During a fiery House Homeland Security Committee hearing on Wednesday, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem tore into Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY) for defending a deported illegal alien with a rap sheet that reads like a horror novel.
Breitbart reported that Noem’s verbal smackdown came as Goldman advocated for Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an illegal alien now rotting in a San Salvador prison. This wasn’t just any deportee—Garcia’s accused of running with the notorious MS-13 gang, trafficking humans, and beating his wife.
Goldman missed the memo that actions have consequences. The hearing, chaired by Rep. Mark Green (R-TN), zeroed in on Garcia’s alleged crimes.
A convicted felon, who ran a human smuggling ring, spilled to the FBI that he hired Garcia to sneak illegal aliens past law enforcement from the southern border. Goldman’s defense of this lowlife left jaws on the floor.
Noem didn’t mince words, and why should she? “It’s got to be extremely discouraging to be one of your constituents,” she blasted Goldman, “to see you fight for a terrorist like this and not fight for them is extremely alarming.” Her words cut like a knife, exposing Goldman’s baffling priorities.
Goldman’s push for Garcia’s return to the U.S. reeks of woke pandering. The man’s accused of human trafficking in Tennessee back in 2022, a probe launched by Chairman Green himself. Defending someone with that kind of baggage takes a special kind of disconnect.
Let’s talk about Garcia’s resume. MS-13 gang ties? Check. Domestic abuse allegations from his wife, not once but twice? Double check. This isn’t a misunderstood soul; this is a walking menace who’s exactly where he belongs—in a Salvadoran cell.
Goldman’s stance isn’t just misguided; it’s dangerous. While Noem fights to keep America safe, he’s capping for a guy who allegedly helped smuggle illegals into the country’s heartland. It’s the kind of move that makes you wonder who he’s representing.
The FBI’s intel paints a grim picture. A human smuggler confessed to hiring Garcia to dodge border patrols, ferrying illegal aliens into the U.S. interior. Yet Goldman’s out here playing lawyer for a guy who treated the border like a turnstile.
Noem’s takedown wasn’t just a soundbite; it was a wake-up call. “Extremely alarming” doesn’t even cover it when a congressman fights harder for a criminal than for his constituents. New Yorkers deserve better than this circus.
Garcia’s rap sheet keeps growing. The 2022 Tennessee human trafficking probe tied to him isn’t some minor infraction—it’s a stain on his already tarnished record. And Goldman thinks this guy deserves a second chance?
Then there’s the domestic abuse. Garcia’s wife accused him not once, but twice, of violence. Defending someone who allegedly harms their own family isn’t compassion; it’s complicity in excusing evil.
Chairman Green’s probe into Garcia’s trafficking activities is peeling back layers of this sordid tale. The more we learn, the worse it gets. Goldman’s advocacy looks less like principle and more like a desperate grasp for relevance.
Noem’s righteous anger resonates because it’s grounded in truth. While Goldman plays hero to a villain, she’s standing up for Americans who want their country to be secure. It’s a contrast as clear as day and night.
The hearing laid bare a troubling reality: some politicians will bend over backward for the wrong people. Garcia’s imprisonment in San Salvador isn’t a tragedy; it’s justice. Goldman’s defense, on the other hand, is a betrayal of common sense.