02/14/2011
By Peter Brimelow pointed out to me the case of Elvis Noe-Garcia, who is charged with killing his own children. He’s referred to in the press as a "Georgia Man." The only thing that relates him to a normal Georgia man is that his name’s Elvis:
"Elvis Noe-Garcia had multiple stab wounds when he first talked with police in the town of Lawrenceville in Atlanta’s northern suburbs, after they found his 1-year-old and 3-year-old sons fatally stabbed inside their home. Another 3-year-old son was sent to an area hospital after being injured, according to a statement Saturday from the Gwinnett County Police Department. CNN affiliate WSB reported family members said the 3-year-olds are twins."[Georgia man charged with sons' murder after accusing another, By the CNN Wire Staff, February 13, 2011]
For the record, we refer to this as "Immigrant Familicide" rather than "Immigrant Mass Murder".
It’s reported that Mr Noe-Garcia, estranged from the mother of his illegitimate children, didn’t want them raised by another man, who is accused of being a drug dealer. Both the father accused of murdering his children and the accused drug dealer have immigration holds against them, which means that neither is really a "Georgia Man." Perhaps it should be "Salvadoran Man" — who knows?
Googling around to find out more about this "Georgia Man," I found an earlier case, that of a man who’s not named Elvis at all — Chaudhry Rashid, a Pakistani who’s a suspect in an honor killing.
Mr. Rashid is suspected of killing his daughter to preserve the family honor, an act not characteristic of actual "Georgia Men" — in the old stories about shotgun weddings, the shotgun was pointed at the prospective (if he knew what was good for him) son-in-law.
This custom has died out — who wants Levi Johnston for a son-in-law? But the custom of killing your daughter if she misbehaves is regrettably common among Pakistanis.
Police Say Georgia Man Killed Own Daughter to Protect Family Honor, July 08, 2008
I can’t find much more about Rashid. I'll just point out that WikiPedia deleted the article on him. The reasons given were that it wasn’t notable enough — because of the lack of mainstream media coverage. Also I'll note that other stories about Mr. Rashid called him Georgia Dad and Jonesboro Man.
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