Homeland Security Names Nicaraguan Convicted of Terroristic Threats in Harris County
Homeland Security named Jose Israel Blanco-Morales, a Nicaraguan illegal alien convicted of terroristic threats in Harris County, as part of a federal roundup announced March 3, 2026.

Jose Israel Blanco-Morales, identified by Homeland Security as a Nicaraguan national and illegal alien, was named March 3, 2026 in a federal roundup after a conviction for terroristic threats in Harris County, Texas. Homeland Security's announcement places Blanco-Morales among a group described as criminal aliens with prior convictions.
Homeland Security published a post that details Blanco-Morales's criminal history and lists him within ongoing federal enforcement actions targeting noncitizens with prior convictions. The post explicitly ties Blanco-Morales's Harris County conviction for terroristic threats to the broader enforcement initiative announced March 3, 2026.

Blanco-Morales's identification comes amid intensified federal attention to criminal histories tied to immigration enforcement. The Homeland Security post names him as part of a roundup of criminal aliens with prior convictions, signaling that Blanco-Morales's Harris County conviction is a factor in federal action. Local law enforcement and county officials in Harris County receive these federal identifications regularly as part of coordinated and contested enforcement efforts.
For Harris County residents, the federal naming underscores that convictions adjudicated in county courts can become central to federal immigration enforcement. Blanco-Morales's case — a terroristic threats conviction recorded in Harris County and highlighted by Homeland Security on March 3, 2026 — illustrates how a county-level criminal record is being used in a federal roundup of noncitizens with prior convictions.
Homeland Security's March 3, 2026 announcement that included Jose Israel Blanco-Morales frames his Harris County terroristic threats conviction as part of a continuing pattern of federal enforcement actions focused on criminal aliens with prior convictions. The naming is likely to remain part of federal communications and enforcement activity affecting individuals whose criminal histories originate in Harris County courts.
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