Most American adults today oppose any sort of government benefit for illegal immigrants, according to a recent Christian Science Monitor/TIPP poll.
October 19, 2010
October 18, 2010
FAST FACT: In Whitfield County, a total of $3.2 million β close to $6 million when Dalton Public Schools is included β was spent on the ESOL program in fiscal year 2010
“In Whitfield County, a total of $3.2 million β close to $6 million when Dalton Public Schools is included β was spent on the ESOL program in fiscal year 2010… HERE
Secure Communities program grows – WSJ
Wall Street Journal
Deportation program grows
A federal program that scans local jails for illegal [aliens] is being expanded across the state, the latest front in the nation’s battle over immigration policy. — In the past two weeks, Texas became the first border state to fully deploy the Department of Homeland Security program, which is scheduled to be rolled out to all U.S. counties by 2013…
Fiscal Year 2010 deportations: 392,862
According to ICEβs deportation statistics, from October 2009 until September 2010, the agency deported 392,862 illegal aliens. HERE from FAIR
Immigration cases being tossed by the hundreds
Houston Chronicle
Immigration cases being tossed by the hundreds
Immigration cases being tossed by the hundreds
Docket review pulls curtain back on procedure by Homeland Security
By SUSAN CARROLL
Oct. 17, 2010
In the month after Homeland Security officials started a review of Houston’s immigration court docket, immigration judges dismissed more than 200 cases, an increase of more than 700 percent from the prior month, new data shows.
The number of dismissals in Houston courts reached 217 in August β up from just 27 in July, according to data from the Executive Office for Immigration Review, which administers the nation’s immigration court system.
In September, judges dismissed 174 pending cases β the vast majority involving immigrants who already were out on bond and had cases pending on Houston’s crowded downtown court docket, where hearings are now being scheduled into 2012.
Roughly 45 percent of the 350 cases decided in that court in September resulted in dismissals, the records show.
The EOIR data offer the first glimpse into Homeland Security’s largely secretive review of pending cases on the local immigration court docket.
In early August, federal attorneys in Houston started filing unsolicited motions to dismiss cases involving suspected illegal immigrants who have lived in the country for years without committing serious crimes.
News of the dismissals, first reported in the Houston Chronicle in late August, caused a national controversy amid allegations that the Obama administration was implementing a kind of “backdoor amnesty” β a charge officials strongly denied.
In recent weeks, some immigration attorneys reported the dismissals have slowed somewhat, while others reported they now have to ask ICE trial attorneys to exercise prosecutorial discretion in order to have their cases dismissed. Others, however, said they are still being approached by government attorneys seeking to file joint motions for case dismissal.
“They’re still doing it,” said immigration attorney Steve Villarreal. “They’re just doing it quietly.”
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials declined this week to discuss specifics of the docket reviews and dismissals, which are also going on in several other cities, including Dallas and Miami…