Leftist laws were slammed for seeming to “only protect the criminal aliens” as a repeat deportee was slapped with multiple murder charges for an alleged drunk driving crash.
In the latest example of things that never happen continuing to happen no matter the amount of gaslighting, an illegal alien is allegedly responsible for the deaths of six fellow farm workers following a vehicle crash that occurred on September 7. As charges were brought against 53-year-old Norberto Celerino, thrice-convicted of DUI, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) found fault with California’s sanctuary laws, which have continued to hinder proper law enforcement in the once-Golden State.
In a statement provided to the media, an ICE spokesperson said of the man with multiple known aliases, “Beto Cerillo-Bialva … is a criminal alien from Mexico who first entered the United States in 1995. Since his first illegal entry, he has been arrested several times for possession of cocaine, multiple DUIs, and removed multiple times from the United States.”
The driver “repeatedly entered our country unlawfully after being removed, in violation of our laws. Unfortunately, due to [his] continued disregard for the laws within the United States and California’s sanctuary laws, has led to this tragic incident. Sanctuary laws continue to place the American public in danger and only protect the criminal aliens.”
Of the seven passengers that were in the car the morning that Celerino was allegedly driving drunk on the way to work, six died in the crash in Napa County when the car struck a tree. The victims of the crash were identified as Beymar Reynosa Rodriguez, 32; Fernando Silverio, 34; Demetrio Celerino Francisco, 39; Aaron Ruiz, 39; Loreto Ricardo Hernandez, 42; and Pedro Lopez Gomez, 57.
Aliases for Celerino were detailed by ICE to include Beto Celerino-Bialva, Roberto Salvaringo-Diabla, Grabien Martinez, and Norberto Celerino-Novillava.
The initial release from the Napa County District Attorney’s Office listed a number of those names in addition to spelling out how the illegal alien had two previous DUI convictions in San Joaquin County, dated August 22, 2020, and September 20, 2024. The third conviction was said to be more than a decade old and, therefore, could not be considered for an enhancement to Celerino’s charges.
PRESS RELEASE: Napa County District Attorney Charges Stockton Resident Norberto Celerino with Six Counts of Murder pic.twitter.com/qp4C1ZNqT3
— Napa County District Attorney’s Office (@NapaCountyDA) September 9, 2025
Meanwhile, corporate media continued to run cover for the open border agenda of the left as ABC 7 centered coverage of the tragic crash on shifting blame away from the sanctuary status of California.
Bill Hing, the founding director of the University of San Francisco’s Immigration and Deportation Defense Clinic, was quoted as saying, “It’s a tragic situation, but to blame it on sanctuary policies is misguided.”
“Let’s assume that he had been removed many times before. When somebody comes back to the United States, it’s the responsibility of the federal government to figure that out,” added Hing who further faulted “whatever social and economic factors that might have been relevant in the situation,” rather than acknowledge that the accident would not have occurred in California if the driver hadn’t been in the country in the first place.
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