Illegal Immigrant Student Convicted of Groping Fairfax County High‑School Girls
An 18‑year‑old El Salvadoran national, Israel Flores Ortiz, who DHS says entered the U.S. illegally and was released under the Biden administration in 2024, was convicted Thursday on nine misdemeanor counts of assault and battery for groping multiple female classmates at Fairfax High School in Fairfax County, Virginia. After an all‑day hearing in which about a dozen girls testified, a judge found Flores Ortiz guilty on nine charges, not guilty on three, and dismissed one, with sentencing set for April 21. The case has become a flash point in the immigration and public‑safety debate because Fairfax County’s Democratic Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano — a progressive prosecutor backed by George Soros‑linked funding — is accused by critics of undercharging the case as simple assault instead of sexual battery, seeking bail, and subpoenaing victims and witnesses only the day before trial. Sean Kennedy of Virginians for Safe Communities, who attended the hearing, argues Descano’s office "deserves no credit" for what he calls a Pyrrhic victory and claims the office’s handling could make deportation harder, while also criticizing a top deputy for characterizing the conduct as "grabbing butts" in opening statements. The outcome is fueling intense online reaction across conservative outlets and social media, with protesters framing it as evidence of lax enforcement by progressive prosecutors and renewed questions about federal and state coordination to remove non‑citizens convicted of sex offenses from U.S. schools and communities.
📌 Key Facts
- Judge convicted Israel Flores Ortiz on nine misdemeanor counts of assault and battery, acquitted him on three counts, and saw one charge dismissed.
- Flores Ortiz, age 18, was an 11th‑grade student at Fairfax High School and, according to DHS, is an illegal immigrant from El Salvador released into the U.S. in 2024 under the Biden administration.
- Local police were notified March 5 by Fairfax High School about multiple on‑campus assaults; Flores Ortiz turned himself in March 7, and sentencing is set for April 21.
- Critics say Fairfax Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano undercharged the case as simple assault instead of sexual battery, sought bail, and subpoenaed victims and witnesses only one day before trial.
- Virginians for Safe Communities president Sean Kennedy publicly accused Descano of "intentional" incompetence and said any likely deportation will come through ICE rather than strong local prosecution.
📊 Relevant Data
As of the 2023-2024 school year, Fairfax High School's student body was approximately 34% White, 26% Hispanic, 24% Asian, 9% Black, and 7% other or multiracial, reflecting significant demographic diversity in the student population.
Fairfax High School — U.S. News & World Report
Fairfax County's foreign-born population increased from about 30% in 2010 to 30.6% (352,000 people) in 2024, with international migration contributing to population growth despite domestic out-migration.
Fairfax County, VA — Data USA
From fiscal year 2021 to 2022, the Biden administration released approximately 223,000 unaccompanied alien children to sponsors in the U.S., with nearly half (about 107,000) becoming unreachable for follow-up checks.
Biden's HHS Lost Nearly Half the Unaccompanied Migrant Children Released to Sponsors — Center for Immigration Studies
Mass migration from El Salvador to the U.S. between 2020 and 2024 has been driven primarily by economic stagnation, high levels of crime and violence, and natural disasters, with family reunification also playing a role in sustaining migration flows.
El Salvador — Migration Policy Institute
Soros-funded prosecutors, including in Virginia, have been criticized for undercharging cases, such as reducing child rape charges to lesser offenses in sexual assault prosecutions, leading to lighter sentences.
Virginia AG Report Exposes Soros-Funded Prosecutor — The Daily Signal
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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