NJ Illegal Alien from Mexico Charged in Murder of Two Children
March 14th, 2008More of those “family values” we are importing from Mexico I suppose. Is this what you want to be importing for the sake of having some cheap labor to pick vegetables, butcher animals in plants, clean our motel rooms etc? I’d like every business owner who hires illegal aliens to think about the kind of people they are bringing here and exposing THEIR NEIGHBORS and THEIR COMMUNITY to. Their blood in ON YOUR HANDS!
TOMS RIVER — An illegal immigrant from Mexico was sentenced this morning to two,
consecutive life terms in prison for murdering the children of a Stafford Township family that took him into their home.
In addition, Superior Court Judge Barbara Ann Villano sentenced Richard Toledo to 30 years in prison for kidnapping the children’s mother, telling her that her boys were fine but threatening their safety if she didn’t do what he said while, all along, he knew the boys were dead.
“All of this is so cruel and depraved that it is almost beyond comprehension,” Villano said in sentencing the 23-year-old defendant during an emotional, tearful proceeding that spanned about an hour and a half.
Toledo will never be eligible for release on parole for the murder of Zabdiel Gonzalez because the boy was 7 years old when Toledo killed him with a clawhammer in his family’s home on Middie Lane in the Manahawkin section of Stafford Township on Jan. 19, 2006.
Toledo pleaded guilty Feb. 8 to the murders of Zabdiel and his brother Karlo, 14, and to kidnapping the mother of the boys, Wanda Gonzalez, after he brutally beat both boys to death with the clawhammer.
“‘I still do not know what it was that we did to that man to merit such an act of hatred,” said Carlos Gonzalez, the boys’ father, while Toledo hung his head, never glancing at the survivors of his victims.
“‘We fed him. We put a roof over his head,” Carlos Gonzalez said of Toledo. “‘We treated him as family. When he was out of work, we did not ask for anything from him and gave him understanding.”
First Assistant Ocean County Prosecutor Ronald F. DeLigny said robbery was the motive. The Gonzalez family had a large amount of money in their bank account from a recent refinance of the mortgage on their home. Toledo forced Wanda Gonzalez at knifepoint to withdraw $500 from an automated teller machine - the maximum amount the machine would dispense - before driving north on the Garden State Parkway, where the woman escaped when Toledo stopped for gas at the Monmouth Service Area in Wall.
“I want you to look into my face and tell me - why my children?” Wanda Gonzalez said to Toledo during the sentencing.
Toledo continued to hang his head toward the floor.
“‘How could there be people who would be able to take the life of two children, and how can I continue living without them by my side?” the boy’s mother said.
“‘The murder of children is the most unspeakable crime,” Villano told the children’s parents. “‘I can only hope you have the strength to recover.”
Although Toledo cannot be considered for release on parole for his sentence for the murder of Zabdiel, he is subject to the state’s No Early Release Act, requiring a prisoner to serve 85 percent of a term before parole consideration, for Karlo’s murder and for the mother’s kidnapping.
Villano ordered the prison term for the kidnapping be served consecutive to the sentences for the two murders.
Another article covers the sentencing here.
Meanwhile in other areas of New Jersey, such as Lakewood, we have politicians pandering to illegal aliens and inviting the same caliber of people to live among the legal residents of New Jersey and this country. Here’s another example from Lakewood area news of some of those fine family values - gee these illegal aliens have such an enterprising spirit no?
LAKEWOOD — A day after members of the Ocean County Special Operations team descended on an Alamitros Drive home and seized more than 500 bags of heroin, the task force seized a large quantity of cocaine from a New Central Avenue residence.
Five people were arrested Thursday after authorities found 400 grams of cocaine and 12 bags of heroin worth an estimated $12,000 while executing a search warrant, Ocean County Prosecutor Marlene Lynch Ford announced today.
Joe Correa, 22, Carmen Velasquez, 44, Juan Torres, 27, and Jonathan Correa, 19, all live at 1971 New Central Ave. when members of the Lakewood Police Department enterred the home. Also arrested was Jose Claudio, 26, who resides at 780 River Avenue, apartment 48.
All four are charged with possession of a controlled, dangerous substance and
possession with intent to distribute. Ocean County superior Court Judge Wendell Daniels set bail at $150,000 each with no 10 percent option.During the raid, authorities also seized a 2002 Toyota Camry, a digital scale and
$1,000 cash.A sixth arrest warrant was also issued for Abetzabel Reyes, 18, of Lakewood, who
remains at large.



