May 22, 2008

Why this American will never vote for John McCain…(Or Obama)

Posted by D.A. King at 6:35 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Washington Post

McCain resumes talk of ‘comprehensive immigration reform’ ( Amnesty )

Union City, Calif. — …”I believe we have to secure our borders. But we must enact comprehensive immigration reform, and we must make it a top priority,” McCain told the chief executives of several high-tech companies. “We must make the best of this problem, and we must attract the best and brightest minds to this nation.”

HERE

[This menace works for McCain’s campaign]

We get mail…on defeating amnesty. Again

Posted by D.A. King at 12:46 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Dear D.A. – ( Re: Ag Jobs amnesty)

Each win is a step in the right direction. Thank you for making it so easy for us to make our voices heard; without D.A. King and the Dustin Inman Society none of this would be possible. Thank you on behalf of my grand kids who are yet to be born, and my ancestors who fought and died for our sovereignty.

Methinks the post below quoting Jerry Gonzalez is connected to the one below it?

Posted by D.A. King at 12:43 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

read down…

Enforcement works from…Jerry Gonzalez

Posted by D.A. King at 12:20 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Below from HERE

Lets all look up ” un-hinged

Cobb County: In Denial About the Reality and Jeopardizing Public Safety: Latinos and Immigrants Do NOT TRUST Local Law Enforcement Officials
Found in Press Statement ( note from D.A. – an 1000 word press statement?…yawn)
Written by Jerry GonzalezPosted on 2008-05-22

Cobb County: In Denial About the Reality and Jeopardizing Public Safety

Latinos and Immigrants Do NOT TRUST Local Law Enforcement Officials

By: Jerry Gonzalez, Executive Director of GALEO

The devolution of responsibility of immigration enforcement to the state and local levels will be mired in controversy. 287 (g) agreements with ICE are active in Cobb ( note from D.A. – we were first in Georgia), Hall and Whitfield Counties and Gwinnett County is next in line for this type of “agreement”. As this continues, we will likely see an increase in racial profiling against Latinos and foreign nationals. Public safety will be undermined, and we will also see serious due process violations.

Based on some of the examples that have been exposed recently by the Washington Post with the deaths of immigrant detainees as well as reports about ICE raids where violations and misconduct have occurred, how can we trust that ICE will adequately train local law enforcement officials to act on their behalf to enforce a broken immigration policy? ( note from D.A. – OH WAIT!)

My Fox Houston

Cop-killing invader killer spared death penalty, victim’s family upset
Houston — The family of a police officer killed in the line of duty says they are “heartbroken” by a jury’s decision to spare the killer’s life. — Some are calling the jury’s decision nothing short of amazing after the illegal immigrant, who confessed to killing a Houston police officer, was sentenced to life in prison on Tuesday

OK, back to Gerardo

Are we to turn a blind eye away from some of the serious allegations of increased police racial profiling, police harassment, due process violations and other concerns raised by these “agreements”? If ICE cannot do its job effectively, humanely, in accordance with the law, and in accordance with the due process protections afforded to all persons within the United States, what can we expect from the likes of Wild West Cobb County Sheriff, Neil Warren?

Because our political “leaders” walked away from resolving this issue in the U.S. Congress, should we simply accept the enforcement approaches as the only fix for our immigration policy? No, we must not. Furthermore, we must shine a light on these issues, concerns and highlight these cases to bring forward the change that is necessary to truly restore the rule of law while also addressing the millions of undocumented people within our borders.

As an example of the chaos and confusion at the local level, in a previous article in Mundo Hispanico, April 24, 2008, Cobb County officials insisted that Cobb County law enforcement officials do not racially profile Latinos.

Further, Cobb County Chairman Sam Olens accused me of inciting fear. Here is what he said in the article:

Olens considers part of the problem to be the information the Hispanic community is receiving. “Jerry Gonzalez generates fear in the community”, says Olens about the executive director of GALEO, one of the organizations that denounces irregularities in Cobb County.

My response to this false and irresponsible accusation was clear. Through the policies and sanctioning of the elected officials in Cobb County, including the County Commission and the Cobb County Sheriff, there has been the creation of an environment of fear through active racial profiling and intimidation targeting the Latino community within Cobb County. With the implementation of the recently signed law of SB350 (drive without a license and go to jail bill), we will likely see an increase in these tactics and practices by law enforcement officials across the state. We have received hundreds of calls from people in Cobb County alluding to the reality of the situation where they are stopped for no apparent reason. This story evolves into the arrest by local police for minor traffic violations and then handed off to the Cobb County Sheriff for detention and deportation. Thus, the culture of fear continues as Latino families in Cobb County are being torn apart. Considering this reality and the testimony provided by the community, Cobb County blindly denies that racial profiling exists.

In fact, we have had calls from non-Latinos who look like Latinos and they indicated they were stopped for no apparent reason. Once the Cobb County officer determined the individual was not Latino, they were allowed to go on about their business. Cobb County Sheriff has had court orders issued against his jail procedures because the Cobb County Sheriff was detaining people longer than they should. Latino U.S. citizens have been held in jail longer than they should have while their “immigration status” is verified, while similar non-Latino U.S. citizens in the Cobb County jail are not subjected to such “immigration status verification.”

Blurring of the lines of immigration enforcement and local law enforcement is exactly the problem that is brewing in Cobb County. Public safety is being jeopardized by local policy makers. These practices have resulted with the reality that many within the Latino community do not trust the local police in Cobb County. We have received calls from individuals who are victims of crime, yet afraid to report the crime because of their immigration status. The situation has evolved into a dangerous environment because crime is going unreported. Will additional crime go unsolved because a segment of the Cobb County community does not feel like they can trust local law enforcement to uphold public safety without inquiring about immigration status? Due to this volatile environment created by the policy makers, crime will also likely increase as criminals will exploit the vulnerability of the Latino and immigrant communities. Read about it further below as this scenario already exists. Cobb County officials will need to work very hard to rebuild the erosion of trust that has occurred.

The solution will require that Cobb County officials recognize the reality and severity of the situation that they alone have created. They must take responsibility for their actions and policies and quit blaming Latino community leaders who respond against these police tactics. They must begin to take steps to rectify the erosion of trust. It will require stopping the practice of harassment and intimidation. Cobb County law enforcement officials must stop the practice of racial profiling. They must implement a process for greater community involvement and greater transparency within law enforcement and allow oversight by community members. Finally, Cobb County Sheriff must sever its relationship with ICE for the sake of enhancing public safety for all in Cobb County. If these steps are not taken, then public safety will keep diminishing because the trust between the local police and the community they should serve continues to erode.

The rule of law is important and must be upheld; however, one’s belief in the rule of law should also respect the due process rights of all persons and should also respect the right not to be racially profiled and harassed by local police. Consistency in enforcement and affording due process protections must be at work. Balancing the rule of law and the importance of upholding public safety must be carefully considered as the debate of the devolution and outsourcing of ICE responsibilities continues in this country.

In conclusion, ICE is not doing an effective job of “enforcement” in accordance to due process rights because our immigration policy is in shambles. With 287 (g) agreements and other state policies, local law enforcement officials are getting a blank check to target a vulnerable community while undermining public safety. We maintain that in order for us to restore the rule of law, enhance overall national security/public safety and maintain a humane and robust immigration system, we need comprehensive immigration reform. Devolution of responsibilities and duties while not respecting due process rights is not a solution we should strive for because this nation deserves better. Our U.S. Congress should demand answers and push for greater accountability on the problems that are unfolding.

JG

Please read the articles included below that we translated into English to provide you with more information and become more informed of the reality within Cobb County and the diminishing public safety situation.

*****************************************************

Below are articles that highlight the reality in Cobb County as reported by Mundo Hispanico:

Defending Their Work in Cobb County: Authorities deny persecution of Hispanics and accuse Latino Leaders of inciting fear (Mundo Hispanico, By: Rodrigo Cervantes, April 24, 2008)

Cobb County does not racial profile. So insists Sam Olen, Board of Commissioners President, along with 3 police department representatives in a meeting with Mundo Hispanico.

“The Hispanic community feels misunderstood (by the authorities) but so do we”, said Marietta Chief of Police, Dan Flynn. “We have been accused by immigrant groups of not being friendly or unequal treatment but we do not discriminate nor do we treat anyone unjustly”, he commented.

According to Officer Anibel Lopez, “the police department has a bad image as the majority of Latinos are poor and come from places where police have a bad reputation”.

“What we want to say to the Hispanic community is that we aren’t the same (as the authorities in their countries) and that they can trust us” added George Hatfield chief of Cobb police.

Read more:
http://www.galeo.org/story.php?story_id=0000004603

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Driving without a license, a sure step into jail? Chronicle of an arrest in Cobb (Mundo Hispanico, By: Mario Guevara, May 15, 2008)

In April, authorities from Cobb County indicated to Mundo Hispánico that, as regards minor traffic violations, they only detained those who had previous court records or those who were not able to prove their identity and/or home address. But MarĂ­a MejĂ­a’s case seems to contradict this.

On April 23, MejĂ­a was driving inside a mobile home complex on Six Flags Road, in the city of Austell, where she resides with her 4-year old son. There, she was stopped by a Cobb County police officer, AnĂ­bal LĂłpez. The Honduran woman wasn’t wearing her seat belt.

Mundo Hispánico witnessed the detention and the arrest.

Read more: http://www.galeo.org/story.php?story_id=0000004677

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Cobb County: “Day laborers are afraid of police. Prefer to keep quiet when mugged, rather than sent to jail” (Mundo Hispanico, By: Mario Guevara, May 15, 2008)

Fear takes hold of day laborers every time they go out searching for work throughout the streets of Cobb County. They acknowledge fear of being mugged, as it has happened before to some of them. Nevertheless, they prefer to live like that rather than report it to police, whom they mistrust.

Read more: http://www.galeo.org/story.php?story_id=0000004675

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Cobb County Police Respond: Chief Hatfield, “We don’t care if they are documented or not”
(Mundo Hispanico, By: Pilar Verdes, May 15, 2008)

After the detention of MarĂ­a MejĂ­a, (see the previous page), the Chief of police of Cobb County, George Hatfield Jr., maintained his position that the decision to arrest or not a driver without a driver’s license depends on the criteria of the law enforcement officer, even though the detained person may show an address verification document.

“Were we to follow what the law requires, we would need to arrest everybody”, asserted Hatfield.

Read more: http://www.galeo.org/story.php?story_id=0000004674

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Contradictions in Cobb County: Latinos Do Not Trust Police Because of Contradictions, (Mundo Hispanico Editorial, May 15, 2008)

Once again, authorities in Cobb County deny any attacks against the Latino and the undocumented communities while they get tangled up in their own contradictions, as if they were evading their responsibilities.

By Jerry ( Gerardo E.) Gonzalez

Read more: http://www.galeo.org/story.php?story_id=0000004676

May 21, 2008

Ag Jobs amnesty dead again

Posted by D.A. King at 3:57 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

I have lost count on how many times the American people have stopped amnesty.

The open borders lobby will never stop trying.

THANKS to all who called the U.S. Senate!

( Added 12:52 22 May) HERE

Points on the pending AgJobs amnesty in the Senate

Posted by D.A. King at 9:35 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

AgJOBS Amnesty 2008

Feinstein Amendment to the Senate Appropriation Committee’s 2008 Iraq Supplemental Spending Bill
The Feinstein amnesty, titled “Emergency Agriculture Relief,” is 101 pages long. It was submitted to Members of the Senate Appropriations Committee on May 15, 2008—the same day it was passed by the Committee by a vote of 17 to 12.
PLEASE READ AND CALL YOUR SENATOR! HERE

Georgia Congressman Tom Price receives “A” in English award

Posted by D.A. King at 8:40 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Brendan Buck
May 15, 2008 (202) 225-4501

Brendan.Buck@mail.house.gov

Price Receives “A in English” Award

Honored for Work to Protect English in the Workplace Policies

Washington, DC – Rep. Tom Price (GA-06-R) issued the following statement after receiving the “A in English” Award from U.S. English, Inc. The award was given for Rep. Price’s dedicated support of making English our official language and ensuring employers have the right to institute “English in the Workplace” policies.

“Being recognized for such an important cause is a true honor,” said Rep. Price. “Throughout the history of the United States, English has been a common thread uniting our society. It has promoted communication and integration among our proudly diverse population and solidified us as a unified nation.

“My support for English as the official language remains steadfast. Bound together by a common language, our nation will encourage Americans from all backgrounds to work together, live together, and prosper together. As this debate moves forward, I continue to encourage more of my colleagues to join me in promoting English as our common language.”

NOTE: Last year, Rep. Price introduced H.R. 4464, the Common Sense English Act, so that employers have the freedom to establish “English in the Workplace” policies. The bill enjoys bipartisan support with more than 100 cosponsors.

May 20, 2008

War Supplemental Bill Includes Amnesty for Illegal Ag Workers – NumbersUSA

Posted by D.A. King at 9:28 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

War Supplemental Bill Includes Amnesty for Illegal Ag Workers

(May 20) The Senate Appropriations Committee last week voted 17-12 to attach an amnesty to the Iraq supplemental spending bill (H.R. 2642). In short, the AgJOBS amendment, which was sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), would require the Department of Homeland Security to grant “emergency agricultural worker status” (i.e., amnesty) for up to five years to as many as 1.35 million illegal aliens, plus their spouses and children (bringing the total amnesty to about three million), if the illegal alien:

Could show by “a preponderance of the evidence” that he worked 863 hours or 150 work days (defined as 5.75 hours of work per “work day”), or earned at least $7,000 in agricultural employment between January1, 2004, and December 31, 2007;

Filed an amnesty application with a “qualified designated entity,” or with DHS directly if he is represented by an attorney or a nonprofit organization, during an 18-month application period that would begin six months after enactment of the amnesty;

Was not a known terrorist or convicted criminal; and

Paid a “fine” of $250.

Click here to see a more detailed analysis by NumbersUSA.

The full Senate began general debate on H.R. 2642 today, and could vote on the immigration-related portion of the bill tomorrow (May 21). Please contact your Senators now to urge them to strip the amnesty from the bill, as well as the other measures increasing immigration levels.

One such measure sponsored by Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) would exempt from the annual cap of 66,000 any H-2B nonagricultural seasonal workers who were admitted during the previous three years. This could increase the number of H-2B workers to over 400,000 by FY 2011. Another measure sponsored by Sens. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Judd Gregg (R-N.H.) would “recapture unused” employment-based visas from the past couple of decades. Since any employment-based visas that are not used in one year are added to the number of available family-based visas for the following year, there are no “unused” employment-based visas, and so there are none to “recapture.” However, this deceptive manipulation of visa numbers would add an estimated 218,000 employment-based visas to the annual cap of 140,000.

SENDING THEM BACK – illegal alien removal figures from an AJC story

Posted by D.A. King at 7:58 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

SENDING THEM BACK

Removals of illegal immigrants doubled last year in the Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s three-state region based in Atlanta. Part of the reason was the opening of a new detention center in south Georgia; illegal immigrants are sent there from several parts of the country, but their removals are counted as being from the Atlanta region. ICE spokesman Richard Rocha also credited greater cooperation with local law enforcement agencies with driving up the numbers.

REMOVALS OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS

Fiscal year ..U.S…….Atlanta region

2005……….178,657 ..4,312

2006……….206,052 ..5,187

2007 *……..282,548 ..10,925

2008 *……..119,429 ..5,520

* includes “voluntary removals,” in which the deportee agrees to leave the country without a formal deportation order. 2007 removals included 41,769 such cases nationwide. 2008 figures represent the fiscal year through mid-March.

CRIMINAL REMOVALS

These involve immigrants who were convicted of a crime in the U.S. and deported.

Fiscal year ..U.S…….Atlanta region

2005……….83,389….2,291

2006……….92,554….2,521

2007……….96,243….4,590

2008……….38,716….1,918

COBB COUNTY’S AGGRESSIVE ENFORCEMENT

The Cobb sheriff’s department began screening foreign nationals lodged at the Cobb County jail in July 2007. Because the program is new, the numbers are sparse, but they’re growing.

……Foreign-born ..Immigration……Inmates

……inmates……..”hold” placed….removed

……questioned……on inmate ……by ICE

2007 ..2,170 ……….1,357 ……….748

2008 ..1,506 ……….1,012 ……….884

2007 figures are from July 1 through Dec. 31; 2008 figures are through March 31, according the sheriff’s department Web site.
HERE

Chambliss, Isakson Urge Democratic Leader to Strip Agricultural Worker Provisions from Emergency War Supplemental Bill

Posted by D.A. King at 5:15 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Chambliss, Isakson Urge Democratic Leader to Strip Agricultural Worker Provisions from Emergency War Supplemental Bill

Say amnesty provision has no place in bill to fund troops

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., and Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., today, along with eight other Republican senators, sent a letter to Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., urging the removal of language that would grant legal status to over 1 million illegal agriculture workers and their families in the emergency war supplemental spending bill.

“A bill to provide funding for our servicemen and women should not be bogged down by a debate over immigration policy,” said Chambliss. “I strongly disagree that this amendment would serve to provide stability in the agricultural industry and would in fact harm U.S. farmers and ranchers and U.S. workers. Nobody is more interested in the well-being of American agriculture than me, and this proposal is simply the wrong policy at the wrong time.”

“There’s no greater domestic issue in this country than illegal immigration, and the American people will not stand for this attempt to grant amnesty on a bill designed to give our soldiers the resources they need in the War on Terror,” Isakson said. “The war supplemental is not only the wrong vehicle to deal with this issue but I firmly believe this is absolutely the wrong approach in regards to agricultural workers.”

On May 15, the Senate Appropriations Committee adopted an amendment to the emergency war supplemental spending bill that would give a five-year visa to 1.35 million workers plus their spouses and dependent children to live and work in the United States. For almost all legal purposes, the amendment requires that the illegal aliens who qualify for the proposed visa be treated as lawful permanent residents. Illegal aliens would qualify for the proposed five-year visa by proving they have performed agricultural employment for 863 hours or 150 work days or earned $7,000 from agricultural employment over the course of a four-year period. Once granted the proposed five-year visa, the illegal aliens would be authorized to work in any job other than agriculture-related jobs for the rest of the year and would be treated as U.S. workers for hiring purposes.

Adding the amendment to the appropriations bill also violates Senate rules because it legislates on an appropriations bill. As such, it will be subject to a point of order on the floor and 60 votes will be needed to keep this language in the bill. Chambliss and Isakson strongly oppose the amendment and will vote against it.

The text of the letter to Senator Reid is below. The letter was also signed by Senators Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, Jeff Sessions, R-Alabama, David Vitter, R-Louisiana, Tom Coburn, R-Oklahoma, James Inhofe, R-Oklahoma, John Barrasso, R-Wyoming, Elizabeth Dole, R-North Carolina, and Jim Bunning, R-Kentucky.

May 20, 2008

The Honorable Harry Reid

Majority Leader

United States Senate

Washington D.C. 20510

Dear Majority Leader Reid:

We write to express disappointment that the Senate Appropriations Committee chose to include in the War Supplemental more than 100 pages of immigration language that would grant legal status to more than one million illegal alien agriculture workers and their families. We urge you to remove these controversial provisions from the bill so we can enact essential funding for our troops without delay. If these provisions remain in the bill, you can expect a vigorous debate on immigration policy.
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