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A Border Patrol Agent keeps watch while other agents make an arrest on Sharonbrook Drive in Charlotte on Sunday morning, Nov. 16.
Knikouyeh@charlotteobserver.com
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security quietly corrected false information it published after The Charlotte Observer reported it incorrectly said a Honduran man charged in a Charlotte murder was released “back onto North Carolina’s streets… after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.”
The man has never been released, the Observer reported. DHS did not reply to requests for comment, but it corrected its statement online. The updated statement does not have a correction line or indicate any changes have been made.
DHS — the department that oversees Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement — released a statement after Border Patrol agents landed in Charlotte on Nov. 15. It listed “a handful of the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens — including murderers, rapists, and pedophiles — who were RELEASED back onto North Carolina’s streets because of sanctuary policies.”
The department said “Jose Ulloa-Martinez, a criminal illegal alien from Honduras, was arrested for murder” and “released after authorities failed to honor the ICE detainer.”
A review of court and jail records showed that was false. Ulloa-Martinez, 43, has been in the Mecklenburg County Detention Center since he was arrested in Texas and extradited to Charlotte in June 2024. Police say he killed Kevin Merlos-Saravia in east Charlotte on May 26.
Mecklenburg County Sheriff Garry McFadden said the federal government’s information was “simply untrue.”
DHS has previously criticized McFadden for not “honoring” ICE detainers; McFadden has complied with state law. A judge received an ICE detainer in September and ordered McFadden to continue to hold him for 48 hours. But sheriff’s office spokesperson Bradley Smith said ICE agents never came for Ulloa-Martinez.
The Observer previously reported that another man, Jose Rivera-Martinez, was arrested and charged with being accessories in the murder by helping Ulloa-Martinez flee to Texas. A magistrate briefly released him from jail after what the sheriff described as a document mix-up.
Misinformation from federal agencies
The falsehood in the DHS statement comes as court proceedings across the country unearth misinformation spread by federal immigration agents. In Chicago, Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol supervisor, admitted he lied under oath about being hit in the head with a rock before deploying tear gas at protesters.
In Charlotte Thursday, video played in court contradicted statements by federal agents that Miguel Angel Garcia Martinez assaulted them with his car in a Nov. 16 incident that left one officer injured. Martinez fled from a “voluntary stop,” and agents ran into him, video played in court shows.
Charlotte homicide
Police started looking for Ulloa-Martinez after his wife called 911. She told police he and Merlos-Saravia had been drinking for hours on May 25, 2024 — a Saturday evening. She woke up to gunshots at 3 a.m. the next day and found Merlos-Saravia “lying on his back by the stairs and Jose’s vehicle no longer in the parking lot,” according to the arrest affidavit.
She said her husband was “known to shoot” when drinking.
Texas police arrested Ulloa-Martinez in Houston weeks later, on June 3, 2024, and he was extradited to Charlotte June 24, 2024.
He has remained under McFadden’s custody since.
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Julia Coin
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