
Carlos Martinelly-Montano's Aug. 30 collision in Prince William
killed Sister Denise Mosier and seriously injured two other
Benedictine nuns.
A long-awaited report on the legal status of a Prince William man whose alcohol-related head-on collision killed a Richmond-based nun shows repeated instances of a failure to report his crimes to Homeland Security as well as a shift in emphasis by the Obama administration in dealing with illegal aliens.
Judicial Watch, a public disclosure group, said today that it has a received a copy of the report by the Department of Homeland Security that was kept secret after Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano had declared her office would thoroughly investigate the Prince William case and make it public.
The 35-page report deals with the criminal history and legal status of Carlos Martinelly-Montano, 23, whose Aug. 30 collision in Prince William seriously injured two Benedictine nuns and killed a third, Sister Denise Mosier, 66, all of Richmond.
Martinelly-Montano is scheduled to go to trial March 28 on six indictments, including felony murder, maiming resulting from driving under the influence and involuntary manslaughter.
Tom Fittman, president of Judicial Watch, said the report, which his group sought through a Freedom of Information Act request, shows how this country's patchwork of policies toward illegal immigrants and deportation can "blow up in our faces."
He called the report "a clear indictment of Obama's lawless approach to illegal immigration. An innocent person lost her life because local police officers and immigration officials couldn't be bothered to enforce and obey the law."
The report details shifting federal policy regarding what level of crimes should result in deportation. It also tracks at the local level in Northern Virginia court and law enforcement systems that don't uniformly enforce laws or report their outcomes to federal immigration officials.
Corey Stewart, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors, said the report "indicates that ICE is, in fact, releasing dangerous criminal illegal aliens instead of deporting them. And in (Martinelly Montano's) case, they issued him a federal employment authorization permit."
(This has been a breaking news update. Check back for more details as they become available. Read more in tomorrow's Richmond Times-Dispatch.)