Posted on 07/29/2008 9:53:55 PM PDT by GATOR NAVY
US VISIT needs fixing an opportunity for McCain.
Sen. John McCain, the Republican presidential hopeful, says he has learned his lesson on immigration. His vision of a comprehensive reform in which at least some illegal aliens would be rewarded with legal status must, he now knows, await major deposits in the credibility bank by a government Americans do not trust to enforce the law. He says its time to get serious, and that the way to do that is Border Enforcement First.
Unfortunately, thats not very serious.
Long before September 11, 2001, the government well knew that smuggling across the border from Mexico or Canada is not the preferred route for millions of illegals. Instead, these aliens first enter by simply walking through a port of entry inside our country thanks to one of the various kinds of American government-issued visas visas whose terms those aliens then overstay or otherwise violate. Indeed, some reputable studies put the visa-overstay figure at upwards of 40 percent of the illegal-alien population.
That aside, we now know that all the 9/11 terrorists entered with visas. So have several other foreign terrorists, Ramzi Yousef and Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman of 1993 World Trade Center bombing infamy being but two examples.
After 9/11, Congress and the executive branch finally decided it was time to make better use of electronic technology to track who enters and departs or, more to the point, fails to depart. US VISIT, the shorthand name for the United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology system, is the post-9/11 computerized biometric database established toward that end.
The entry part of US VISIT began to come on line, in fits and starts, circa 2004. It tracks the entrance of many, though not all, foreign nationals who enter the United States through ports of entry. (Most Canadians and Mexicans, diplomats, and certain others are exempt.)
But US VISITs all important exit part has never been implemented.
The system basically works this way. When aliens present themselves at a port of entry, an inspector from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (or CBP, an agency of the Department of Homeland Security) queries each persons identity, documents, and fingerprints in the computerized lookout system that cross-references numerous law-enforcement, terrorism, and security databases. The document information, photographs, and fingerprints are digitized and entered into the US VISIT database along with a record of the aliens entry.
Eventually, the entry tracking capabilities of US VISIT evolved to the point where things work fairly well. It took several years to get there, equipment, policy, funding, and training issues being what they were. The system initially utilized only a two-fingerprint process. It took until 2007 for DHS to begin shifting to a full ten-fingerprint system to match the FBIs database. That transition is still in progress and the results are yet to be fully evaluated.
Nevertheless, as noted above, the departure control half of US VISIT was never implemented (beyond a few pilot test sites at seaports). Departure control is a critical aspect of the system. It is the part of the equation that would give us a firm read on which aliens have overstayed their visas and thus should not be in our country.
To put it mildly, efforts to establish departure tracking have been lackluster. Although the 2004 Intelligence Reform Act ostensibly required departure control, it provided no deadline for implementation. Frustrated by the predictable inaction and mindful of the public mood, Congress finally provided an impetus: It linked implementation of departure control by June 2009 to the Bush administrations controversial request to expand the Visa Waiver program.
(Continued at link)
From later in the article:
The obvious question is: Does DHS really want the exit system to work?...Perhaps because once overstay violators were identified in black-and-white, (a) Americans would have a concrete, easily understood metric of how many illegal aliens are actually in the United States and, thus, could judge for themselves how effective governments enforcement efforts actually are; (b) DHS would have to do something about it.
McCain isn’t serious about ‘Enforcement First’.
His idea of ‘Enforcement First’ is to have Open-Border supporting Governors ‘Certify’ the borders are secure.
His hope is enough people are stupid enough to accept this and then he can ram through his amnesty with the help of other RINO congressmen and the Democrats
You won't get any argument from me. I think the authors were giving him the (undeserved) benefit of the doubt.
Sen. John McCain, the Republican presidential hopeful, says he has learned his lesson on immigration. His vision of a comprehensive reform in which at least some illegal aliens would be rewarded with legal status must, he now knows, await major deposits in the credibility bank by a government Americans do not trust to enforce the law. He says its time to get serious, and that the way to do that is Border Enforcement First.
“he now knows?” “HE NOW KNOWS???”
AGGHHHHHH Would someone PLEASE call this idiot on this!!!! Nothing burns me up more than hearing this over and over again.
I’m sick to death of him getting away with this statement confirming that WE have told him that AMNESTY is ok as long as the border is enforced first. It’s such B.S. and he dang well KNOWS IT!!!
EFFECTIVE BORDER SECURITY FIRST and NO AMNESTY OF ANY KIND FOR ANY ILLLEGA ALIENS.
Was that before or after he showed up at La Raza's conference to denounce his conservative supporters (again) and pander to his fellow illegal lovers?
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