Posted on 08/10/2004 6:04:26 PM PDT by neverdem
WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 Citing concerns about terrorists crossing the nation's land borders, the Department of Homeland Security announced today that it planned to give border patrol agents sweeping new powers to deport illegal aliens from the frontiers abutting Mexico and Canada without providing the aliens the opportunity to make their case before an immigration judge.
The move, which will take effect this month, represents a broad expansion of the authority of the thousands of law enforcement agents who currently patrol the nation's borders. Until now, border patrol agents typically delivered undocumented immigrants to the custody of the immigration courts, where judges determined whether they should be deported or remain in the United States.
Homeland Security officials described the immigration courts which hear pleas for asylum and other appeals to remain in the country as sluggish and cumbersome, saying illegal immigrants often wait more than a year before being deported, straining the capacity of detention centers and draining critical resources. Under the new system, immigrants will typically be deported within eight days of their apprehension, officials said.
Immigration legislation passed in 1996 allows the immigration service to deport certain groups of illegal aliens without judicial oversight, but until now the agency only permitted officials at the nation's airports and seaports to do so. The new rule will apply to illegal aliens caught within 100 miles of the Mexican and Canadian borders who have spent 14 days or less within the United States. The border agents will focus on deporting third-country nationals, rather than Mexicans or Canadians, and they are expected to begin exercising their new powers on Aug. 24 in Tucson and Laredo, Tex.
"There is a concern that as we tighten the security of our ports of entry through our biometric checks that there will be more opportunity or more effort made by terrorists to enter our country through our vast land borders," Asa Hutchinson, the undersecretary for border security at the Department of Homeland Security, said at a news conference.
"We recognize that we have to secure those and that's the president's first principle of immigration reform," Mr. Hutchinson said. "America must secure its borders and this is a part of that effort."
The decision was hailed by officials who have long complained that the nation's porous borders represent a serious threat to national security. But it prompted a flurry of criticism from advocates for immigrants who warned that the new system lacked adequate safeguards to ensure that people fleeing persecution, American citizens lacking paperwork or other travelers with legitimate grounds would not be improperly deported.
Mr. Hutchinson said that border agents would be trained on asylum law and that immigrants who demonstrated a credible fear of persecution would be sent to see immigrant judges, not returned to hostile governments. "That right," he said of the right to apply for asylum, "is very important."
But Homeland Security officials provided little details about the training, and advocates said that they feared that mistakes would be made when border agents decide who will be deported and who will not, often in the vast, inhospitable plains of the southern deserts.
And now, in the "For What It's Worth" department...
There are changes here on the border, but it's looking like too little, too late. Time - and lost lives - will tell.
I wonder if the ACLU will require the painting of a broad green line 100 miles from the border to indicate where the "get home free" zone starts?
" Bush is in Vicente Fox's back pocket "
According to the AP your post is hyperbole and... can we get a quote on your views of the Catholic Church?
Remember the Alamo!
Let's hope they're finally getting serious, but I'll believe it when I see it.
It looks as if terrorists make it past the 14 day deadline, they are free to bomb you on the 15th day.
Union members who assume that people will pay them $35 an hour to do the jobs that immigrants are doing for $8 an hour are living in the past when our living standards were lower and they could coerce employers into paying exorbitant wages. But times have changed. Consumers will simply cut back on non necessary expenditures and postpone buying a new car or house rather than pay twice the price.
Without increasing immigrant labor our economy would contract, new factories would be built overseas and our living standard would drop. You should be thankful that you are living in the greatest period of economic prosperity in history.
If you are just sitting around waiting for the government to take a job away from an immigrant and give it to you, you're going to be waiting a long time.
Suddenly -- Three months till the election '04 -- Homeland Security has "concerns about terrorists crossing the nation's land border"??
Are these people aware yet that Pearl Harbor has been attacked?
Ping.
Well, isn't that nice.
Consider your soul, bayourod, if not your freedom.
Since you have no real respect for law as a societal concept, why do you expect anyone else to abide only by the ones you approve and profit from?
Perhaps the ones I am inclined to ignore are ones that profit myself, and might tend to cause you great harm.
Since we are both seemingly free to ignore the laws of society,in your opinion, it seems you advocate anarchy.
Be carefull what you wish for, you might actually get it.
And if you're 101 miles from the border, you're home free.
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This may seem like a step in the right direction but what it actually does is take away punishment for illegally crossing the border. Instead of spending time in jail they will be expedited to their country of origin. We already have something like this in place for illegals returning after deportation. Prior deports used to spend time incarcerated. Now they get no jail time unless there are mitigating factors like having numerous felonies.
Ping
That's a great idea. Talk about a dilemma for the goverment though, more money vs. enforcing immigration laws. Something tells me they might go for the money.
That statement right there would leave out the 29 illegals found in an 18 wheeler in Fort Worth just this past week. One hundred miles leaves out any that get to my city!!
So the little 'shack cities' will start developing 100 miles from the borders now.
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