Dallas, TX
Dallas home invasion shows Venezuelan gang threat is real
The ruthless Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua is becoming a household name in the United States, rolling off the tongues of Republican politicians to attack the Biden administration’s border policies. Many Democrats, for their part, want you to brush off reports about gang activity in the U.S. as election-year exaggerations.
You should be wary of political rhetoric that paints all Venezuelan immigrants as violent criminals. An overwhelming majority of them aren’t. But Tren de Aragua, and a rival gang known as Anti-Tren, are real threats. While we don’t know the full scope of their presence and crimes in the U.S., law enforcement records indicate that their tendrils have reached into Texas and the Dallas area. A recent home invasion in Bluffview near Dallas Love Field underscores why local police agencies must be on high alert, working together with federal partners to counteract this gang threat before its roots grow deeper in North Texas.
On Sept. 21, four men cornered a woman as she pulled into her garage and forced her into her home at gunpoint. According to a police affidavit, the woman was pistol-whipped and bound with her own clothing as the men ransacked her home. They made off with $75,000 in jewelry, designer purses, a bank card and the woman’s iPhone.
Authorities linked a fingerprint at the crime scene to a Venezuelan named Manuel Hernandez Hernandez, 28, who admitted being present during the robbery and implicated four other suspects, including the getaway driver, according to a police affidavit. Hernandez Hernandez told police the other suspects were in the Anti-Tren gang — a group made up of former Tren de Aragua members — and that they were involved in sex trafficking. The man told detectives he had known one of the suspects for 15 years and that they had grown up together.
“Manuel Hernandez-Hernandez claimed that he was not a part of the gang but that the other members were known to engage in promoting prostitution and possessed firearms,” reads the Dallas police affidavit.
We’re troubled by what we’ve learned about the men’s records. According to federal officials, Hernandez Hernandez crossed the border without being inspected in March near El Paso, and in May, he pleaded guilty to driving while intoxicated and was sentenced to three days’ confinement. Officials didn’t say where.
Colleyville police arrested Hernandez Hernandez after a traffic stop Sept. 19, a couple of days before the Dallas robbery. Records show he was cited for five low-level misdemeanors, including possession of drug paraphernalia and driving without a license, and released from jail the next day. A spokeswoman for Colleyville police told us there was no immigration detainer on Hernandez Hernandez at the time of his release.
An immigration detainer is a notice that tells local officials that federal authorities plan to take custody of a suspect who is not a U.S. citizen and is eligible for deportation.
Another suspect, Carlos Alberto Martinez Silva, arrived in July at a U.S. port of entry in California. He was admitted into the country pending immigration proceedings, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials.
Two other robbery suspects — Yean Torrealba Sanabria and Wilmer Colmenares Gonzalez — encountered Border Patrol agents in 2023 near Eagle Pass and Brownsville, respectively. Both were released pending immigration court hearings in Dallas in January 2025.
We don’t know how the fifth suspect, Jarlen Flores Guana, made his way into the U.S. He and the four other robbery suspects now have immigration detainers, according to ICE and county records.
Our editorial board reached out to the Dallas Police Department to ask about the potential presence of Venezuelan gangs. The department declined our interview request.
We also reached out to the FBI office in Dallas. The agency described in broad terms its efforts to investigate gangs. It said in a statement that it pursues violent gangs with its local and state partners through its Violent Gang Safe Streets Task Force and that it works closely with the community to develop sources and generate leads.
It’s no surprise that potential gang members have filtered through the southern border. A recent federal audit found that the Department of Homeland Security’s technology and procedures were “not fully effective” in screening and vetting asylum applicants. The agency fails to rescreen asylum-seekers for potential threats during the months and years that it takes to adjudicate hundreds of thousands of asylum applications.
This problem is magnified when dealing with arrivals from Venezuela, a country with which the U.S. has no diplomatic ties or data-sharing agreements.
Local police can’t control immigration authorities’ vetting protocols, but they can be proactive about sharing intelligence with other law enforcement agencies and federal partners, especially when dealing with crimes like sex trafficking that often cross city and state boundaries.
Earlier this year, three Venezuelan citizens with ties to Tren de Aragua were charged in connection to a sex trafficking operation. According to a federal criminal complaint, a victim told Border Patrol agents in El Paso that a gang member paid for her to be smuggled into the U.S. and was forcing her to pay off her debt through prostitution. The woman said the gang had “stash houses” in Texas, Louisiana, Virginia, New Jersey and Florida and that up to 30 women were being trafficked. According to the complaint, local authorities searched an apartment in Baton Rouge after a Spanish-speaking woman called to say she was being trafficked. Officers found money, condoms and ledger books.
“The ledger books appeared to document how much money each victim made each day and how much of their ‘debt’ remained,” the federal complaint states.
Bianca Davis, CEO of New Friends New Life, a Dallas nonprofit that helps trafficking victims, told us that the overwhelming majority of people it helps are locals, not immigrants. She said she expects the number of immigrants the organization helps will grow as it does more outreach and immigrant communities become more established.
Davis emphasized that sex trafficking can be subtle and doesn’t require victims to cross borders or even ZIP codes.
It’s important to see the big picture here and reject fearmongering that blames undocumented immigrants for all the crime in our neighborhoods and cities. At the same time, our police and state and federal agencies must remain vigilant about international criminal groups and proactively share information with one another that can help our communities stave off threats.
We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com
Dallas, TX
2026 Dallas Cowboys schedule officially announced
Behold the 2026 Dallas Cowboys schedule.
We knew coming into Thursday that the Cowboys would be on the road to take on the New York Giants in the season opener on Sunday Night Football, that Dallas is “hosting” the Baltimore Ravens in Brazil in Week 3, and that the Philadelphia Eagles would be in town for Thanksgiving Day. Now we know it all.
Among the first things that jump to mind is that bye week is late. Dallas isn’t on bye until Week 14, the Sunday of that week is December 13th for full perspective.
The Cowboys also only play twice in their own building, thanks to the Brazil game, before November. Sometimes those weird quirks show up in schedules and this is certainly one of them.
It is interesting to see that the NFL gave Dallas the longest amount of rest possible after their Thanksgiving tilt. It hasn’t been uncommon for the league to have the Cowboys play on consecutive Thursdays, but perhaps that is a thing of the past.
Dallas, TX
Dallas Approves $180,500 for New Botham Jean Boulevard Street Signs
Flashit Photography
On Wednesday, the Dallas City Council approved funding that will replace highway exit signs and road signs marking Lamar Street with new signage honoring Botham Jean, the 26-year-old Dallas accountant who was fatally shot in his own apartment by an off-duty Dallas police officer in 2018.
The $180,500 in funding for 13 signs to be installed by the Texas Department of Transportation is the final step in the street renaming that was unanimously approved by the council in 2021. The new signs will be placed at exits along Interstate 45, State Highway 310 and U.S. Highway 175.
Already, Botham Jean Boulevard signs run along the road in the Cedars, where Jean lived before he was killed.
“This street on which he chose to live and the street on which he died can serve as a lasting memory of the upstanding resident who loved Dallas so much,” his mother, Allison Jean, told the council in 2021.
Jean was shot by Amber Guyger, a Dallas police officer, after she entered his apartment believing it was her own. A Dallas jury found Guyger guilty of murder in 2019 and sentenced her to 10 years in prison. She has also been ordered to pay the Jean family nearly $100 million in a civil trial, which accused her of using excessive force.
The Jean family is seeking restitution from the city of Dallas because they argue that Dallas, as Guyger’s former employer, had a duty to defend Guyger and pay out claims brought against her. The Jean family filed suit against the city in April of this year.
On Wednesday, city council member Adam Bazaldua stated that the continued remembrance of Jean’s name is a reminder that “no one is above the law.”
“This has never simply been about changing street signs; it has always been about commemorating a life that was taken too soon,” said Bazaldua. “When driving down Botham Jean Boulevard, we are reminded of the thousands of lives lost across the country each year to senseless gun violence.”
Bazaldua said that once city leaders were made aware that some signs from the initial 2021 street name change had not materialized, the horseshoe took steps to correct the oversight “somewhat promptly.” But he acknowledged that Wednesday’s funding came on the heels of community advocacy urging the project’s completion.
Community leader Yafeuh Balogun said his organization, Community Movement Builders, began asking the city for the updated signs in September 2025. Addressing the council ahead of Wednesday’s vote, Balogun encouraged the horseshoe to vote in favor of the funds because it “would make no sense” to not follow through with the street renaming approved years ago.
“I think this is very powerful simply because driving here today, I still saw the Lamar Street Signs,” Balogun said. “I remember how powerful it was back in 2021 when the city council voted to rename Lamar Street to Botham Jean. I’d like to keep that legacy going.”
Dallas, TX
World Cup volunteers receive uniforms, new tickets released
We’re less than a month out from the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and North Texans volunteering in the event have received their uniforms. FOX 4’s Peyton Yager has more on that and the new hospitality tickets released today.
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