January 22, 2009

Americans and the law win in Cherokee County Georgia! More compliance with the Georgia Security and Immigration Compliance Act of 2006

Posted by D.A. King at 10:36 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Cherokee Tribune

‘Better safe than sorry’

Published: 01/22/2009

By Ashley Fuller

The Cherokee County Board of Commissioners has decided to start accepting affidavits affirming citizenship for business license applicants.

County Manager Jerry Cooper is developing an addition to the business license application and could start accepting within a couple of weeks.

Commissioner Derek Good said Tuesday night that talks among the board and its attorney led to the decision.

He said the board still agrees with the Association County Commissions of Georgia’s opinion that a business license was not a public benefit as defined in the Georgia Security and Immigration Compliance Act.

The act requires local governments that administer public benefits to collect an affidavit from applicants affirming their citizenship or lawful alien status and use the federal SAVE (Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements) database to verify the immigration status of alien applicants.

“It is probably better to be safe than sorry,” he said. “It is better to be proactive. It has been our intention to be fully compliant.”

Cooper said he already has met with officials from Cobb County’s government, which last year began checking the immigration status of business license applicants.

The county has filed 17 memorandums of understanding with the Department of Homeland Security to request the use of the SAVE database to verify different public benefits. Commission Chairman Buzz Ahrens said the time lapse between starting to accept affidavits and receiving final approval to use the database should not be long.

“This shows more than good faith,” Ahrens said regarding the possibility the state government would withhold funds from local governments it determined to not be in compliance with the law.

Canton City Manager Rob Logan said the city likely would start requesting the affidavits as well in light of the county’s action.

“I need to look at it to be sure,” he said, adding that if the county is going to start, “It is no different with the city.”

Mayor Donnie Henriques of Woodstock said the City Council has not talked about the issue, but generally follows the county’s actions.

State Sen. Chip Rogers (R-Woodstock), who authored the law, said he was pleased with the county commissioners’ decision.

“I appreciate the commissioners’ work on this important issue. It really makes no sense for any county to grant a business license to a person unlawfully present in the United States. The effort by the Cherokee commissioners will assist in the effort to discourage illegal immigration,” he said.

The county commissioners also currently are considering an ordinance that would require anyone who wants to rent or lease property to submit an occupancy license application to the county, which would include a declaration that the applicant is a lawful resident.

The ordinance also would make it illegal in the county to hire illegal aliens.

Comment on this Story on Cherokee Tribune site and read original news report HERE

January 21, 2009

287 g enforcement works in Las Vegas!

Posted by D.A. King at 12:11 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

KTNV-TV — Las Vegas

287 (g) program called a success in Las Vegas

Every year thousands of people are booked into the Clark County Detention Center. — In the past it was difficult to know who was here illegally but now a new program is changing that. — “This program allows us to identify these people and see who we are dealing with,” says Lt. Rich Forbus….

The program has been a little over 8 weeks and so far about 300 high level offenders have been identified. Officers have found another 1,700 low level offenders who are here illegally.


HERE

MORE GOOD NEWS! Charges dropped against Border Patrol agent

Posted by D.A. King at 12:08 am - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

KOLD-TV — Tucson

Charges dropped against Border Patrol agent

A judge has formally ruled that a border patrol agent will not be tried again for the death of an illegal [alien]. — Nicholas Corbett was put on trial twice last year in Tucson. — Both trials ended with hung juries. — If new evidence comes up, charges could be refiled…

HERE

January 20, 2009

E-Verify facts that illegal alien lobby hopes you don’t see

Posted by D.A. King at 11:59 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

HERE from www.NumbersUSA.com

Warrior against illegals lives, breathes the issue – D.A. King in the AJC – March, 2006 – I try to post this a few times a year to help Jerry

Posted by D.A. King at 5:47 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

 

Warrior against illegals lives, breathes the issue

By Carlos Campos, Atlanta Journal Constitution, March 27, 2006

Cobb man quit job to become full-time activist

Carlos Campos – Staff

Monday, March 27, 2006

CORRECTION: 03/29/06, Page A/02: An article in Monday’s Metro section about activist D.A. King should have said that The Dustin Inman Society is an anti-illegal immigration group. The organization is not opposed to legal immigration.

Whether on the streets or in the halls of the Georgia Capitol, fighting illegal immigration is a way of life for D.A. King.

The 53-year-old Cobb County man quit his job selling medical insurance three years ago to become a self-educated activist against illegal immigration. Dismissed as a fringe figure by critics, King has forced his way into an influential role in this year’s debate over a legislative crackdown on illegals.

King’s style is straightforward, even confrontational. At a rally in 2004 at which illegal immigrants protested in favor of being issued driver’s licenses, King — a 6-foot-2, 220-pound Marine Corps veteran — waded through the crowd holding up his own license, taunting demonstrators.

“You are criminals!” King shouted. “You cannot have my country!”

Critics say King uses angry rhetoric to stir up passions. One legislator asked King in a public meeting if he considered himself a supremacist.

But King’s allies see him as a smart, articulate and tireless warrior for their cause.

“D.A. probably knows more about this issue than any person in the Southeast,” said Sen. Chip Rogers (R-Woodstock), sponsor of the Georgia Security and Immigration Compliance Act, which is nearing final passage in the Legislature. “He’s been a very helpful information source. And I’ve never had anything he’s given me turn out not to be true.”

King said he was drawn into the debate when a Mexican family moved across the street from his home in 1997. King said eventually, up to 20 people were living in the home and multiple cars and loud parties became commonplace. King called federal immigration authorities. He was shocked that federal officials ignored his complaints.

Sen. Sam Zamarripa (D-Atlanta), who has been criticized by King for supporting illegal immigrants, said he understands the frustration many Americans feel toward the issue.

“Ultimately, they’re discussing economics, costs, taxes, policy related to immigration,” Zamarripa said. “But that’s not what D.A. King discusses. D.A. King has a language system that bumps up against hostility, anger, and that’s a very dangerous way to approach a discussion that’s loaded with sensitivities.”

King has spent much of this year working in Capitol hallways and committee rooms advising Rogers on his proposal, Senate Bill 529. King also testified several times on the bill, which would deny many public benefits to illegal immigrants and require employers to verify that their workers are in the country legally if they want to claim them as a business tax deduction.

When King testified before the Senate Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee, Sen. Steen Miles (D-Decatur) asked if he considered himself a supremacist. King told Miles he simply wants the federal government to enforce its immigration laws.

“I don’t know the gentleman,” Miles said in an interview later. “But the information that I have read from his Web site … tends to point in that direction.”

King believes the federal government should secure its borders to make sure no one crosses into this country illegally. He believes federal authorities should conduct periodic raids of businesses that employ illegal immigrants. Those businesses should be punished, and the illegal immigrants should be deported in accordance with existing laws, he says.

Over time, King reasons, businesses will stop hiring illegal immigrants and the workers will realize there are no jobs in the United States.

King said he realizes there would be a dramatic impact on the economy if all illegal immigrants were deported immediately, so he advocates a slow deportation. He believes American companies would adjust and start paying competitive wages and hiring legal residents, even if it means increased costs.

Last year, King founded an anti-immigration group called the Dustin Inman Society, named for the 16-year-old son of a friend killed in a hit-and-run car crash involving an illegal immigrant.

“I commend him greatly,” said Billy Inman of Woodstock, Dustin’s father. “The problem overwhelmed him and really bothered him. He don’t want to see no other kids done this way. Or nobody. ‘Cause it’s not right.”

King writes regular columns posted on Web sites and published in the Marietta Daily Journal. King often writes about the fear of “Georgiafornia,” a takeoff of the anti-illegal immigration name for California, “Mexifornia.” After attending a rally in support of illegal immigrants, he wrote in one column, “My first act on a safe return home was to take a shower.”

King is a regular contributor to VDARE.com. The Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, a civil rights organization that tracks hate groups, has dubbed VDARE.com a “hate Web site,” and noted King’s activities in a report on anti-immigrant activity in Georgia.

In response, King said the center “ran out of … nutball Klanners to go after” but needed to keep donations flowing, so its founder “turned his head towards people who insist that our immigration laws be enforced and that our borders be secured.” King noted the center has been criticized by other human rights advocates for questionable fund-raising tactics.

Zamarripa said he believes King is a shadowy “agent.” A September report, put together by several organizations including the Zamarripa-chaired Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials, details associations between King and groups such as the Federation for American Immigration Reform, Center for Immigration Studies and American Patrol.

“These organizations are not white supremacists with the sort of old-fashioned Ku Klux Klan model,” Zamarripa said in an interview. “But these organizations walk a very fine line in getting close to organizations that, historically, I associate with intolerance and bigotry.”

King contends that charges of racism against him are a desperate act to silence people who are vocal about illegal immigration.

“I say that illegal immigration is wrong, it’s bad for my country and I try to stop it,” he said. “Here comes the only weapon that they can use. They cannot use the law, they cannot use any facts, they can’t back up their argument with anything other then their last line of defense, which is charges of some kind of un-Americanism.”

King regularly organizes rallies and has shown up at day labor sites where illegal immigrants wait for work; he takes pictures and asks the men if they are in the country legally. He has complained to companies that allow Spanish as a customer service option.

King acknowledges his aggressive style.

“That is by design. I try very hard to plainly say we have a problem, it will get worse, and here’s what it is,” King said. “I have watched people sit around the elephant in the living room and talk about the wallpaper.”

In 1977, King was convicted on federal gambling charges and sentenced to two years on probation and a fine, according to documents he provided to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. King said he had worked as a bookie in Alabama for more than two years and got caught in interstate betting on sports.

He said getting punished by the feds is not his motivation for urging the government to enforce immigration laws.

“I violated the law and I deserved to be punished and I was,” King said. “But my whole life I had been taught that I am no better or no worse than anyone else. And I cannot accept the fact that there are well-connected wealthy, campaign-donating people who are profiting from federal crime and are not being punished.”

King insists he’s “just a guy” who would rather be cooking, savoring his wine collection and enjoying the company of his wife of nearly 24 years, Sue.

The price of activism has been high, King said. He said he’s blown through his savings and his grandmother’s inheritance and maxed out eight credit cards. King said he’s not sure how he will make his mortgage payment in May.

Fighting illegal immigration was not part of his plan. He and his wife had planned to buy a home in Sarasota, Fla. Sue was supposed to stop working as a travel agent, and he was supposed to sell insurance part-time.

But the fight has, however, become what King believes is his duty.

“A lot of people are quite willing to sit and assume that somebody else is going to fix it. I never would’ve guessed that I was the somebody — in my wildest dreams.”

DONALD ARTHUR “D.A.” KING

> Age: 53

> Lives in: Cobb County, near Marietta

> Quit his job in 2003 to work full time as an activist against illegal immigration.

> Former independent insurance agent and U.S. Marine Corps corporal

> Founder, the Dustin Inman Society, the American Resistance (anti-illegal immigration groups)

> Birthplace: Rapid City, S.D.

> Reared in: Montgomery, northern Michigan and the suburbs of Detroit

> Family: Wife, Sue, married more than 23 years

Read the complete article.

Fair Use: This site contains copyrighted material, the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of issues related to mass immigration. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information, see: www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode17/usc_sec_17_00000107—-000-.html.
In order to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

287 g in another American county – illegal alien lobby not happy because they know: ENFORCEMENT WORKS

Posted by D.A. King at 5:43 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

WXII-TV — Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Guilford to join deportation program

The Guilford County Sheriff’s Office will begin participating in a federal initiative to identify, apprehend and deport illegal immigrants this spring. — Sheriff BJ Barnes said his office is scheduled to begin taking part in the 287(g) program through U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in April…

HERE

Obama poised to give insurance to illegals

Posted by D.A. King at 3:34 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

WorldNetDaily.com

Obama poised to give insurance to illegals

Shortly after taking office, President Obama is expected to sign a bill that could give health insurance to illegal aliens and children from middle-class families that make more than $61,000 per year. — Last week, the House voted 289-139 to expand HR 3963, the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP…

HERE

Paul Nachman, a DIS supporter tell it like it is in a LTE to a Montana newspaper

Posted by D.A. King at 1:28 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Helena (Mont.) Independent- Record
January 13, 2009

The drip, drip, drip of layoffs in Montana — Semitool is laying off 200 in Kalispell and Libby, after jettisoning 100 in November — is echoed by the torrent of job losses nationwide. Employers eliminated more than 500,000 jobs in both November and December.

Meanwhile, month after month, our government, via legal immigration, lets nearly 140,000 new foreign workers per month flood in and compete with struggling American citizens. Surely Congress is aware of this and is about to fix it, right?

Nope. Instead, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has been telling reporters that he wants to amnesty 11 to 19 million illegal aliens and — amazingly — greatly increase the number of foreign workers legally entering the country. Reid has introduced a bill, S9, for the purpose.

Citizen outrage stopped amnesty in 2006 and 2007, crashing the Senate’s switchboard in the latter case. Now citizens need to step up again to quash Reid’s new, expanded nonsense. This means telling Senators Baucus and Tester: “No amnesty. No increases in legal immigration. No way!” Best bet: Phone their Washington offices (202-224-2651 and 202-224-2644) and tell them that, with the economy and employment plummeting, drastic decreases in immigration are mandatory.

Paul Nachman
Bozeman, Mont.

Obama quotes on illegal immigration, amnesty and illegals

Posted by D.A. King at 1:15 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

President Barack Obama on Immigration – so there is no confusion about where the new president stands on amnesty and rewarding illegal aliens.

Quotes from Obama HERE

Obama rates 8% ( out of 100) by USBC, indicating an open-border stance. His U.S. Senate voting record on immigration HERE from NumbersUSA.com

January 19, 2009

Bush finally commutes sentences of Ramos and Compean

Posted by D.A. King at 10:48 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

Ramos Compean blogspotMonday, January 19, 2009

Bush finally commutes sentences of Ramos and Compean

With less than 24 hours left in his presidency, George W. Bush at last granted clemency to two former Border Patrol agents, Jose Compean and Ignacio Ramos. The two had received lengthy prison sentences after being convicted of shooting a fleeing Mexican drug dealer.

Clemency for the two former agents was a major goal of USBC and attracted considerable support among all advocates of tougher border security, who had repeatedly argued that the agents were just doing their jobs.

A large number of senators and representatives, both Republicans and Democrats, had supported clemency for the two men. A Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in 2007 emphasized that the drug dealer had crossed the United States-Mexican border illegally and drove a van containing 743 pounds of marijuana worth almost $1 million.

The commutation granted by President Bush means the prison sentences of Ramos and Compean, both from El Paso, Texas, will expire on March 20, but leaves intact the three years of post-imprisonment probation and fines of $2,000 each. Both had been in prison since early 2007. Much of that time was spent in solitary confinement, which was said necessary to protect the former law enforcement agents from other inmates.

Bush commuted the sentences before he received a recommendation from the Justice Department’s pardon attorney. “The Office of the Pardon Attorney was still in the process of reviewing the clemency requests from Compean and Ramos at the time these commutations were granted,” a Justice official says.

In fact, the Justice Department was still reviewing the applications and had not made a recommendation to the White House.

HERE

« Previous PageNext Page »