September 3, 2009

Daily news updates from CIS

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Center for Immigration Studies

Daily news updates from CIS

The U.S. Border Patrol needs to better manage the checkpoints it operates on roads in the southwestern United States, including the one near Yuma, according to a federal oversight agency report released earlier this week. — The 147-page report, released Monday by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in Washington, says

MUCH MORE NEWS HERE

Allow 70% of bad guys through ports of entry ?

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Terence P. Jeffrey — CNS News

DHS’ Goal: Allow 70% of bad guys through ports of entry

In fiscal 2008, U.S. Border Patrol officers working at checkpoints that are typically set up along roads and highways 25 to 100 miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border stopped three people “who were identified as persons linked to terrorism,” according to information provided by the Border Patrol to the Government Accountability Office…

HERE

43 illegal aliens captured in Douglas drop house

Posted by D.A. King at 10:25 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

KNXV-TV — Phoenix

43 illegals nabbed in Douglas drop house

Tucson — Border Patrol agents and Douglas police uncovered a stash house Monday. — Agents and officers discovered 43 people concealing themselves within the home. — All the occupants were determined to be illegally in the United States…

HERE

Mexicans running pot farms around the U.S.

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CNN

Mexicans running pot farms around the U.S.

…As many as 82 Mexican nationals were taken into custody and deported, the Fresno County state attorney’s office told CNN. So far, the U.S. attorney’s office has charged 16 people. If convicted, those without prior drug charges would face 10 years to life and a $4 million fine; those with drug records could get double that sentence. — But little intelligence is gleaned from growers. They don’t want to talk, fearful of the consequences…

HERE

We know just how he feels: Mexican mayor says deportations harm his crime-bloated city

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CNN International

Mexican mayor says deportations harm his crime-bloated city

The deportations of thousands of Mexicans who have served time in U.S. jails into Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, are adding a deadly ingredient to an already volatile state of security, Juarez Mayor Jose Reyes Ferriz said. — Turf battles between rival drug cartels, and between authorities and cartels, have made Juarez one of the world’s most dangerous cities…

HERE

Roy Beck on Ted Kennedy and massive immigration

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Roy Beck — Numbers USA

Ted Kennedy’s immigration legacy — and why did he do it?

I was dining in downtown Boston with a long-time acquaintance of Teddy Kennedy at the very time the Senator died a week ago. We had discussed what had caused Kennedy to pursue immigration policies that so fundamentally changed America. I got the news when I awoke the next morning to the Massachusetts TV stations doing their eulogies…

This was a typical comment among the thousands who honored Ted Kennedy this last week:

Senator Kennedy helped change the character of the immigration system, and indeed the country, bringing the United States a step closer to its founding ideals of fairness and opportunity for all.

— Former Immigration and Naturalization Service commissioner Doris Meisner

Hmmm, what ideals? Does Meisner think it was fair to drive all those American drywallers out of their jobs? How about all the American meat packer workers who lost their jobs and incomes to Kennedy’s army of immigrant workers? Of course, Meisner was the chief of enforcing immigration laws that she thought were unfair and out of step with our nation’s ideals. She and Kennedy fundamentally believed that our laws limiting immigration are evil or unjust.

But NumbersUSA’s website is full of page after page of information showing that Kennedy’s immigration policies have in fact undermined the ability of the poor to find good-paying jobs and to get on the ladder of opportunity.

The policies have undermined the fight against discrimination by making it easy for businesses to ignore poor American Black job applicants in favor of high-motivated immigrant workers. The plight of the Black underclass seems as intractable today as during the 1960s.

Kennedy’s policies have driven scores of urban school districts backwards through over-crowding and through overwhelming already precarious schools with masses of non-English-speaking students from impoverished homes.

Ted Kennedy’s immigration policies aren’t even good for the immigrants who already are here. There is little opportunity in this nation today for millions of immigrants who must constantly compete with the next decade’s millions upon millions of new foreign workers.

Please read Roy’s blog HERE

September 2, 2009

ACJ report: “Jerry Gonzalez of the Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials guided several men through a legislative phone-and-photo directory, helping them pick out certain legislators with whom to speak. Many busily filled out message forms for legislators in hopes of getting them to come out of the Senate to hear them out.”

Posted by D.A. King at 10:17 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

HERE

A Mexican citizen who’s twice been deported from the United States was sentenced to prison after he was found to be in the country illegally again…

Posted by D.A. King at 8:50 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Northwest Herald – Illinois

Twice deported man found in Hebron

HEBRON – A Mexican citizen who’s twice been deported from the United States was sentenced to prison after he was found to be in the country illegally again.

Marcelino Tellez-Pineda, 35, most recently was discovered after he was arrested Jan. 1 by Hebron Police for driving under the influence, according to a release from the U.S. Department of Justice.

He originally was deported in 1998 after being convicted of assault with a deadly weapon in California, according to court documents. Tellez-Pineda was deported the second time in 2004, again from California, because he was in the country illegally.

Today he was sentenced to serve a 60-month prison sentence, after which he’s been ordered to surrender to immigration authorities, according to the release…

HERE

Arrest Made In Fatal Hit And Run – yes, its an illegal alien

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Tulsa ABC TV8

Arrest Made In Fatal Hit And Run

Authorities say they have arrested a man in connection with a hit and run crash that killed an elderly bicyclist Tuesday morning in west Tulsa.

Shortly before 2:30 p.m. this afternoon, investigators located the vehicle believed to have been involved near 31st and Southwest Boulevard, just over a mile away from the scene of the crash.

From there, they later located the suspect, identified as 28-year-old Roberto Torres, who officials say is an undocumented Hispanic male.

Torres now faces charges of leaving the scene of a crime, felony hit and run and possibly manslaughter. He is currently in the Tulsa County Jail.

Torres is accused of being behind the wheel of an SUV that struck and killed 74-year-old Beverly Duffield near 17th and Southwest Boulevard. It happened shortly before 7 a.m. Tuesday morning.

Police say the driver of the SUV was exiting Interstate 244 at 17th Street and struck Duffield, who was riding a bicycle along the access road. Duffield was pronounced dead at the scene.

HERE

September 1, 2009

Ed Koch ( yes that Ed Koch) : Deport Illegal Aliens Serving Time in Federal and State Prisons and Municipal Jails Immediately

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Family Security Matters

September 1, 2009

Deport Illegal Aliens Serving Time in Federal and State Prisons and Municipal Jails Immediately
Ed Koch

I have a proposal which I hope the Obama administration will consider and implement.

Immediately, or as soon as possible, all illegal aliens who are now in our federal and state prisons and in our municipal jails should be deported to their countries of origin. In 2005, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued a report on the number of illegal aliens incarcerated in the United States. The report stated:

They were arrested for a total of about 700,000 criminal offenses, averaging about 13 offenses per illegal alien. One arrest incident may include multiple offenses, a fact that explains why there are nearly one and half times more offenses than arrests. Almost all of these illegal aliens were arrested for more than 1 offense. Slightly more than half of the 55,322 illegal aliens had between 2 and 10 offenses. About 45 percent of all offenses were drug or immigration offenses. About 15 percent were property-related offenses such as burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft and property damage. About 12 percent were for violent offenses such as murder, robbery, assault, and sex-related crimes. The balance was for such other offenses as traffic violations, including driving under the influence; fraud – including forgery and counterfeiting; weapons violations; and obstruction of justice. Eighty percent of all arrests occurred in three states – California, Texas and Arizona. Specifically, about 58 percent of all arrests occurred in California, 14 percent in Texas, and 8 percent in Arizona.

The GAO reported that the number of convicted criminal aliens incarcerated in federal prison on December 27, 2003 was 46,063 and the number incarcerated in state prisons and local jails was 262,105.

According to the Colorado Alliance for Immigration Reform, “Today, criminal aliens account for about 30 percent of the inmates in federal prisons and 15-25 percent in many local jails. Incarceration costs to the taxpayers were estimated by the Justice Department in 2002 to be $891 million for federal prison inmates and $624 million for inmates in state prisons [annually].” Every year, about 600,000 of those incarcerated, not limited to illegal aliens, are released and within three years, two-thirds become recidivists and are back in prison.

My proposal would make many of these people the problems of their countries of origin. Those countries would be given the authority to put whoever is turned over to them back in prison or fine them or place them on probation or otherwise free them. Since many of these people are drug offenders, and Mexico and several other Latin American countries have changed their laws and decriminalized the personal use and possession of hard drugs like cocaine and heroin, many of those turned over to them who received harsh Rockefeller drug laws sentences of four to 16 years may qualify in Mexico and elsewhere for instant release. Why should we care? In the Netherlands, they legally sell marijuana in coffee shops. Each country today makes its own rules, irrespective of international treaties governing the issue. Our approach to controlling drug use is certainly not a phenomenal success that would allow us to lecture the rest of the world on how to control substance abuse.

Of course, a determination would have to be made on not releasing those who were convicted of acts of terror against the United States, who remain a danger to us. Even there we have released to friendly countries those we considered terrorists and seen them released in their own country, rather than serving out their prison terms in their country of origin. Of course, there would need to be special U.S. courts provided where applications could be heard from those believing that they should not be expelled because of special circumstances and mitigating factors such as family, particularly American-born children and American spouses in the U.S. There should be provision for hearings and right of appeal to a federal circuit court. I suggest the rules of evidence be softened so as to allow hearsay evidence to make it easier for the individual being expelled to their own country to make their case for the application of compassion or simply to correct facts.

If it is possible to do this by administrative action and as quickly as possible, I would hope President Obama would take that course. If it is not solely within his power, then the President should ask the Congress to provide him with the powers needed.

The State of California has been ordered by a federal circuit court to reduce its prison population by 40,000 inmates within two years If it does not, California may face the situation when it will be forbidden by federal court order from imprisoning any new persons until it has reduced its prison population by that number. We know that California has just seen a prison riot which injured hundreds of inmates – mostly by the acts of other inmates – and attributed by many commentators to overcrowding and racism exhibited by the inmates towards one another. If the Congress cannot by law place the state prison systems into this program, then allow states the option of participating.

Perhaps there are states that will not want to participate and would prefer keeping the illegal aliens in their state prisons and jails, ultimately to be freed and allowed to return to society, but I doubt it. I don’t expect to see those who believe in the concept of open borders join me in supporting this proposal Those who believe that illegal aliens are simply migrants with the right to come and go across borders as they choose and those who are opposed to our building a security fence on our borders to help control those borders and those who believe the Secretary of Homeland Security, Janet Napolitano is currently too harsh in arresting illegal aliens in their workplaces, will oppose those proposals as well.

Nevertheless, I believe the proposal is reasonable and practical. Why didn’t people think of it a long time ago? They probably did and the country wasn’t ready for it. Today, we are.

FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributing Editor Ed Koch is the former mayor of New York City

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