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(Includes "fair-use" footage from TV reports) |
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| Now available
from American Patrol for only $9.95 (Plus tax, S&H). Call
1-800-600-8642 (M-F 9-5 Pacific) to get your copy. |
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| Orange
Co. Register Reconquistas complain about border enforcement ...Figures kept by the INS show 1,184 |
| Post-Gazette Drug dealer facing jail, then deportation When the Mercer County Drug Task Force showed up at her house in Sharon last year, Natalie Elaine Garbutt threw her cocaine out the bedroom window and then hid in a closet. Neither move worked. -- Detectives quickly found her. And after a search, they also found 75 grams of crack cocaine, two digital scales, drug paraphernalia and about $1,000 in cash. -- Now she's headed to prison for 12+ years and, eventually, back to her home country of Belize. |
Daily Record
(NJ) Hispanic Chamber touts empowerment Economic empowerment of the growing Hispanic community will help Hispanics better deal with social ills, the president and chief executive officer of the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce said Friday. -- "The more businesses we start, the more people we can employ, the more revenue is generated for the local tax base, the more money for infrastructure development to better provide the services that we need in our community," said George Herrera... |
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Thanks,
American Patrol Team I have just recently became aware of your site and have begun visiting frequently. I just want to say thank you and keep up the good work. The information that you pool together and subsequently make available is extremely informative. |
| Miami Herald Legal status in U.S. urged for Hondurans (by Honduras) Central American countries are pleased about this week's U.S. House of Representatives' vote that gave President Bush authority to expedite new free trade deals, but would be even happier if the U.S. government agreed to legalize the immigration status of Central American U.S. residents, Honduran president- elect Ricardo Maduro said Friday. (300,000 Hondurans in the US send about $600M annually to Honduras, the article says). |
MSNBC Detainees could be jailed indefinitely Some of the non-citizens being held on immigration charges in the post-Sept. 11 dragnet may remain in jail for life, or at least indefinitely, if their home countries refuse to take them back and if the U.S. government convinces judges that they are too dangerous to be released. But some of the people in custody are seeking political asylum in the United States, which will create new legal challenges for the Bush administration. |
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There
is only one solution to illegal immigration Implement asset forfeiture laws. It is illegal for them to be here. It is illegal to hire them. It is illegal to transport them. It is illegal to harbor them.... |
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Christian
Science Monitor - Published Pros and cons of Mexican identification cards I completely agree with your Dec. 12 editorial "Who IDs illegal immigrants?" on identification cards issued by Mexican consuls for Mexican nationals who reside illegally in the United States. |
| The Nation
- Wm. Greider A New Giant Sucking Sound The "giant sucking sound" Ross Perot used to talk about is back, only this time it is not Mexico sucking away American jobs. It is China sucking away Mexico's jobs. And jobs from Taiwan and South Korea, Singapore and Thailand, Central and South America, and even from Japan. Globalization is entering a fateful new stage, in which the competitive perils intensify for the low- wage developing countries much like the continuing pressures on high-wage manufacturing workers in the U.S... |
L.A. Times Drunk-Driving Foes Launch Effort to Reach State's Latinos With drunk-driving accidents on the rise in California for the first time in 14 years, Mothers Against Drunk Driving is launching a new campaign to educate Latinos about the dangers of drinking and driving. -- The campaign, dubbed "Pasa Las Llaves" (Pass the Keys), promotes the designated-driver concept in a community that suffers from a disproportionately high rate of problem drinking and fatal car accidents. |
| AZ Republic
(Free Registration) Budget deal cuts off dialysis funds As many as 175 undocumented Mexican immigrants could lose access to kidney dialysis today under a budget-balancing plan approved Friday by state legislators. -- Doctors said the patients could die without the treatment. Legislators will meet Monday to try to correct the problem. -- "People are going to say, 'Oh, they're just wetbacks, I don't care,'" said an angry Sen. Pete Rios, D-Hayden. |
AZ Republic
(Free Registration) State may help border counties strapped by migrant costs Arizona's border counties, facing alarming budget crunches caused by growing undocumented immigrant populations, may soon receive money instead of words from the state. -- The Legislature's first- ever immigration committee released its first findings report today, confirming the legitimacy of the years-long cry for help from border counties. |
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Re:
Tom Tancredo California has a serious problem with illegal immigration, and the local government will not uphold federal immigration laws. The city of Anaheim and the local police department are now accepting a foreign ID, an ID issued by Mexico, in lieu of a California driver's license, during traffic stops. |
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Rocky
Anderson, SLC Mayor As a hardworking middle class taxpayer, I am outraged at your 1-sided definition of "compassion" toward people who have broken our laws. -- This Country cannot and WILL NOT permit the entire world to enter into our country. The room is full. |
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Re:
Tom Tancredo ...Glenn Spencer, of American Patrol, recently sent you a video tape of the attack by Mexican Marxists on a gathering of American citizens attempting to convince the Anaheim, CA, City Council, and anyone else who would listen, to reject the notion of a bunch of Orange County, CA, police chiefs who don't want to be bothered, to accept identification cards from Mexican nationals, who are here illegally and lawlessly, issued by Mexican Consulate offices as legitimate US identification. |
Salt Lake
Tribune![]() Airport Is At Fault in Badge Fuss Salt Lake City International Airport officials on Friday acknowledged responsibility for issuing security badges to 271 convicted felons and undocumented immigrants who were arrested or fired in a federal crackdown on security violations. -- All but six of the 271 workers were undocumented workers from Latin America, a fact that drove more than 100 protesters to the Federal Building and then to City Hall on Friday. Mayor Anderson urged federal officials and the community to understand the plight of the workers and their families. -- He quoted an e-mail he had received which read: "What part of 'illegal' don't you understand?" [Discuss] |
| San Diego
Union-Tribune Man faces immigration fraud, gun counts A native of Iraq who entered the United States to attend San Diego flight schools and then overstayed his visa was charged yesterday with immigration fraud and illegal gun possession, authorities said. -- The arrest of Maher Hazim Aziz, a Lomita resident who works for an El Cajon plumbing company, was the result of the government's unprecedented roundup of Middle Eastern visa violators in the wake of Sept. 11. |
| Bradenton
Herald Noncitizens wait for driver licenses Scores of immigrants seeking driving permits or ID cards waited in long lines Friday as state officials expedited anti-terrorism rules restricting how noncitizens obtain Florida driver licenses. -- The changes make it easier for state officials to verify the immigration status of applicants and ties the expiration of their driver licenses to the expiration of their visas. -- Thirteen of the 19 terrorists suspected of being involved in the Sept. 11 attacks were known to have Florida ID cards or driving permits. |
Deseret
News U.S. Attorney: Mayor's intended warning an illegal act Salt Lake Mayor Rocky Anderson said at a rally Friday that had he known earlier about a federal roundup of illegal aliens at the Salt Lake City International Airport, he would have warned them to leave their jobs before they were arrested. -- Anderson said he knew about the roundup one week beforehand. U.S. Attorney for Utah Paul Warner says had Anderson given workers notice it would have constituted a criminal act. [Discuss] [Fight illegal alien cheerleader mayor] |
| Associated
Press Hispanic Groups Drops Boycott of Denver Nuggets Hispanic activists dropped their threatened boycott of the Denver Nuggets on Friday after meeting team officials who promised coach Dan Issel would apologize publicly for an insulting ethnic remark. -- About 25 Hispanic activists met with executives of Kroenke Sports Enterprises - owner of the Nuggets - and Issel, who apologized privately. |
Associated
Press Hundreds March in Salt Lake About 200 people marched Friday to City Hall to protest the detention of 60 illegal immigrants working at Salt Lake International Airport. -- The workers were charged and detained Tuesday with lying or using fake documents to get jobs in high-security areas. Federal prosecutors have said the arrests were necessary to ensure safe air travel. [Discuss] [Fight mayor Rocky Anderson who supports illegals] |
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