Illegal Immigration

Jailed border patrol agent's family warned of massive fine

The federal government has sent a collection notice to the family of a Border Patrol agent who was jailed and fined for pulling on the arms of a handcuffed suspect to get him to comply with orders, according to a charitable organization working on a defense for Jesus E. Diaz Jr.

WND reported earlier on a call for Congress to hold hearings to uncover why U.S. law enforcement officers are being charged, prosecuted and sent to prison for apparently doing what their jobs require.

That call came from President Andy Ramirez of the Law Enforcement Officers Advocates Council, which is working on Diaz' case. The officer was sentenced to 24 months in jail and fined nearly $7,000 for his conviction based on the testimony of a drug smuggler who was given immunity to testify.

WND reported earlier that U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., wrote to Attorney General Eric Holder seeking an explanation for the federal government's actions.

Topics: Illegal immigration, U.S. Border Patrol, U.S.-Mexico border, drug smugglers, amnesty, jailed agents

AL Attorney General Rebuffs Justice Dept's Probe Of State Immigration Law

In the latest of a series of sparring letters between the U.S. Justice Department and Alabama over educational issues surrounding the state's new immigration law, Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange won't yield -- after the federal office noted its "express authority" to investigate.

Last week, Assistant U.S. Attorney General Thomas Perez pressured Alabama schools to abide by federal requirements that states cannot deny children equal access to public education based on immigration status. In a letter Monday to Alabama school superintendents, Perez requested information on enrollment practices by mid-month, saying that the state's new immigration law "may chill or discourage" young people from taking part in public education.

Perez seeks to determine whether the law has affected public school enrollment and determine if Alabama is in federal compliance and "whether further action is warranted."

In response, Strange questioned the Justice Department's legal authority to acquire enrollment information about students across the state's schools. He requested that the department respond by Friday, "otherwise, I will assume you have none, and will proceed accordingly," Strange wrote.

Subjects - Illegal immigration, Alabama, Luther Strange, Dept of Justice, Thomas Perez, education, HB 56.

Immigration a Focus of Arizona Recall Election

MESA, Ariz. — The architect of the groundbreaking Arizona immigration law that thrust the issue into the national political debate faces a recall election Tuesday likely to be viewed as a referendum on the state's hardline immigration policies.

The effort to oust Republican state Sen. Russell Pearce
has transformed a normally quiet legislative district in a Phoenix suburb into a closely watched battleground on immigration that also features issues such as school funding cuts and state mandates on local governments. 

People on both sides of the debate believe that removing Pearce would send a powerful message to the Legislature that uncompromising stands on immigration and other issues will not be tolerated by voters. On the flip side, a Pearce victory will say a tough stance on illegal immigration is just what voters demand.

"The folks running the recall are trying to send a message to the rest of the Legislature that if they can take out Russell Pearce, then they can take out any one of us, and to get us to stop running bills against illegal immigration," said Republican Sen. Ron Gould.

Topics: illegal immigration, Arizona, Senator Russell Pearce

US Limits Troubled Visa Program

The State Department is limiting participation in a troubled exchange program and putting a moratorium on new businesses becoming sponsors for thousands of foreign college students who use the program to visit the United States.

The agency published the new rules Monday. The changes to the J-1 summer work and travel program come 11 months after The Associated Press reported widespread abuses, from students working in strip clubs to others paid $1 an hour or less for menial jobs.

The students given temporary visas are required to have jobs and often work in resorts and restaurants. Participation has boomed from about 20,000 students in 1996 to a peak of more than 150,000 in 2008 and roughly one million foreign post-secondary students have participated in the past decade.

The State Department enacted stronger rules this past summer, but says complaints remain high.

The department says future participation will be limited to the "2011 actual participant levels."

Topics: ICE, US State Dept.,visas

Judicial Watch Launches National Campaign on Illegal Immigration

The illegal immigration debate could not be any hotter. While JW was protecting the rights of Maryland citizens to stop tuition breaks for illegal aliens in Maryland, on October 14, a federal court blocked provisions of Alabama’s new tough illegal immigration enforcement law from taking effect — at the urging of the Obama Department of Justice (DOJ) — while allowing other provisions to be enforced. At the same time, Arizona’s illegal immigration enforcement law, SB 1070, is expected to go before the U.S. Supreme Court soon (Judicial Watch currently represents the Arizona State Legislature in court and recently filed an amicus curiae brief with the High Court, which began its current term on October 3).

In the midst of this firestorm, Judicial Watch took aggressive action, launching a national television advertising campaign to combat illegal immigration. The purpose of the campaign is to collect petitions from the American people to send to the governors of all 50 states, urging them to obey and enforce all laws against illegal immigration. This campaign to encourage our nation’s governors to stand strong on illegal immigration law enforcement has become more urgent now that the Obama DOJ has decided to sue states for merely trying to protect their citizens from the scourge of illegal immigration.

But it’s not just the federal government that is to blame. Some states have decided to side with the illegal aliens, rolling out the welcome mat for illegal aliens through costly and unlawful sanctuary policies. That’s why we’re going national with this petition campaign. The petition campaign is being driven by a series of television advertisements that began broadcasting this week in California, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas, as well as nationwide on Fox Business News (FBN) and the Military Channel.

Topics: illegal immigration, Maryland, US/Mexico Border, Amnesty, states enforcement

Letters: State Should Ban 'Sanctuary' Cities

As the federal government postpones dealing with the issue of illegal immigration, states like Arizona and Alabama are seeking to honor the federal laws regarding illegal immigration. As states like these seek to enforce the law, two Michigan city councils have voted to do the opposite and become sanctuary cities—cities where illegals are welcome to live in violation of federal law and at taxpayers’ expense. Surprisingly, both Detroit and Ann Arbor have now become sanctuary cities as documented in “The Original List of Sanctuary Cities, USA” available on the Internet.

Via local resolutions, executive orders or city ordinances, sanctuary cities protect illegal aliens. Once that is done, city police departments may develop their own policies, and procedures. Although the federal government is not taking action to uphold the law, Michigan must stand up and correct this.

There really are two issues. First is the violation of the law. The federal government is not upholding its own laws. Michigan does not want to follow suit.
Topics: illegal immigration, sanctuary cities, US/ Mexcio Border, Arizona, Michigan

We must have more support immediately

Friends of ALIPAC,

Our funds are very low and our email response rate is low. We must have more donations immediately if we are going to continue normal operations during this funds drive.

Right now we only have $8,000 of the minimum of $40,000 we need to stay in the fight through February 1, 2012. We only have 24 days left till our deadline, but at this point our funds are to low to stay in operation till then!

Please take a few minutes to chip in on this funds drive. There are 40,000+ of you receiving this request. If we all pull together we can reach our minimal operations goals to keep ALIPAC in the national fight against illegal immigration and Amnesty...

Operation Fast & Furious - Eric Holder has a gun problem

November 5, 2011
Jordy Yager
Capitol Hill Publishing Corp.

As the chief law enforcement officer Attorney General Eric Holder came out swinging in the first months of the Obama administration as he pushed to reinstate the assault weapons ban, pointing to the rising levels of violence in Mexico and increased presence of U.S. guns south of the border.

But nearly two years later assault weapons can still be bought and Holder has found himself at the center of a quagmire involving a botched gun-tracking operation that sent thousands of high-powered firearms to Mexico in the hands of known or suspected straw buyers for drug cartels.

Amid a plethora of Republican calls for Holder’s resignation, Democrats have silently indicated their support for the attorney general. Instead of taking him to task for Operation Fast and Furious, Democratic lawmakers have tried to draw attention to what they describe as the country’s weak network of gun laws.

Subjects: Border violence, drug cartels, U.S.-Mexico border, Operation Fast and Furious, DOJ, NRA

Mexicans, including illegals, in Va. to get labor law assistance

Mexican citizens living in Virginia are being helped by an outreach program designed to inform them of their workplace rights.
The U.S. Department of Labor signed an agreement with an official from Mexico's Consulate General in Norfolk on Friday in an effort to curb labor law violations. About 160,000 Mexicans live in Virginia, although it is unclear how many of those are of working age or are employed. Federal labor laws also apply to workers regardless of immigration status.

"There is no distinction made whether the worker is in the country legally or illegally. We don't even ask that question. That's not part of our mission," said Bruce Clark, district director for the Labor Department's Richmond office.

Topics = Illegal immigration, Department of Labor, U.S.-Mexico borderMexican Consulate

MD - Frederick County targets illegal immigration

An undocumented Salvadoran man's arrest on murder charges has spurred county officials to attempt to crack down on illegal immigration.

The Frederick County Commissioners and sheriff have generated a number of ideas, such as requiring businesses to vet employees through federal databases and prohibiting day labor sites.

While some proposals were already in the works, the recent arrest of Jose Reyes Mejia-Varela brought the effort to the forefront, Commissioners President Blaine Young said Thursday.

U.S. officials deported Mejia-Varela in 2009, but he re-entered the country and last week was charged with the fatal shooting in March of a Burger King manager in Frederick.

Subjects: Illegal immigration, illegal immigrant crimes, county illegal immigration laws, E-Verify, taxpayers

Feds Say They Have 'Express Authority' to Investigate AL Schools

The Justice Department on Friday told Alabama's attorney general that it has the "express authority" to investigate potential federal civil rights violations in Alabama's public schools authorized by the state's controversial new immigration law.

Assistant US Attorney General Thomas Perez informed Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange of the federal government's powers two days after Strange requested that the Justice Department cite what legal authority it had to collect enrollment data on Hispanic students in his state's public schools.

"The Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department is tasked with investigating potential violations of civil rights laws that protect educational opportunities for schoolchildren," Perez wrote in a letter. "We know that the longstanding legal tradition in this country of ensuring the right to attend school without being subject to discrimination on any impermissible ground is as critically important to you, as the Attorney General of the State of Alabama, as it is to the Civil Rights Division."

The Justice Department initially requested the enrollment information at Alabama public schools Monday after receiving complaints that the state's immigration law may violate federal anti-discrimination statutes related to education.

But Luther advised the state's school superintendent to decline to handover the data because of the ongoing litigation over the immigration law.

Subjects:  Illegal immigration, Alabama, Dept of Justice, HB 56

Senators urge DHS to stop ignoring illegal alien sanctuaries

While the Justice Department focuses on taking action against state laws to combat illegal immigration, a group of U.S. Senators is asking the Obama Administration to stop ignoring local ordinances that undermine federal laws by offering undocumented aliens sanctuary.

In battling local immigration control measures nationwide, the DOJ has claimed that they conflict with federal immigration law and undermine the government’s careful balance of immigration enforcement priorities and objectives. The Obama Administration has made this argument recently in cases against Arizona and Alabama.

But what is the administration doing about local governments that refuse to cooperate with federal immigration authorities and blatantly ignore the legal status of arrested individuals? A group of Senate Judiciary Committee members posed the question to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano this week.

They specifically mentioned Cook County Illinois where local authorities openly flip the finger at the feds by refusing to report illegal immigrants who come in contact with police, even dangerous criminals. In fact, in 2007 Judicial Watch took legal action against the Chicago Police Department—which has a don’t-ask-don’t-tell immigration policy—after learning of an illegal immigrant sanctuary resolution that was being considered by Cook County’s Board of Commissioners at the time.

Topics - Illegal immigration, Obama administration, Cook County, ICE, Janet Napolitano, sanctuary city, public safety, DHS.

DeMint, Vitter, Sessions push bill to ban immigration reform lawsuits

Today, U.S. Senators Jim DeMint (R-South Carolina), David Vitter (R-Louisiana) and Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama) announced they will soon offer legislation to prohibit President Obama’s administration, including the Department of Justice (DOJ) and other agencies, from participating in lawsuits against South Carolina, Alabama and Arizona over recently passed immigration laws.

Senator DeMint said, “It’s absurd that the Obama Administration, which has failed to enforce the nation’s immigration laws, is now stopping South Carolina, Alabama and Arizona from taking commonsense steps to protect citizens and uphold the law. President Obama has failed to build the southern border fence mandated by Congress. He’s also failed to control the northern border, allowing the Border Patrol to stop conducting routine checks at bus stops and train stations for illegal immigrants who could be smugglers or terrorists. South Carolina has a duty uphold the law and to protect our citizens from criminals who are in the country illegally.”
 
Subjects: Illegal immigration, state immigration laws, Republicans, legislation, lawsuits, DOJ, GAO, DHS

Subpoena authorized for illegal-immigration data from ICE

Signaling growing unrest with the Obama administration’s level of cooperation, House Republicans on an immigration subcommittee voted Wednesday to authorize a subpoena to get data on illegal immigrants against whom the government has declined to pursue deportation cases.

The 7-4 party-line vote came two days after the Department of Homeland Security failed to meet an Oct. 31 deadline given to DHS Secretary Janet A. Napolitano last week by Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith. Mr. Smith said he could issue the subpoena as early as Thursday.

Meanwhile, late Wednesday, Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee announced its investigative subcommittee will hold a vote early Thursday to authorize subpoenas for documents related to Solyndra, the failed solar-technology company that received special attention from the White House.

Together, they show an increasing belief among Republicans that the administration is stonewalling requests from the new GOP majority in the House.

Subjects: Illegal immigration, House Republicans, DHS, Obama administration, Secure Communities Program, ICE

Gov. Brewer: Obama Wants Illegals--They'll Help Him Get Re-elected

Illegal immigration is costing Arizona $1.6 billion a year – a staggering 19 percent of the state’s total budget – Gov. Jan Brewer claimed in an exclusive interview with Newsmax.TV, adding that the Obama administration is turning a blind eye to it since migrants will help Obama register more Democratic voters.

Successful efforts in California and Texas to close off the border are funneling aliens through her state, Brewer said, while the federal government sits by and watches.

And she claimed the Obama administration does nothing to stop the influx because the more illegal immigrants there are in the country, the more votes the Democrats will get.

“We are fed up,” said Brewer, whose new book, "Scorpions for Breakfast," was released today. “We are of course assuming all the responsibility and all the cost of the incarceration, the education and the healthcare for the illegals that come across the border and into our state.

“Unfortunately we keep asking the Feds to do their share and they just simply won’t do that."

The Tucson sector of the Mexican border has become the “gateway” for illegal immigration into the United States, Brewer said. “Along with that, of course, comes the drug cartel and all the criminal elements that we have to deal with and pay for,” she said.

“It is our fight with the federal government. Secure our borders.”

Topics:  Illegal immigration, Jan Brewer, Arizona, Barack Obama, Fast and Furious, Janet Napolitano.

TX: Illegal alien child murder suspect crossed border more than once

The man accused of murdering a 10-year-old girl in Carrollton illegally crossed into the United States on multiple occasions before his most recent arrest.

Records obtained by News 8 show that Carrollton police arrested Sifuentes in April 2009 in a traffic stop. He faced charges including minor in possession of alcohol and driving without a license and insurance. Officers turned him over to immigration officials because of his illegal status.

Sifuentes was granted voluntary return - an option given to some illegal immigrants with no serious criminal history on record. He went back to Mexico, but he didn't stay long.

According to ICE, Sifuentes was caught trying to illegally enter the U.S. that same month, and then again in May 2009. All three times, he was granted voluntary return.

"It tells me that it's continual, that's it's a pattern and it's not going to stop," said Dallas immigration attorney, Michelle Scopellite.


Subjects:  Illegal immigration, criminal, murder, ICE, US-Mexico border, CBP, child, Carrollton.

PA bills would crack down strongly on illegal immigrants

It’s not every day that lawmakers in Harrisburg gird themselves for votes against illegal immigrants.

But that pervades Rep. Daryl Metcalfe’s ongoing fight against illegal immigrants in Pennsylvania — a battle over what demographers say is a relatively small slice of the state’s population.

Pollsters also say the matter grabs even less of the general public’s attention, but it seems likely to dominate the social justice agenda for the rest of this two-year legislative term.

Metcalfe’s “National Security Starts At Home” package includes bills requiring:

— Verification of legal status for anyone 18 or older applying for public benefits such as welfare or food stamps.

Employers seeking public-works contracts to use the voluntary federal database “E-Verify” to authenticate employees’ Social Security numbers; and higher penalties for firms that have hired illegal immigrants.

— Police to verify a person’s immigration status if that person is stopped for a crime and reasonably suspected of being in this country illegally.

Metcalfe, along with like-minded lawmakers from other states, has also proposed a special noncitizen birth certificate for the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants to prevent their families from gaining privileges.


Topics - Illegal Immigration, Pennsylvania, Daryl Metcalfe, food stamps, birthright citizenship, E-Verify, ACLU, migrants.

Stop Obama's 150,000 Mexican Trucks Poised to Roll Into America

Friends of ALIPAC,

After fighting them back for more than ten years, Americans now face a crushing blow.

Unless Americans on the left and the right unite to stop the Mexican Truck program authorized by NAFTA, over 150,000 unsafe Mexican trucks loaded with drugs and illegal aliens will roll into every state and community!

If this happens, and without a strong response from you it will, then over 100,000 American truckers will lose their jobs.

Border level drug and illegal alien interdiction efforts will become completely moot as the designers of this 'North American Integration' treason desire.

Untold numbers of innocent Americans will perish at the hands of unqualified Mexican truck drivers who are inexperienced at driving on 1st world roadway systems, unsafe Mexican trucks, and the increased amount of deadly addictive drugs and illegal immigrant invaders brought into our American communities. The organized crime syndicates will have a new powerful tool in the stripping down of America if this planned trucking integration happens.

Mexican long-haul trucks take to U.S. highways today

Kimberly Dvorak
San Diego County Political Buzz Examiner
October 21, 2011

Despite a protest rally from Teamsters, a speech from Jim Hoffa Jr. and bi-partisan Congressional members, Mexican long-haul trucks will take to U.S. highways today.

Safety standards and the threat of losing more than 100,000 truck driver jobs was not enough to sway the Obama Administration’s decision to allow Mexican trucks, approved through a North American Free Trade Association (NAFTA) pilot program, to gain access to U.S. and deliver their goods.

Using a Russian roulette analogy for Mexican truck safety standards, Hoffa said it would take a serious car accident to get Mexican trucks off the highways...

I guess immigration laws are made to be broken..

Note: Although this is an editorial and written by a GOP website, for decades both parties have refused to seriously enforce our federal immigration laws.  Nevertheless, this common sense article is worthy of our homepage and hopefully someday we will finally have the leadership to enforce these laws.

November 1, 2011
Bobby Eberle
GOPUSA

Perhaps I should rephrase my headline. From the actions of our federal government, it's not that immigration laws are made to be broken, it's that they are made to not be enforced in the first place. After years of neglect in keeping American's borders secure and fighting illegal immigration, states have had to step up and do it themselves. The problem is that each time a state passes a law to get tough on illegal immigration, the feds move in to shut it down. That's exactly what's happening now in South Carolina.

Whether overtly or covertly, the federal government is doing everything it can to stop Americans from stopping illegal immigration. First, the overt actions... When states like Arizona and Georgia passed laws that help them do what the federal goverment should be doing regarding illegals, Barack Obama directed his Justice Department to file lawsuits to shut them down. In Arizona, the law that was passed was essentially the same law that's already on the federal books. The reason Obama and company got scared was because they knew Arizona would enforce it.

Subjects: Illegal immigration, GOP, state immigration laws, President Obama, federal immigration laws
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