Illegal Immigration

Sheriff: Police shooting marks 1st bona fide spillover violence in TX

November 1, 2011
Naxiely Lopez
The Brownsville Herald

EDINBURG — A police shooting that stemmed from a botched drug transaction and kidnapping Sunday afternoon is being labeled the first reported incident of spillover violence in Hidalgo County by Sheriff Lupe Treviño.

While other law enforcement officials, such as Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw, call Hidalgo County the center of spillover violence in Texas, Treviño repeatedly disputes those claims and is quick to dispel talk about cartel-related attacks in the U.S.

But the circumstances surrounding Sunday’s shooting, in which a suspect was killed and a deputy was injured, were enough to make him “say it like it is.”

“I have to say … this is our very first reported spillover-violence event that we have experienced,” he said. “And unfortunately, it got one of our deputies shot.”

Subjects = Illegal immigration, border violence, U.S.-Mexico border, drug cartels

More Than 150,000 Mexican Cargo Trucks Await U.S. Permits

MEXICO CITY – Eleven Mexican trucking companies hope to join a pilot program that could see more than 150,000 vehicles delivering products to destinations deep inside the United States by year’s end, the vice president of the Canacar transport association said.

Eight of the 11 firms have already submitted applications and are awaiting a response from the U.S. Transportation Department, Luis Moreno said.

It was only last Friday that a Mexican long-haul truck became the first to deliver a shipment to the U.S. interior under the revived pilot program.

Subjects: NAFTA, border security, U.S.-Mexico border, Mexican trucks

Justice Dept Sues South Carolina Over State's Strict Immigration Law

COLUMBIA, S.C. – The federal government filed a lawsuit Monday seeking to stop implementation of South Carolina's tough new immigration law, arguing that the legislation that requires law officers to check suspects' immigration status is unconstitutional.

Federal officials and state officials had met to discuss the issue a week ago.

The government wants a judge to stop enforcement of the legislation, which requires that officers call federal immigration officials if they suspect someone is in the country illegally following a stop for something else, U.S. Attorney Bill Nettles told The Associated Press.

"The Department of Justice has many important tasks," Nettles said. "Two of those important tasks are the defense of the constitution and ensuring equality is afforded to all."

The lawsuit filed in federal court names Gov. Nikki Haley as a defendant. A spokesman for the Republican, the daughter of immigrants from India, said the state was forced to pass its own law because there is no strong federal immigration law.

Topics: Illegal immigration, Department of Justice, state immigration laws, Obama administration, DHS

Joining the National Discussion about Illegal Immigration

Friends of ALIPAC,

A few times each year, we are going to offer an invitation to our supporters to join the national discussion about illegal immigration by participating in the Discussion Groups area of our main website at www.ALIPAC.us

Our Discussion Groups are for supporters only, and offer a unique online community where your opinions and activism are on display in a very prominent forum.

The Discussion Groups area is accessed via the main menu box on the left of each page at alipac.us

We have very strict rules regarding participation in our Discussion Groups, and this facet of ALIPAC's national operations is not for everyone. While comments in this open source section of our website do not reflect the positions of the ALIPAC organization, our volunteer moderators work hard to assure the rules of proper discourse are followed.

Broadcasting via our Discussion Groups area means that an activist must be careful about how comments can be perceived or intentionally distorted by illegal alien supporters who watch us closely with a baleful eye.

Healthcare Spending Pits Elderly Against Illegal Aliens

The culture war is moving from when life begins to how it should end. Like a drum beat, supporters of the Obama agenda are protesting that the elderly are consuming too many health resources, and their care needs to be cut back.

The current target of this unrelenting campaign against the elderly is the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, which is charged with devising a plan to reduce federal deficit spending by Nov. 23.

Among those calling for less care for seniors is H. Gilbert Welch of Dartmouth Medical College.

“If you were hoping to play the ‘death panel’ card, now’s your chance,” Welch says to his critics. “But don’t play it and then pretend you care about the budget.”

That brazen statement — pitting grandma's well-being against the nation's fiscal health — is a false choice. Future federal healthcare spending can be significantly reduced by repealing the expansion of Medicaid and the billions poured into medical and interpreter services for illegal immigrants under the Obama health law before these provisions go into effect.

Subject - Illegal immigration, illegal aliens, elderly, Medicare, Medicaid, Obamacare, deficits, spending cuts.

Illegal Immigrant Charged With Killing Woman in Wal-Mart Lot in Albion

Police have arrested a man in connection with the fatal stabbing of a woman in a Wal-Mart Super Center parking lot in the town of Albion last night.

Luis A Rodriguez-Flamenco, 24, an illegal immigrant from Honduras, has been charged with second-degree murder.

According to the Orleans County Sheriff's Office, Kathleen I. Byham, 45, of Albion was stabbed multiple times after she left the store, on Route 31, around 7 p.m. and walked toward towards her car.

She was taken to Medina Memorial Hospital, where she died about 40 minutes later.

Topics: illegal immigration, Honduras, Mexico/U.S. Border, US Border Patrol

Trial in Hot-Button Drunk Driving Case to Start

When an illegal immigrant was accused last year of driving drunk and causing a crash in Prince William County that killed a nun, the case unleashed a wave of anger and became a touchstone for supporters of stricter immigration enforcement.

With the murder trial of Carlos Martinelly-Montano set to begin in the county’s Circuit Court on Monday, the political reverberations of the case are still playing out and will probably do so long after the verdict is read.

“The case has become a hallmark,” said Claire Gastanaga, a former Virginia chief deputy attorney general and a lobbyist for immigration advocacy groups. “It has become a place holder for a lot of different things that people are unhappy about with the immigration system.”

Melissa Sanchez, Martinelly-Montano’s attorney, said he is expected to plead guilty to five of the six charges he faces but intends to plead not guilty to the most serious charge, felony murder.

Police said Martinelly-Montano, 24, of Bristow slammed his car into another with three nuns inside about 8 a.m. on Aug. 1, 2010. The crash on Bristow Road in Bristow killed Sister Denise Mosier, 66, and seriously injured Sisters Connie Ruth Lupton and Charlotte Lange. All three belonged to the Benedictine Sisters of Virginia, who have a monastery in the town just west of Manassas.

Topics: illegal immigration, licenses for illegals, drunk-driving, Mexico, 

Gallegly: U.S. magnet: Illegal immigrants paid $4.2 billion

October 29, 2011
State Rep. Elton Gallegly
Ventura County Star

According to President Obama's own Treasury Department, 2.3 million illegal immigrants who paid no income taxes in 2010 nevertheless received $4.2 billion in tax refunds.

That's four times the tax refunds that were paid to illegal immigrants who paid no taxes in 2005, and is increasing exponentially as more illegal immigrants find out about the program.

At a time when the federal government is considering program cuts for American citizens, giving away billions in taxpayer dollars to illegal immigrants is unconscionable.

Illegal immigrants are able to claim tax credits because the IRS allows illegal immigrants to apply for a nine-digit Individual Taxpayer Identification Number, which is then used to file income tax forms in lieu of a Social Security number. Tax credits are paid even if the taxpayer has no taxable income.

Subjects: Illegal immigration, costs of illegal immigration, taxpayers, E-Verify, Republicans

California employers embrace E-Verify to help screen for illegal workers

Illegal immigrants will have a harder time securing a job -- some jobs, at least -- as more Bay Area employers screen new hires through an immigration records check.

From corporate giants Apple (AAPL) and Chevron to the organic-friendly grocer Berkeley Bowl and the nonprofit Kaiser Permanente health care organization, more than 26,000 employers in the state have signed up for the federal E-Verify program that checks the immigration status of employees.

As a growing number of states require public and private employers to use E-Verify, California has gone out of its way to make it voluntary, passing a law this month that bans local governments from forcing firms to use electronic verification.

Topics: Illegal immigration, E-Verify, DHS, Legal Workforce Act, undocumented workers

Stimulus Jobs meant for Americans went to immigrants

Rep. Peter DeFazio demanded Tuesday that the federal Department of Labor add muscular - and clear - new provisions to a guest-worker program that was used to hire foreign workers for forest jobs in Oregon intended for unemployed U.S. citizens.

"Over the past year it has come to light that several contractors exploited loopholes in the H-2B visa process to intentionally hire foreign workers, rather than available Americans, for American Recovery and Reinvestment Act-funded jobs on Forest Service lands in Oregon. This is unacceptable," DeFazio said in a letter sent Tuesday to Labor Secretary Hilda Solis.

The letter came less than a week after the department's inspector general released a report about the contracts and the fact that 254 foreign workers were hired to perform work that most believed should have been filled by unemployed Americans.

"Taxpayer money was spent to hire foreign workers while unemployed Oregonians were denied these jobs. The Department of Labor owes it to the American taxpayer and the over 13 million unemployed Americans to make sure this can never occur again," the letter says.

Subjects:  Immigration, unemployed, stimulus, guest worker program, H-2B visa, Oregon, Department of Labor, Peter DeFazio, loopholes.

Coddling Illegals, Jailing Agents

Justice: Another border patrol agent faces prison after arresting an illegal alien smuggling drugs. When not being killed by guns funneled into Mexico by their own government, they are prosecuted for doing their job.

In a case reminiscent of an earlier injustice against those protecting our borders, Border Patrol Agent Jesus E. "Chito" Diaz Jr. has been sentenced to two years in prison by U.S. District Judge Alia Moses Ludlum in San Antonio. The illegal alien he arrested for drug smuggling goes free.

In November 2009, Diaz was named in a federal grand jury indictment after an October 2008 arrest near the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas.
 
Subjects = Illegal immigration, U.S. Border Patrol, Agent Jesus E. Diaz, drug smuggler, U.S.-Mexico border

US northern border checks scaled back

SEATTLE—The U.S. Border Patrol has quietly stopped its controversial practice of routinely searching buses, trains and airports for illegal immigrants at transportation hubs along the northern border and in the nation's interior, preventing agents from using what had long been an effective tool for tracking down people here illegally, The Associated Press has learned.

Current and former Border Patrol agents said field offices around the country began receiving the order last month -- soon after the Obama administration announced that to ease an overburdened immigration system, it would allow many undocumented people to remain in the country while it focuses on deporting those who have committed crimes.

The routine bus, train and airport checks typically involved agents milling about and questioning people who appeared suspicious, and had long been criticized by immigrant rights groups. Critics said the tactic amounted to racial profiling and violated the civil liberties of travelers.

But agents said it was an effective way to catch unlawful immigrants, including smugglers and possible terrorists, who had evaded detection at the border, as well as people who had overstayed their visas. Often, those who evade detection head quickly for the nearest mass public transportation in hopes of reaching other parts of the country.

Topics: Illegal immigration, border security, Canadian border, U.S. Border Patrol, transportation checks

PJ Media Finds Gunwalkers Unreachable Man in the White House

The Obama admin. told Rep. Darrell Issa that Kevin O’Reilly — Gunwalker’s possible connection to Obama — was “in Iraq and unavailable.” He’s there, but available. After we called him, his phone number was deactivated.

The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform led by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) is investigating to what extent the White House was aware of — or involved in — the “Fast and Furious” gunwalking scandal.

The committee recently requested to speak with former White House National Security Staffer Kevin O’Reilly. According to CBS News reporter Sharyl Attkisson, the Obama administration answered:

O’Reilly is on assignment for the State Department in Iraq and unavailable.

Topics: Border violence, ATF, Operation Fast and Furious, Obama administration, congressional investigation

State Sen. Beason responds to Napolitano on illegal immigration policy

October 27, 2011
Mary Orndorff
The Birmingham News
Alabama Live LLC

WASHINGTON - A key architect of Alabama's immigration law said this morning that U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano's policy against helping the state enforce it will not diminish the law's effectiveness.

State Sen. Scott Beason, R-Gardendale, said the law was intended to push illegal immigrants out of Alabama, not necessarily deport them from the United States, which is a function of the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency that Napolitano oversees. Beason said her testimony on Capitol Hill yesterday was not a surprise and that the Alabama law was never intended to be a big referral service to ICE for deportation.

"We said at the beginning, we didn't think there would be huge numbers of people arrested or a mass filling of jails," Beason said.

Subjects: Illegal immigration, state immigration laws, DHS, Alabama immigration law, self-deportations

Napolitano queried on lack of Fast and Furious probe

Congressional Republicans are trying to expand the scope of questions over disastrous ATF gun-sting operation Fast and Furious to Homeland Security Secretary Janet A. Napolitano, asking her why she never investigated even after suspected guns showed up at the scene of a dead U.S. Border Patrol agent.

Having repeatedly excoriated Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., who Republicans said either knew or should have known about the gun-walking operation, party lawmakers this month have turned attention to Ms. Napolitano, saying she also should have asked questions once two AK-47s sold as part of the operation were found at the scene of the December shooting death of Agent Brian A. Terry.

Topics = Illegal immigration, ATF, Operation Fast and Furious, border violence, U.S.-Mexico border, U.S. Border Patrol

Janet Napolitano: No help on Alabama illegal immigration law

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said Wednesday the agency is not working with Alabama to help the state implement its controversial new immigration law and she expressed concerns about the impact of the measure on Hispanics.

Testifying before the House Judiciary Committee, Napolitano was asked by Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.) whether her department has been working with Alabama officials to aid the implementation of the law, which is regarded as one of the toughest in the nation. Napolitano said no, adding that the DHS has instead been “working with the Department of Justice on its challenge to that law.”

Asked to comment on the law’s impact on the state’s Hispanic residents, Napolitano said, “I don’t know the answer to that question right now. The law has just gone into effect.”
 
Subjects = Illegal immigration, DHS, state immigration laws, Obama administration, Alabama immigration law

Important State Defense Battles in CA and Other States

Friends of ALIPAC,

While our illegal immigration fighting legislation in the states continues to advance in places like Alabama, South Carolina, Georgia, Oklahoma, Indiana, and Arizona, we have also suffered some defeats.

What we are learning is that these defeats appear to finally awaken many Americans. While it is sad that many Americans will not rise to action until the illegal alien invaders have won major concessions, these public backlashes are very important to us.

Right now we are aiding and monitoring incredible reactions to illegal alien legislation that has passed in California, Maryland, and Utah.

Next week, we plan to send you detailed information on what you can do if you live in these states or in other states...

Utah - Home raided that made fake documents for illegals

October 25, 2011
Aaron Vaughn
KSTU-TV

Attorney General's SECURE strike force raids fake ID mill in Midvale

MIDVALE, Utah— Police from the Utah Attorney General’s SECURE strike force raided a Midvale home and uncovered various fake identifications allegedly made to be sold at a premium to undocumented immigrants.

Three suspects are charged with a variety of felonies, that could become federal charges at some point, after state and federal police say they found fake Social Security cards, driver’s licenses, and permanent resident cards.

After acting on a tip and armed with a warrant, police Monday surrounded and raided the home and arrested the suspects, including Gilberto Ramirez-Crus, who detectives say has a knack for making high-quality fake documents.

Subjects: Illegal immigration, fake identification mill, illegal immigration crimes, fake documents

Camera system helps detect illegal immigrants

America's Third War: A New Eye on the Border

A new high-tech, low-cost camera system is helping to detect illegal immigrants along the Texas-Mexico border, according to the Texas Department of Public Safety.

The new system of cameras is catching undocumented immigrants sneaking across private ranches and farms -- groups that would have otherwise gone undetected, according to local landowners.

“There are literally hundreds of trails out here that are being frequented and used by drug smugglers and human smugglers, ” said border rancher Michael Vickers. “There’s a lot of desperate people coming in here from all over the world and, frankly, a lot of them are getting through.”

Subjects: Illegal immigration, U.S.-Mexico border, smugglers, drugs, illegal immigrant arrests, border security

Democrats consider new illegal immigration AMNESTY push

Democrats consider new illegal immigration reform push

Democratic sources tell CNN that it's likely that Democrats on Capitol Hill –with the approval of the White House– will re-introduce some form of immigration reform, possibly as early as December. At this point, the details of any plan are unclear. But what is clear is that Democrats are interested in using their version of reform as a "contrast issue" to Republicans, who largely emphasize border security.

Sources say there are ongoing discussions among Democrats ranging from re-introducing comprehensive reform to bringing up the Dream Act again, which would allow the children of illegal immigrants who go to college or serve in the military to become citizens. The Dream Act was defeated last year.

Topics = Illegal immigration, amnesty, Dream Act, border security, campaigns
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