ICE Scores Another Win: Brazilian Murder Fugitive Nabbed in Massachusetts, Exposing the Failures of Open Borders
By Hotspotnews
In a textbook example of effective law enforcement, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Boston arrested Kele Cristian Alves-Pereira, an illegal alien from Brazil wanted for murder in her home country. The takedown occurred on March 13 during a targeted operation in Everett, Massachusetts. Alves-Pereira now sits in federal custody, facing deportation back to Brazil to confront a murder warrant issued on February 22, 2021.
This is precisely the kind of decisive action that conservatives have demanded for years: prioritizing American safety by removing criminal invaders who exploit our porous borders. While liberal sanctuary policies in places like Massachusetts roll out the red carpet for anyone crossing illegally, ICE agents are quietly doing the dangerous work of hunting down threats that never should have been here in the first place.
Alves-Pereira’s arrest highlights a harsh reality ignored by the open-borders crowd. She entered the zUnited States unlawfully and allegedly carried with her the baggage of serious violent crime from abroad. The ICE announcement pulled no punches: “Newsflash: You’re still a criminal regardless of the country you reside in.” That simple truth cuts through the leftist fog of “undocumented immigrant” euphemisms and “root causes” excuses. Crime doesn’t vanish at the border, and neither does accountability.
Even voices from Brazil itself are sounding alarms. Multiple Brazilian users reacting to the news pleaded with American authorities not to send her back, warning that under the current leftist regime there, violent criminals often walk free due to corruption, lenient judges, and a revolving-door justice system. Some half-jokingly suggested routing her to El Salvador instead, where President Nayib Bukele has shown the world what real toughness on crime looks like with his crackdown on gangs and murderers. The desperation in those pleas speaks volumes about the breakdown of law and order in nations exporting their worst elements northward.
This case is no isolated incident. Under years of lax enforcement prior to the current administration’s renewed focus on removals, America has become a dumping ground for foreign fugitives, gang members, and opportunists. Sanctuary cities and states shield these individuals from detection, draining taxpayer resources on housing, healthcare, and policing while law-abiding citizens bear the costs and risks. Everett, Massachusetts—part of a region long criticized for soft-on-crime attitudes—now finds itself in the spotlight once again.
Conservatives have long argued that strong borders and interior enforcement are not about xenophobia but about sovereignty and public safety. When ICE deports someone like Alves-Pereira, it sends a clear message: America will not be the escape hatch for murderers and felons fleeing justice elsewhere. It protects neighborhoods from avoidable tragedies and frees up resources for actual citizens.
The visual details released with the arrest only underscore the cultural and criminal undercurrents at play—tattoos that often signal affiliations with the very underworld elements plaguing Latin America. Yet the left’s response is predictable: deflection, accusations of “raids,” and hand-wringing over “due process” for people who bypassed our laws from day one. Meanwhile, American victims of crimes committed by illegal aliens continue to be forgotten.
President Trump’s renewed emphasis on mass deportations and border security is already yielding results like this one. Operations targeting at-large fugitives prove that when ICE is empowered rather than demonized, communities get safer. The Biden-era catch-and-release policies that flooded the system with millions of encounters are being reversed, one removal at a time.
As Alves-Pereira awaits removal, Americans should take heart. This is what winning the fight for law and order looks like. No more excuses. No more importing chaos. Secure the border, enforce the laws already on the books, and put American citizens first. ICE’s success here is a reminder that real justice doesn’t coddle criminals—it removes them.

