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ShowApril 25, 2025
Watch: NY Times Goes Full Simp Over Deported Jamaican Kidnapper
While the left can’t seem to agree that illegal immigration is an objectively bad thing, you would think they would at least stop defending those accused of terrible crimes. However, that is not the case. Today’s show breaks down one of the worst takes and misinformation the media had on immigration this week.
It took a lot for the media to find their poster child to help prove that deportation is evil, and the best they could do was get Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a suspected MS-13 gang member.
That was bad enough, but the New York Times has chosen to cry over a man who was “deported after he was convicted of kidnapping in 2006, [and] accused of abducting an acquaintance who had stolen weed from his apartment.”
"They are really looking to do a profile on the innocent, hard-working, law-abiding migrants who accidentally get deported and end up with an MS-13 gang member, and this," Crowder said. “And they are still trying to make it a race thing.”
A judge ordered Mr. Blair to be deported after he was convicted of kidnapping in 2006, accused of abducting an acquaintance who had stolen weed from his apartment. Yet he was allowed to remain in the United States after leaving prison in 2020 because the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency did not consider Mr. Blair a priority for deportation.
Before landing in jail, Mr. Blair had joined a bustling Jamaican community in Westchester, where he moved into a basement apartment in Mount Vernon owned by his aunt. He settled into a job at a Brooklyn moving company, earning enough to send money back to his siblings. He also began meeting other Jamaicans, including some who sold marijuana, which was still criminalized at the time.
He then began dealing weed and “fell in love with the money.”
Those dreams were resoundingly shattered on Oct. 11, 2005, when an 18-year-old who lived in Mr. Blair’s building broke into his apartment and stole half a pound of marijuana and money. Mr. Blair did not report the break-in to the police, fearful of getting busted for possessing marijuana. Instead, he took matters into his own hands.
That is not typically what one calls an upstanding immigrant, but that is neither here nor there.
The police arrested him and two other men the following day, after they were accused of kidnapping the teenager, holding him at another apartment and demanding $5,000 from the teenager’s father over the phone. Mr. Blair was accused of pistol-whipping the 18-year-old and driving him to the apartment, where prosecutors say he was tied up. The police freed the teenager that night after raiding the apartment, where they found two handguns and two pounds of marijuana.
"The guy came here and immediately committed a serious crime that violates an American's fundamental human rights," Crowder said.
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