[Also by Juan Mann: 03/27/06 - Do Reconquistas Already Run Federal Immigration Bureaucracy?]


Another illegal alien amnesty looms on the political horizon. But as long as the Department of Homeland Security’s Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) division administers it, an immigration benefit fraud free-for-all will certainly result.


Why do I make such harsh judgment?


Look no further than the staggeringly comprehensive Government Accountability Office (GAO) report released in March—IMMIGRATION BENEFITS: Additional Controls and Sanctions Strategy Could Enhance DHS’s Ability to Control Benefit Fraud (GAO-06-259) [PDF].


The Treason Lobby and its handmaidens in the Senate of the Untied States would rather have this report seized and burned than allow it to ever see the light of day in the mainstream media, which hasn’t reported it at all.


But as I've been writing on VDARE.com, the GAO report is still right on the front burner.


So to review, here’s what the GAO wrote about the agency that will be charged with passing out millions of uninvited “guest worker” cards sometime in the future, if the Treason Lobby carries the day.


The GAO’s confidence level with CIS’ fraud-detection ability is not high.


The GAO wrote:

  • “USCIS does not have a mechanism to help ensure that adjudicators have access to information related to detecting fraud they may need to carry out their responsibilities. Information regarding fraud trends can be provided in various forms including e-mails, intranet Web pages, and bulletin board notices.” [page 32]
  • “USCIS headquarters operations management told us that the adjudications operations is a ‘high pressure’ production environment and that they are seeking to increase production, but it was not their intention that this [this what? . . . read: application granting free-for-all] should come at the expense of making incorrect adjudications decisions.” [page 6]
  • “[A]djudicators we interviewed reported that communication from management did not clearly communicate to them the importance of fraud control; rather it emphasized meeting production goals, designed to reduce the backlog of applications almost exclusively.” [page 5-6]
  • “Adjudicators we spoke with said that communications from management emphasized meeting production backlog goals almost exclusively. They said that management’s focused attention on reducing the backlog placed additional pressure on them to process applications faster, thereby increasing the risk of making incorrect decisions, including approving potentially fraudulent applications.” [page 30]


So now that another month has passed since the release of the March 2006 report, it’s safe to say that things are probably all still status quo at CIS.


Let’s face facts: the institutionalized pro-illegal alien customer service elements of the federal immigration bureaucracy aren’t going to go away (or be “fixed”) anytime soon. If ever.


The very existence of several GAO reports exposing CIS as a “customer-friendly” sham is something that should have been shouted from the rooftops . . . rather than flushed down the mainstream media’s memory hole.


Maybe someone in the U.S. Senate will finally read the GAO report [PDF] before it’s too late, and save our country from yet another amnesty fraud free-for-all.


[Original posting in the Juan Mann Archive on VDARE.com]



The mass illegal alien demonstrations have exposed the legal theory underlying the amnesty movement: illegal aliens have rights simply because they want them, not because the law grants those rights. Next stop: nations without borders or any other attribute of sovereignty.



[Original posting in the Juan Mann Archive on VDARE.com]


As the U.S. Senate grapples with the question of how much amnesty to give the over 20 million illegal aliens already in the country—not to mention offering "guest worker" status to potentially millions more of the uninvited—Americans outside the Beltway are contemplating something quite different.


As a quiet reaction to the recent pro-illegal alien marches fueled by Mexican revanchism on American soil, law-abiding Americans seem to be coming to the conclusion that what is at stake is nothing less than the survival of the nation itself.


And the ultimate answer to the problems of illegal immigration and border anarchy might just be military.


For example, nationally-syndicated columnist Georgie Anne Geyer asked some chilling questions at the conclusion of her column on April 3:

"What will be the results of this unprecedented Mexican program of brazenly reaching into another country and telling it what to do? Will Mexicans simply retake the southern U.S.? Or will we perhaps come too late to the realization that in our foolishness, we have helped start the breakup of America?"

Ms. Geyer’s accomplished career as a foreign correspondent, author and commentator – having witnessed revolutions come and go all over the world —mean her comments cannot be taken lightly. The alarm bells sounded by pioneering outfits like Glenn Spencer’s American Patrol Report have now gone mainstream!


As yet another chilling sign of the times, last week I mentioned the grave implications of the recent "Border Wars" article by Jeff Randall in the April 2006 issue of S.W.A.T. Magazine. This chronicles the increasing intensity of violence experienced by Americans living all along the Mexican border. Randall writes:

"‘No matter what the politicians and left-wingers tell you, what’s happening on the Mexican border is not as simple as illegal aliens crossing to find work and better their lives.’ Even though the violence is ratcheting up, most politicians in Washington don’t care that law-abiding American property owners are being robbed, raped and shot on their own land."

While I’ve been making the case for summary removal of illegal aliens and criminal alien residents (instead of the current litigation-based system for the deportation of every single illegal alien in the country), this issue is small potatoes compared to the threat of military-style resistance lurking along and within our own borders.


[Read the full story on VDARE.com]



Mexico loves to dictate to the U.S. what its immigration policy should be. As thousands of illegals rally again today to demand amnesty, it is illuminating to review how Mexico would react to the protests: mass deportation.



[Original posting in the Juan Mann archive on VDARE.com]

As Mexican nationalist demonstrators take to the streets in post-1986 Amnesty mass immigration America– egging the U.S. Senate on to march over the cliff of yet another illegal alien amnesty—Congressman Tom Tancredo took to the pages of America’s favorite "McNewspaper," USA Today, in arguing the case for immigration law enforcement.

In his op-ed Myths vs. Facts (March 29), Congressman Tancredo tackles two of the rallying cries against H.R. 4437 that have supposedly been fueling the recent pro-illegal alien mass demonstrations.

Tancredo writes:

  • "The first myth is that the House bill would make criminals out of priests who run homeless shelters and soup kitchens."
  • "A second myth is that House Republicans want to make illegal presence in the USA a felony."

Both myths about H.R. 4437 to which Tancredo refers come from the bill’s Title II – "Combating Alien Smuggling and Illegal Entry and Presence," specifically Sections 202 and 203.

Thanks in large part to the efforts of Tancredo and his House Immigration Reform Caucus, H.R. 4437, the "Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005" [PDF] was approved by the House of Representatives on December 16, 2005.

Tancredo dismisses the first myth as nonsense in short order. Laws against harboring illegal aliens have been on the books for decades. Of course, they have been unenforced, but they’re there.

Prosecution, or the lack thereof, for immigration violations is the responsibility of the various Offices of the United States Attorneys throughout the country. They are tasked with enforcing violations of the U.S. Code in the Federal District Courts. But has anyone noticed that the federal government is not prosecuting Americans who give illegal aliens an assortment of goodies such as jobs, mortgages, or identification documents?

What makes anyone think that the U.S. Attorneys across the country will somehow overnight begin prosecuting folks who give illegal aliens soup or sandwiches—let alone prosecuting priests in the Roman Catholic Church?

Moreover, the House bill bumps up the penalties, but it does not extend their reach. Soup kitchens have never and do not now constitute “harboring.”

As for the second myth, illegal aliens by definition have committed an immigration violation (under the Immigration and Nationality Act). But they might not necessarily have committed a criminal violation. Illegally entering the United States is a federal "crime" now, but not the mere fact of an alien’s unlawful presence.

Section 203 of H.R. 4437 amends Title 8 U.S. Code Section 1325 by adding "unlawful presence" to the "illegal entry" criminal offense already in the statute. The bill also bumps up the penalties for both to "one year and one day" of prison time, making both federal "felonies."

Entrants who have overstayed the term of valid legal visas constitute unlawful presence violators. Fence-jumpers --­ illegal crossers of the border --­ constitute illegal entry.

Of course, if you really want to get technical here, that does mean many illegal aliens in the United States—maybe 20 million strong of them—are not only subject to removal for violating the Immigration Act, but many of these illegal aliens are in fact criminals!

Not only can they be deported under Immigration and Nationality Act provisions for breaking the law, but a great many of them could also be prosecuted for illegally entering the country under 18 U.S. Code Section 1325.

Tancredo also wrote in USA Today that "[r]ight now, illegal presence in the USA is not a crime; it is a civil infraction."

But the Congressman’s statement depends on what he means by "civil." Here’s a quick thumbnail sketch of all the legal distinctions:

  • Criminal charges are brought by the states or the federal government against individuals for violation of state or federal criminal codes. Criminal charges can subject someone to jail or prison time, depriving them of their liberty.

  • Civil lawsuits are brought by individuals against other persons for money damages or injunctive relief (namely, getting someone to do something, or stop doing something else), but without the issue of jail or prison time (which can only be administered by the government).

  • Aliens who violate the immigration laws of the United States as found in the Immigration and Nationality Act are subject to removal from the country. Deporting aliens can be accomplished either through summary removal (hurrah!) or after running the course of endless litigation before the Department of Justice’s dreaded Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) Immigration Court system (boo, hiss!). But the only thing that aliens have to fear in this area is deportation, not money damages, and not jail time.

  • Aliens who also happen to violate provisions of the federal criminal code can also be subject to prosecution for their crimes (NOT specific charges of removability) by the U.S. attorneys in Federal District Court. Popular immigration-related crimes are found in Title 8 of the U.S. Code (section 1325: illegally entering the U.S.; section 1326: alien smuggling).

As fans of immigration law enforcement though, just ask yourselves: if all of the illegal aliens running loose across America are not being deported in any significant numbers now, (nor have they ever been since probably the 1950s), all of these same illegal aliens are also not being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorneys for illegal entry under 18 U.S. Code Section 1325 either!

So if the government isn’t enforcing the deportation charges against illegal aliens and criminal alien residents, what makes anyone think that the U.S. Attorneys will begin mass prosecutions for criminal U.S. Code violations anytime soon?

The fact of the matter is that most illegal aliens are law-breaking criminals already, and they’re also liars, cheaters, and thieves (i.e.—stealing a life in the U.S. that does not belong to them), just for good measure.

When I say "deport illegal aliens and criminal alien residents," the "criminal" part refers to LPRs (lawful permanent resident aliens) who have committed crimes that render them deportable under the Immigration Act.

And by definition, they've also committed a crime (in this case a federal or state criminal offense) in addition to the immigration violation.

Tancredo in his USA Today article points out that, ironically, Republicans have attempted to soften the law:

"Chairman James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., wrote an amendment to his own bill asking that the penalty be reduced from a felony to a misdemeanor; 191 Democrats and a few Republicans voted to keep the felony penalty in the hope that it would be a poison pill to defeat the measure. After his amendment lost, Sensenbrenner promised, 'When this bill gets to (House-Senate) conference, those penalties will be made workable. You can count on that.' "

The incredible truth that House Democrats actually voted to keep the dreaded "felony" penalty was also previously pointed out in an e-mail from a legislative analyst published March 25 by Michelle Malkin.

Legal Eagles can check out my FAQ section and also the definitions section of Immigration Act Section 101(a) for more hair-splitting technicalities.

But in my humble opinion, this "making it a crime" business is just one gigantic red herring for the reconquista crowd.

As long as the federal government is not particularly interested in enforcing immigration laws anymore, all of these legal distinctions don’t really hold my interest.

I’d much rather ponder the grave implications of the recent "Border Wars" article by Jeff Randall in the April 2006 issue of S.W.A.T. Magazine.

Forget the USA Today opinion page . . . now S.W.A.T. Magazine, that’s one heck of a page-turner!



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