Last year in Virginia Beach, Va., a Mexican national named Alfredo Ramos slammed into the rear of a vehicle in which Allison Kuhnhardt, 17 and Tessa Tranchant, 16 were stopped, waiting at a red light. Ramos, 22 was traveling at a high rate of speed and was drunk at the time. He actually had close to a .20 blood-alcohol level and could barely see the police officers in front of him. The two high school students had to be cut from their crumpled car and both later died after being taken to the hospital. Ramos suffered only a busted lip.

Though an illegal alien, Alfredo Ramos had been living in Virginia Beach for quite a while and worked at local a Mexican restaurant known as Mi Casita. Ramos had been previously convicted of three separate charges of public intoxication, identity theft, and even a DUI, but continued to live in the area. He speaks only Spanish and required an interpreter at all of his court proceedings.

While Ramos had already been convicted of a DUI, Virginia Beach policy dictated that an illegal alien be convicted of three DUI's before police would report them to federal

immigration authorities. Virginia Beach Commonwealth Attorney Harvey Bryant confirmed the policy.

Tessa Tranchant's brother Dylan had only been home from Iraq for two weeks, when his sister was killed. Dylan was tasked with identifying his little sister's body. The case gained national fame thanks to the reporting of Fox News' Bill O'Reilly.

I recently interviewed Ray Tranchant, Tessaīs dad. What follows is the text of that interview:

1)How are you and your family coping with this terrible loss?

It is the biggest challenge of my life. I have been through some hard

but fun times being a retired Naval officer, Annapolis graduate,

Aircraft Carrier aviator, public school teacher, and now College

administrator. The challenges these career paths have taken me pale in

comparison to losing a little girl.

If you have suffered a loss of someone close to you that is totally

unexpected (death sometimes is more predictable with serious illnesses,

age, or severe accidents), no matter what the reason, it is at first

almost surreal.

My ex-wife Colette, Kelsey(15), and Dylan (25) were swept with total

emotion and grief immediately and I chose to compartmentalize and

suppress my grief so that the task at hand (funeral arrangements,

family, and my job) were taken care of. I suffer still, but need help

from friends and God to cope. Colette still understandably breaks down

a lot and Kelsey is angry about many things in life that I donīt think

would have bothered her if her sister were still alive. Dylan moved

away from the area and chose to go to a College in Washington D.C. about

200 miles from Virginia Beach. He is an artist and will undoubtedly

express himself with music and drawings. All of us are undergoing

Therapy and need various medications.

2) What kind of kid was Tessa?

Tessa was a free spirit, and had many gifts, like emotional

intelligence. She was very attractive and was everyoneīs friend (a

social animal that got up at 4:00am in the morning to get ready for High

School), a gifted Irish step dancer, and a good surfer, had a great

voice, and tickled me with her laugh. She loved comedies; anything with

Ben Stiller, Will Farrell, Dave Chappell, Mike Myers, and Borat.

When she smiled, my heart always skipped a beat. She was truly loved by

everyone who spent any time with her.

She is buried next to her friend Ali Kunhardt in Princess Anne Memorial

Park, next to a statue of an angel. I visit her every Friday, the night

she was killed.

The crash site on Virginia Beach BLVD. continues to be a memorial by

the community, it always has flowers, balloons, notes and pictures, and

has for the past 1.5 years.

3) Are you angry with the local city governments for their role in

allowing Ramos to stay in this country?

I am not angry but very disappointed that Ramos was not deported after

two previous offenses. He admitted he was an illegal immigrant, admitted

that he purchased a fake driverīs license from Florida, and nearly

killed a Chesapeake, Virginia police officer with a head-on collision the

second time he was arrested. Judge Whitehurst from Chesapeake gave him a

fine and he walked. His roommate, a woman with a small baby who shared

an apartment out of convenience with Ramos, said essentially that Ramos

was not worried or fazed with the Whitehurst hearing and continued to

come home drunk every night. Apparently he wasnīt worried about being

deported or even the need to get sober, because he continued the same

behavior, which ultimately killed Tessa and Ali.

I am disappointed at the way the municipalities, the Commonwealth, and

the Federal Government interact with immigration issues. Enforcement

varies from city to city and state to state, and all of the states that

interact with ICE claim that they get no support once ICE is notified.

Of course ICE want to do their job, but they are greatly outnumbered

and donīt have the funds to integrate criminal databases to catch

criminal illegal offenders. Some of the illegals have been quoted as

saying, after receiving jail time and even deportation: "donīt

worry. Iīll be back!" What kind of finger pointing, "not my

job" system have we created, or letīs just say allowed to evolve

into an unmanageable monster?

Thatīs why Iīm interested in holding them all accountable with a

law suit that would ultimately hold their feet to the fire and

standardize these strung out policies.

How can we have sanctuary cities or mayors of these cities that take

the law into their own hands?

Like the Mayor of San Francisco who endorsed two juvenile illegal

immigrants with drug offenses to be flown back to Honduras by the

Mayorīs administration? How can any man bypass federal law? Why

arenīt the politicians serving time for violating federal law? Who can

answer this for me? I thought this was America, one land, one set of



rules.

After Tessa and Aliīs death many of the cities in Virginia changed

their policy on asking the immigration status of people who are

arrested. I am thankful for this, but it wonīt bring back Tessa. I

sure hope it helps others from losing their children.

4) Have the circumstances of your daughter's death been accurately reported

by the media?

I think the media has done a good job reporting the facts. I think that

FOX News, OīRielly, Glen Beck on MSNBC, and Laura Ingram on FOX were

very gracious in letting me tell our story. When the deaths happened,

Virginia Beach seemed more worried about the mudslinging with OīRielly

than admitting that the system was broken and change needed to be on the

horizon. Even the Governor of Virginia has not come out with a policy on

illegal immigration.

However Virginiaīs attorney general, who is elected and not

appointed, has clarified the current law that allows local police

departments to check and inquire about the immigration status of the

arrestee. That is what itīs like in a state where bi-partisan politics

prevent a compromise or a solution to many public problems.

5) Did you ever see Alfredo Ramos display any remorse for his crime?

And

what would you say to him?

No and I have a feeling that is why Judge Shadrick gave him 40 years in

prison.

6) How has this tragedy changed your life?

I am more compassionate with my fellow man, I walk and talk to God more

often and with more conviction, and I try to look at the big picture

more than I used to before the deaths. I try not to get bogged down with

the small details that wonīt matter in the long run, and finally, I

see how fragile life really is.

7) Have you become active in the debate over illegal immigration?

I am on the Congressional Alien Criminal Task Force with Repīs

Drake, Cantor, Wittman and Forbes.

I have spoken on 3 national news shows about my views and hope to get

more time.

8) Is there anything you would like to say to President Bush?

The Executive Branch, including the Attorney General, needs to enforce

with clarity the current laws, which would require deportation of any

illegal alien criminal.

They need to secure the borders with more than a structure. We secure

(and I mean secure!) thousands of miles of top secret military

installations in America (area 51 is a good example) with the most

sophisticated electronics and sensors that allow the interceptors to

pinpoint the intruders and concentrate air and ground assets to

interdict swiftly.

And we canīt do this on the borders for what reason? We managed to

build a 10 foot fence so the illegals can build an 11 foot ladder…

We need to start a program of citizenship for the 14 million people who

made it here for whatever reason. If they are illegal criminals then

they go home.

If they go through a monitored program that includes learning

conversational English (mainly for emergency purposes), the meaning of

the Constitution (Americans are required to learn this in

school),understand their civil rights as an American, and register with

IRS/Social Security, then maybe (like my Irish Mother did), they can

become naturalized citizens.

I donīt believe that children who were brought over here have to

suffer. We are a country of compassionate people who do not make

children suffer for any reason.

They should have a probationary period that is free of crime. All of

this should come at a price (monentarily, work program, military

service) BUT NOT GIVEN FOR FREE. Not Amnesty! Otherwise, they wouldnīt

respect or appreciate the gift and right.

Finally, Homeland security and ICE can provide digital fingerprint

databases to municipalities so when any person, including a suspected

illegal, can be fingerprinted then identified by face, alias, and

criminal record. If it is an illegal and they have committed a crime,

arrest and deport. Their ticket to America is over.

If theme parks like Bush Gardens, Williamsburg, can keep a digital

fingerprint on file to verify your ticket, and entrance to the theme

park is a fingerprint scan (they did this to 3.5 million visitors last

year) I think the Government can do it as well!

9) What would you like to hear from candidates John McCain and Barack

Obama?

That they will make an effort to stop the two major parties from

bickering over the solution with a strong bi-partisan committee. Both

parties are going to have to give and take.

One final thought. When the War is over, and some day it will be, what

are we going to do with the upward of 100,000 troops that will be laid

off just like the last Gulf War? The economy took a hiccup last time in

the early 90īs. I propose that we move a great deal of these troops to

our borders and gradually let them go until they were completely

secure. Border patrol would certainly be a welcome place compared to

Iraq, and the troop strength would not diminish in case of need again.

Also, protecting America is a good mission.

End.

I want to take the opportunity to publicly thank Ray Tranchant for taking the time to talk with me about this most painful and senseless loss.

I told Ray that I am a dad to a one year-old beautiful little girl and it was tough for me to even write-out my questions to him. This story has deeply touched and angered me. This could happen to any dad, anywhere in this country. Considering the obvious unwillingness of our elected officials to defend our border and remove illegal alien criminals from our cities, this type of tragedy will hit lots of dads.

The next time you hear someone say that President Bush has kept this country safe since 9/11, please remind them of 16 year-old Tessa Tranchant.