Back to all stories

ICE Operation Jails South Texas Smugglers for Kidnapping Migrant Family and Assaulting Pregnant Woman

Federal prosecutors say U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations, working with Texas and local law enforcement under the Trump administration’s Operation Take Back America, dismantled a South Texas human smuggling ring that kidnapped a migrant family and sexually assaulted a pregnant woman. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas announced that smuggler Rodolfo Daniel De Hoyos, 22, nicknamed "Rufles," was sentenced this week to more than 14 years in prison for conspiracy to harbor illegal aliens causing serious bodily injury and endangering lives. Authorities say the ring abducted a man, his pregnant partner and their 7-year-old child, held them for ransom, sexually assaulted the woman, collected at least $1,000 from relatives and threatened to kill the child and "sell" the unborn baby if more money was not paid. Four other co-conspirators have already received sentences ranging from more than 12 years to 30 years in prison, including alleged coordinator Juan Antonio Flores, while four additional defendants have pleaded guilty and await sentencing. The case highlights how migrant families can be preyed upon by the same smugglers they pay to cross, even as federal officials publicly warn that human smuggling organizations treat people as expendable commodities.

Immigration & Demographic Change Border Security and Human Smuggling Federal Crime and Sentencing

📌 Key Facts

  • Rodolfo Daniel De Hoyos, 22, was sentenced to more than 14 years in federal prison for conspiracy to harbor illegal aliens causing serious bodily injury and placing lives in jeopardy.
  • Prosecutors say the ring kidnapped a man, a pregnant woman and their 7-year-old child, sexually assaulted the pregnant woman, extorted at least $1,000 from relatives and threatened to kill the child and sell the unborn baby.
  • Co-conspirators Juan Antonio Flores, Tomas Estrada-Torres, Nelson Abilio Castro-Zelaya and Edwin Alfredo Barrientos-Mateo received sentences of more than 17 years, 12+ years, 15+ years and 30 years respectively, while four others have pleaded guilty and await sentencing.
  • The investigation, centered in Kinney County, Texas, involved ICE HSI, the Texas Department of Public Safety, U.S. Border Patrol and multiple local police departments as part of Operation Take Back America.

📊 Relevant Data

In Kinney County, Texas, the non-Hispanic White population share decreased from 41.7% in 2010 to 31% in 2022, while the overall population declined from 3,598 in 2010 to about 3,140 in 2022.

Kinney County, TX population by year, race, & more — USAFacts

In fiscal year 2024, there were approximately 4,351 offenders sentenced for alien smuggling offenses, representing a 28.1% increase since fiscal year 2020.

Alien Smuggling — United States Sentencing Commission

Key push factors driving migration from Central America to the US include violence and insecurity associated with organized crime, poverty, corruption, and climate-related events such as prolonged droughts and hurricanes.

Central American Immigrants in the United States — Migration Policy Institute

In fiscal year 2024, 81.2% of offenders sentenced for alien smuggling were Hispanic, compared to Hispanics making up about 19% of the US population.

Alien Smuggling — United States Sentencing Commission

In Kinney County, Texas, the Hispanic population share was 57.5% as of recent estimates, up from around 50.5% in 2020, amid an overall population decline.

Kinney County Demographics | Current Texas Census Data — Texas-Demographics.com

📰 Source Timeline (1)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time