Newark, NJ — A Mexican national who served five years in federal prison for interstate prostitution was deported April 17 and is now wanted in Mexico on allegations of human trafficking and organized crime, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Newark identified the man as Jaime Granados-Rendon, who agents took into custody March 27 upon his release from federal prison before carrying out his removal weeks later.
Arrest followed prison release and prior conviction
According to ICE, Granados-Rendon completed a five-year federal sentence tied to interstate prostitution charges before being transferred into immigration custody.
Officials said he was previously identified by Mexican authorities as a suspect in human trafficking and organized crime, though ICE did not provide details about those allegations or any active proceedings in Mexico.
The agency confirmed that Granados-Rendon was deported on April 17 to his home country.
Separate federal case highlights broader trafficking network
A 2018 case prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York detailed a wider sex trafficking operation involving members of the Granados family from Tenancingo, Tlaxcala, a region long linked by federal investigators to trafficking networks.
In that case, Raul Granados-Rendon pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight years in prison for trafficking young women into the United States and forcing them into prostitution. Prosecutors said victims were lured with promises of relationships and better lives, then subjected to violence, threats, and sexual abuse.
Federal officials said the broader investigation—part of a U.S.-Mexico anti-trafficking initiative—has led to more than 175 prosecutions across multiple states and assisted over 150 victims, including minors.
ICE did not state whether Jaime Granados-Rendon has any direct connection to that specific case or to Raul Granados-Rendon.
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Key Points
• ICE deported Jaime Granados-Rendon on April 17 after a five-year federal prison sentence
• He was convicted of interstate prostitution in the United States
• Mexican authorities want him for alleged human trafficking and organized crime
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Cross-border enforcement remains central
Cases involving individuals with U.S. convictions and alleged ties to transnational criminal activity often require coordination between American and foreign law enforcement agencies.
While ICE confirmed Granados-Rendon’s removal, the agency did not disclose whether Mexican authorities requested extradition or were involved in coordinating his return beyond acknowledging the outstanding allegations.
What happens next
Granados-Rendon is now in Mexico, where authorities are expected to pursue legal action related to the human trafficking and organized crime allegations cited by ICE. U.S. officials have not announced any further role in the case following his deportation.
No additional details about his custody timeline, federal case specifics, or current legal status in Mexico have been released.