Maryland High School Unknowingly Enrolls MS-13 Murder Suspect

The influx of millions of illegal aliens from around the world is causing havoc in American cities and towns, and the problem has spread far beyond the so-called border states.

Residents of Springfield, Ohio, are complaining to their city council and the world about what has happened to their quality of life since the Biden administration sent 20,000 Haitians to their town over the past four years. That’s fully a third of Springfield’s population (60,000) before the influx. While the mainstream media tries to convince the public that their complaints aren’t real, or are “racist,” town residents are saying that the illegals are snatching up ducks and pets and cooking them as they would if they were still living on their third-world island.

The problem is showing up in public schools, too. A high school in Maryland has discovered that they inadvertently enrolled a student who is a member of the incredibly violent Latin American MS-13 gang. Worse, the 16-year-old is a suspect in the murder of 20-year-old Kayla Hamilton.

Walter Martinez, the student enrolled at Edgewood High School in Harford County, Maryland, is now serving 70 years in prison for Hamilton’s murder.

Hamilton’s mother, Tammy Nobles, told media that people find the story hard to believe. “It is a crazy story, but it’s a true story,” she said, saying her daughter’s murder at the hands of the gangbanger is the “worst pain that a parent can get.”

Hamilton, who was autistic,  was found dead in her trailer home with a cord around her neck and stuffed in her mouth.

Martinez came from El Savlador and jumped the border into the U.S., which today is about as easy as crossing state lines on the Interstate highway system. He was an “unaccompanied minor” who was sent to live with a sponsor family in Maryland. Although U.S. police quickly identified him as a suspect because he was caught on recordings at the scene of the crime, he still managed to get enrolled in the Maryland school.

How? No one is sure, but what is known is that police knew he was the likely killer and it took six months to process get DNA confirmation that he was the killer. Why it took that long is a mystery, and it has not been clarified why no one alerted the school, or why Martinez was allowed to live at large while he was the prime suspect in a brutal murder.