with our law enforcement partners on the federal, state and local levels to prosecute the suspected offenders of these and other federal crimes.
An indictment or criminal complaint is a formal accusation of criminal conduct, not evidence. A defendant is presumed innocent unless convicted through due process of law.
Updated April 10, 2026














