Illegal Immigration

ALIPAC 2.0 Upgrade Update

Friends of ALIPAC,

Things are taking longer than we expected as we attempt to move the world's largest database of information regarding illegal immigration in America to a new software and hardware home on the Internet.

We believe we are close to completing the leap. Very soon, the old website at www.ALIPAC.us will disappear and our new website under construction will appear.

This new website will begin with our Forums or Discussion Groups only. If you have been using ALIPAC's 1.0 discussion groups, your same user id and password should work on the new website forums...

Preparing ALIPAC for Major Transition

Friends of ALIPAC,

We have good news to report. We have found a way to make our main website and operations run much faster, more powerfully, and more efficiently. During our efforts to build ALIPAC 2.0, we also found a way to save us around $5,000 per year on our web server!

We need to prepare you all for the transition which should begin within 72 hours God willing.

All homepage news updates at www.ALIPAC.us will cease today. For those of you who read them regularly, please be ready to begin again when we send word that this feature has been restored as part of ALIPAC 2.0

The first steps we take may cause our main website at www.ALIPAC.us to be unavailable for a few minutes or hours.

Bentley Reassures Foreign Industries in Wake of Immigration Law

MONTGOMERY — Alabama’s governor on Monday he is worried the state’s tough crackdown on illegal immigration law could hurt the recruitment of foreign industries, so he’s reaching out to foreign executives to let them know that the state welcomes them.

“We are not anti-foreign companies. We are very pro-foreign companies,” Bentley told reporters at the Capitol.

The Republican governor and other supporters of the law have described it as the nation’s toughest. Some parts of it were put on hold by the federal courts, but major provisions took effect in late September, including allowing police to detain motorists who can’t produce a valid driver’s license. Since then, two foreign workers with the Mercedes-Benz and Honda auto assembly plants in Alabama have run into problems.

 On Nov. 16, a German manager with Mercedes-Benz was arrested under the law in Tuscaloosa for not having a driver’s license with him while driving a rental car. The charge was dismissed after the man provided documents in municipal court. Bentley said he learned about the arrest in a call from someone with Mercedes, but he did not say whom.


Last week, a Honda employee from Japan was detained under the law in Leeds. Police at a roadblock found him carrying an international driver’s license and passport, but not an Alabama license or Japanese license as required by the law. Leeds police said they released the man under the immigration law at a magistrate’s recommendation, and a city judge dismissed a charge of driving without a license. 

Topics: illegal immigration, Alabama, US Immigration 

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