This Luviano character is a real piece of work.
Mr. Luviano got his green card by a combination of luck and guile... he was on a short trip to visit his brother in California when the 1986 [amnesty] immigration law went into effect ...
... he qualified when a farmer wrote a letter avowing he had worked for months in his fields [he hadn't worked in the fields] ... Once he had his papers he returned to Tlalchapa.
He has entered the U.S. several times since then, mostly to renew his green card.
... in the early 1990's, concerned that long absences could put his green card at risk and spurred by the chance to make a little extra money, he lent his Social Security number to his brother's friend. "I kept almost all the income tax refund," Luviano said.
Luviano decided to pull the plug on the arrangement, however, when bills for purchases he had not made started arriving in his name at his brother's address. "You lend your number in good faith and you can get yourself in trouble," he said.
But Luviano is itching to do it again anyway. He knows that Social Security could provide retirement income down the line. And there's always the tax refund. "I haven't profited as much as I could from those documents," he said ruefully.
Wow a full confession.