Border Patrol agent praised by Bovino
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The commander of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown in Minneapolis is leaving the city after federal agents fatally shot two people in less than three weeks.
Gregory Bovino made disparaging remarks about prosecutor’s Jewish faith, report says - The Border Patrol commander has helped lead the Trump administration’s high-profile immigration enforcement opera
Years before he led the Trump Administration’s immigration-enforcement effort in Minneapolis, Bovino saw the 1982 Jack Nicholson film “The Border.”
Bovino’s defense of agents who shot and killed a man in Minnesota drew condemnation. In Imperial Valley, though, his legacy is complicated.
Former U.S. Border Patrol Commander-at-Large Gregory Bovino was reportedly asked to leave a Las Vegas bar out of safety concerns for the venue’s customers.
Records show Bovino was emailed the photo of slave-owning Gen. William Mahone in 2018, with the heading "Chief Bovino." He told the agent who sent it to delete the email but didn't report it to superiors.
Bovino, who has been the face of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, used the term “chosen people” in a mocking way, according to sources.
Gregory Bovino has been removed as the US Border Patrol’s “commander at large” and will return to California ahead of retirement, as the Trump administration rethinks its immigration crackdown.
Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, a prominent face of federal immigration enforcement under President Trump, has reportedly been relieved from his position and is expected to leave Minneapolis.
Greg Bovino once had the title Border Patrol “commander at large,” but as of Tuesday, he’s been kicked to commander of the curb. Perhaps the most feared immigration agent in Chicago and other cities was declawed by his boss,
An immigration judge on Wednesday denied bond to a Chicago man acquitted last month of charges he offered money for the killing of Border Patrol Cmdr. Gregory Bovino.