jueves, 18 de febrero de 2016

JULIO TRUJILLO:CBP OFICIAL/USAGOV DE EJEMPLAR A CORRUPTO

NOTA DEL BLOG: JULIO TRUJILLO despues de ser considerado un ejemplar miemro de la  LA OFICINA DE PROTECCION DE ADUANAS Y FRONTERAS  enfrenta muy graves cargos en texas
 EL FBI AUXILIO EN SU DESCUBRIMIENTO Y DETENCION MEDIANTE "LA FUERZA DE TAREA ANTICORRUPCION QUE EMPEZÒ GACE UN AÑO..ESTA ACUSADO DE VENDER UNA VISA PARA ESTADOS UNIDOS EN 3600 DOLLARES ADEMAS DE AYUDAR A OTRA PERSONA PARA CONSEGUILA...PARA LO CUAL EL INGENUO OFICIAL "ACCESO" INDEBIDAMENTE A UNA COMPUTADORA PROTEGIDA DEL GOBIERNO DE ESTADOS UNIDOS ( CUANDO ENTRAS A UNA COMPUTADORA DEL GOBIERNO TIENES UN CODIGO DE ACCESO CON CIERTOS LIMITES SEGUN EL NIVEL QUE SE TENGA EN LA OFICINA SI ENTRAS A ARCHIVOS FUERA DE TU ALCANCE -POR SUPUESTO QUE SERAS DETECTADO INMEDIATAMENTE Y POR SUPUESTO QUEDAN GRABADAS LAS PRUEBAS DE QUIEN LO HIZO
  1. agente corrupto del CBP a cambio de dlls hacia favores, Julio trujillo, alguien tiene mas datos bienvenida su ayuda.

MCALLEN – A Customs and Border Protection officer is facing federal charges.
Julio Trujillo, from Mission, was arrested on Wednesday. The FBI’s Public Corruption Task Force helped in apprehending the agent.

SOURCE JUSTICE.GOV
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, January 28, 2016

CBP Officer Charged with Bribery

McALLEN, Texas – A U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer has been arrested on allegations he accepted a bribe and for exceeding his authorized access to gain information from a protected government computer, announced United States Attorney Kenneth Magidson.
Julio Trujillo, 30, of Mission, was taken into custody this morning. He is expected to make an initial appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Dorina Ramos tomorrow at 9:00 a.m.
The criminal complaint, filed Jan. 27, 2016, alleges Trujillo accepted $3,600 in exchange for agreeing to extend one individual’s visa and assisting another individual in obtaining a visa. After receiving the money, Trujillo also allegedly exceeded his access to a protected government computer. According to the charges, he performed a record query on one of the individuals on a government computer to obtain records from the Department of Homeland Security, Department of State and FBI relating to the individual.
If convicted of the bribery charge, he faces up to 15 years in federal prison. The exceeding access to a government computer carries a possible penalty of five years, upon conviction. Both convictions also carry as possible punishment a $250,000 fine.
The charges are the result of an investigation conducted by the FBI, and CBP - Internal Affairs. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Roberto Lopez Jr. and David Lindenmuth are prosecuting the case.
A criminal complaint is a formal accusation of criminal conduct, not evidence.
A defendant is presumed innocent unless convicted through due process of law.
 *******************************************


JULIO TRUJILLO  CONSIDERADO COMO UN EJEMPLAR MIEMBRO DE LA CBP  
HIDALGO, Texas CBP Officer Julio Trujillo and Security Officer Criserio “Cris” Gonzalez Jr. recently became unsung heroes at the Hidalgo/Pharr/Anzalduas Port of Entry due to their quick, unselfish and humanitarian actions that helped save the life of a traveler at the Hidalgo International Bridge pedestrian walkway. By having performed CPR on 52-year-old William David Wagner, a United States citizen from Harlingen, Texas, Mr. Wagner is alive and in stable condition at a local hospital in McAllen, Texas.
“I commend and am extremely proud of our CBP officer and the security officer who acted with the utmost of courage and human compassion in this lifesaving incident,” said Efrain Solis Jr., Port Director Hidalgo/Pharr/Anzalduas. “This act of humanity arose from natural instincts and their training in CPR, which proved to be the difference in this person’s destiny.”
CBPO Trujillo is pictured with Mr. Wagner at a local hospital
The heroic feat occurred on April 7, when Mr. Wagner arrived from Reynosa, Tamaulipas, Mexico after having gone there to visit his wife and children. Upon his return through the pedestrian lanes, he began having convulsions and eventually collapsed. Through the chaos that evolved from other travelers yelling out for assistance, CBPO Julio Trujillo and Security Officer Cris Gonzalez, both CPR certified, took immediate action and offered assistance to Mr. Wagner by moving his tongue to avoid choking, sitting him up and making sure he was coherent and stabilized. Within minutes, the two officers noticed that Mr. Wagner was unable to breathe and could not detect a heartbeat.
They immediately took control of the situation by performing CPR; CBPO Trujillo performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and Security Officer Gonzalez initiated chest compressions. Having notified emergency medical technicians (EMT's) immediately after Mr. Wagner first collapsed, the two officers continued with CPR until the EMT's arrived and took control of the situation.
The medics immediately engaged, placing Mr. Wagner on oxygen and continued CPR while transporting him to a local hospital. All throughout the ambulance ride the patient appeared to be unresponsive and unconscious. The medics thanked the two officers for their unsolicited actions, which they said very well could have made the difference between life and death for the traveler.
CBPO Trujillo took it upon himself to visit Mr. Wagner at the hospital two days later, and at that time he was responsive and coherent. Mr. Wagner and his sister, Peggy Wagner, who was there with the patient, thanked CBPO Trujillo for his heroic actions and they also mentioned that Mr. Wagner would undergo open-heart surgery within a couple of days.

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario