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A man who police say is in the United States illegally is accused of raping a woman on what was thought to be a safe and family-friendly trail in Herndon, Va. WJLA learned the man was arrested multiple times before the rape and local and federal officials have allowed him to stay in the Washington, D.C.-Virginia area time, and time again. On Nov. 18, a woman was walking home when a man grabbed her and pulled her behind the bushes at the Washington & Old Dominion Railroad Trail in Herndon and raped her, according to court documents. Police said 31-year-old Denis Humberto Navarette Romero raped the woman and he’s in the U.S. illegally. Police said the attack happened on the trail between Ferndale Avenue and Grace Street shortly before 9 p.m. when a passerby called 911 to report a woman who had been raped. “We haven't had a stranger rape in over 12 years that I've been here as chief,” Herndon Police Chief Maggie DeBoard told WJLA “There should be full prosecution, so this never happens again." According to court documents, Navarette Romero is unemployed and receives public assistance. According to court documents and documents obtained by WJLA through a public records request, Navarette Romero has been accused of several crimes in the past, including sex crimes in D.C., resisting arrest in D.C. and Virginia --- he’s been accused of assaults, battery, trespassing, using a stolen vehicle, weapon violations, drinking and smoking marijuana in public, loitering, and incident exposure. “Now we've determined that there was an allegation made in 2017 involving him with sexual type battery against several juveniles,” DeBoard told WJLA. That’s not all. “He had two felonies from cases we had where we were called, dispatched to investigate a sexual battery, basically where he had grabbed a female and when we went to investigate the case, we encountered the individual then and he assaulted two of my police officers,” said DeBoard. “One he actually grabbed around the throat, tried to choke him. So he was charged with two assaults on a police officer, felonies.” “And was he convicted of two felonies?” Minock asked DeBoard. “No because a couple months later, that case was reduced to simple assault, misdemeanor,” DeBoard answered. “We weren't asked to provide input on that. You know, my officers were victims in that case. We would hope that victims would be asked about their input on this, and we certainly wouldn't have agreed to have that reduced to a misdemeanor.” The police chief is hoping he will be held accountable and serve time for the rape police said he committed. “The problem with deporting him right now would be there is a strong chance that he could end up back in this country again,” said DeBoard. “The danger is, if he's not held accountable for his crimes here, and he's simply deported, we would have no way to keep him from coming back into the country.” DeBoard also encourages residents in Herndon who are not in the U.S. legally to call her office if they are a victim of a crime or have information about a crime in their community. “My job as a police chief here is to protect everyone in this community, that includes people that may not be here legally,” said DeBoard. “And part of the problem that we have is, how do I protect that group, that migrant group that may not be here if they don't report to us? So part of the messaging here is we don't want anybody to feel unsafe here, and that includes the community that may be undocumented here, so it's important to know that we will not turn them over to ICE if they're calling for help. We would never do that. Our goal is to get people out of the community who are preying on anyone here in town, and we can't do that without cooperation. So I'm hoping that they will trust us.”