Illegal migrant ‘cannibal’ attacks mom, daughter in ‘completely preventable’ assault: ‘She’ll never be the same’

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An illegal migrant maniac allegedly high on a powerful drug chomped on a toddler’s face in Texas last week, two years after the Biden administration failed to kick him out of the country despite his arrest in an earlier violent assault, authorities told The Post.

The horrific April 18 attack in a San Antonio park left 3-year-old Amelia Perez with deep scratches and bite wounds across her face, two teeth knocked out, and life-changing trauma, her family said.

“That brute was ravaging my baby!” mom Gabriella Perez, 27, told The Post. “She’s terrified to sleep. She’s lashing out, angry. She doesn’t understand evil like this f–king man. She’ll never be the same again.”

That Saturday, the family — Perez, little Amelia, her father Xavier Estrada, 27, and grandfather Richard Ariaza — headed from their home in LaCoste to Espada Park for a quiet afternoon of fishing for the bass, catfish and sunfish.

At around 2 p.m., Gabriella took Amelia to the restroom, and when they stepped back outside, a man in a frenzied state charged toward them, said Perez.

The man, identified by authorities as Atharva Vyas, a 24-year-old illegal migrant from India, lunged, grabbed the mom’s hair and punched her in the jaw.

Perez quickly lowered her daughter to the ground to remove her from the fray, but the lunatic leapt on her child, she said.

Vyas was allegedly under the influence of “wax,” a highly concentrated cannabis product — with one dose akin to smoking 15-20 joints, authorities said.

On all fours, he pinned the tot to the ground, jamming his thumbs into her eyes before turning cannibal — sinking his teeth into her face and mouth.

Vyas allegedly ripped out the child’s two front teeth as her mother fought, clawing and wrenching at him in a desperate attempt to save her daughter, she recalled.

Horrified witnesses surged forward, dragging the attacker off Amelia while Perez screamed for Xavier until he finally heard the commotion and raced to the scene.

Someone called 911. Two men pulled out guns.

“I was screaming ‘Shoot him! Shoot him,'” remembered Gabriella.

The crowd finally overwhelmed the maniac, beating him until he collapsed, she said.

The sicko attempted to get up, but each time, the crowd subdued him again until San Antonio police officers arrived to find him drifting in and out of consciousness.

EMS took the bloody, shaking child and her family to Christus Children’s Hospital.

Vyas was jailed in the Bexar County Detention Center and charged with injury to a child with intent to cause bodily injury, assault causing bodily injury and illegal entry from a foreign nation, according to court records.

The Department of Homeland Security told The Post Vyas first entered the country from India in August 2023 on a student visa.

Three months later, he was arrested on the University of Texas campus for felony assault.

The college contacted ICE, but the feds under President Joe Biden determined the crime was not “egregious” enough to warrant visa revocation.

But in April 2025, the Trump administration revoked Vyas’ F-1 visa based on the assault arrest.

The day Vyas allegedly attacked Amelia, ICE lodged a detainer request with San Antonio police — asking the local cops to turn him over after he faces the American justice system.

The agency blasted the failed policies that allowed the illegal migrant to remain in the US.

“This barbaric assault against this woman and her 3-year-old child in a park was completely preventable,” said Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis. “The Biden administration NEVER should have released this animal following his arrest for assault.”

 
An illegal migrant maniac allegedly high on a powerful drug chomped on a toddler’s face in Texas last week, two years after the Biden administration failed to kick him out of the country despite his arrest in an earlier violent assault, authorities told The Post.

The horrific April 18 attack in a San Antonio park left 3-year-old Amelia Perez with deep scratches and bite wounds across her face, two teeth knocked out, and life-changing trauma, her family said.

“That brute was ravaging my baby!” mom Gabriella Perez, 27, told The Post. “She’s terrified to sleep. She’s lashing out, angry. She doesn’t understand evil like this f–king man. She’ll never be the same again.”

That Saturday, the family — Perez, little Amelia, her father Xavier Estrada, 27, and grandfather Richard Ariaza — headed from their home in LaCoste to Espada Park for a quiet afternoon of fishing for the bass, catfish and sunfish.

At around 2 p.m., Gabriella took Amelia to the restroom, and when they stepped back outside, a man in a frenzied state charged toward them, said Perez.

The man, identified by authorities as Atharva Vyas, a 24-year-old illegal migrant from India, lunged, grabbed the mom’s hair and punched her in the jaw.

Perez quickly lowered her daughter to the ground to remove her from the fray, but the lunatic leapt on her child, she said.

Vyas was allegedly under the influence of “wax,” a highly concentrated cannabis product — with one dose akin to smoking 15-20 joints, authorities said.

On all fours, he pinned the tot to the ground, jamming his thumbs into her eyes before turning cannibal — sinking his teeth into her face and mouth.

Vyas allegedly ripped out the child’s two front teeth as her mother fought, clawing and wrenching at him in a desperate attempt to save her daughter, she recalled.

Horrified witnesses surged forward, dragging the attacker off Amelia while Perez screamed for Xavier until he finally heard the commotion and raced to the scene.

Someone called 911. Two men pulled out guns.

“I was screaming ‘Shoot him! Shoot him,'” remembered Gabriella.

The crowd finally overwhelmed the maniac, beating him until he collapsed, she said.

The sicko attempted to get up, but each time, the crowd subdued him again until San Antonio police officers arrived to find him drifting in and out of consciousness.

EMS took the bloody, shaking child and her family to Christus Children’s Hospital.

Vyas was jailed in the Bexar County Detention Center and charged with injury to a child with intent to cause bodily injury, assault causing bodily injury and illegal entry from a foreign nation, according to court records.

The Department of Homeland Security told The Post Vyas first entered the country from India in August 2023 on a student visa.

Three months later, he was arrested on the University of Texas campus for felony assault.

The college contacted ICE, but the feds under President Joe Biden determined the crime was not “egregious” enough to warrant visa revocation.

But in April 2025, the Trump administration revoked Vyas’ F-1 visa based on the assault arrest.

The day Vyas allegedly attacked Amelia, ICE lodged a detainer request with San Antonio police — asking the local cops to turn him over after he faces the American justice system.

The agency blasted the failed policies that allowed the illegal migrant to remain in the US.

“This barbaric assault against this woman and her 3-year-old child in a park was completely preventable,” said Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis. “The Biden administration NEVER should have released this animal following his arrest for assault.”

1. Source and Tone


  • This is from The New York Post, which is a tabloid-style outlet known for sensationalist headlines and politically charged coverage.
  • The language is extremely emotive and loaded: “illegal migrant maniac,” “lunatic,” “cannibal,” “animal,” “sicko.”
  • This kind of language signals strong anti-immigrant bias and aims to provoke outrage rather than neutrally report.



2. Claims about the attack


  • Incident: A 3-year-old was attacked in San Antonio in April 2025. This part is plausible; violent attacks on children are reported in local news and police records.
  • Perpetrator: Identified as Atharva Vyas, allegedly a foreign national. Verification would require local police reports or court records.

✅ Fact: Police charges can be verified in Bexar County court records. Assault charges on a child are serious and documented.


⚠️ Alleged details:


  • Statements like “pinned tot to the ground, jamming his thumbs into her eyes before turning cannibal” are unverified eyewitness accounts reported through the family. The “cannibal” description is sensationalistic and not legally confirmed.
  • Claim he was “high on wax” (concentrated cannabis) is plausible if toxicology reports confirm it, but this article presents it as certain without direct evidence.



3. Immigration and visa claims


  • Vyas allegedly entered on a student visa in August 2023: This is plausible, but DHS/ICE records would be needed to confirm.
  • Claim that Biden administration failed to revoke visa for prior assault: This is a political framing. Visa revocation involves legal thresholds, and “egregious” is subjective in policy language.
  • Statement that Trump administration revoked F-1 visa: This is temporally inconsistent because the assault and detainer were April 2025, and Trump is not president in 2025. This is a factual error.



4. Partisan framing


  • The story repeatedly blames the Biden administration for policy failures: “The Biden administration NEVER should have released this animal.”
  • Terms like “illegal migrant” and “animal” are used to invoke fear and political anger.

Bias summary:


  • Highly partisan and sensationalized.
  • Uses graphic, emotionally charged language to demonize the perpetrator and link incident to immigration policy.
  • Includes factual errors (Trump revoking visa in 2025).
  • Mixes verified events (assault, charges, arrest) with unverified or exaggerated claims (cannibalism, “wax” potency, political blame framing).



✅ Key Takeaways


  1. Attack on child may be real, but some details are sensationalized.
  2. Immigration claims are partially true but framed misleadingly, with at least one clear factual error regarding Trump’s involvement.
  3. Language is extremely biased, aimed to provoke anti-immigrant sentiment rather than neutral reporting.
 

1. Source and Tone


  • This is from The New York Post, which is a tabloid-style outlet known for sensationalist headlines and politically charged coverage.
  • The language is extremely emotive and loaded: “illegal migrant maniac,” “lunatic,” “cannibal,” “animal,” “sicko.”
  • This kind of language signals strong anti-immigrant bias and aims to provoke outrage rather than neutrally report.



2. Claims about the attack


  • Incident: A 3-year-old was attacked in San Antonio in April 2025. This part is plausible; violent attacks on children are reported in local news and police records.
  • Perpetrator: Identified as Atharva Vyas, allegedly a foreign national. Verification would require local police reports or court records.

✅ Fact: Police charges can be verified in Bexar County court records. Assault charges on a child are serious and documented.


⚠️ Alleged details:


  • Statements like “pinned tot to the ground, jamming his thumbs into her eyes before turning cannibal” are unverified eyewitness accounts reported through the family. The “cannibal” description is sensationalistic and not legally confirmed.
  • Claim he was “high on wax” (concentrated cannabis) is plausible if toxicology reports confirm it, but this article presents it as certain without direct evidence.



3. Immigration and visa claims


  • Vyas allegedly entered on a student visa in August 2023: This is plausible, but DHS/ICE records would be needed to confirm.
  • Claim that Biden administration failed to revoke visa for prior assault: This is a political framing. Visa revocation involves legal thresholds, and “egregious” is subjective in policy language.
  • Statement that Trump administration revoked F-1 visa: This is temporally inconsistent because the assault and detainer were April 2025, and Trump is not president in 2025. This is a factual error.



4. Partisan framing


  • The story repeatedly blames the Biden administration for policy failures: “The Biden administration NEVER should have released this animal.”
  • Terms like “illegal migrant” and “animal” are used to invoke fear and political anger.

Bias summary:


  • Highly partisan and sensationalized.
  • Uses graphic, emotionally charged language to demonize the perpetrator and link incident to immigration policy.
  • Includes factual errors (Trump revoking visa in 2025).
  • Mixes verified events (assault, charges, arrest) with unverified or exaggerated claims (cannibalism, “wax” potency, political blame framing).



✅ Key Takeaways


  1. Attack on child may be real, but some details are sensationalized.
  2. Immigration claims are partially true but framed misleadingly, with at least one clear factual error regarding Trump’s involvement.
  3. Language is extremely biased, aimed to provoke anti-immigrant sentiment rather than neutral reporting.
I knew this was a bogus partisan smear piece from just reading Zigzag's title. It's nice to have it confirmed, though.
 
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