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To: brytlea
This is what happened to the ilelgals:

1. The Mexican illegals that refused to testify in court against the executives were removed to Mexico, and yes, some went back to Mexico, contrary to what the MSM is reporting.

2. The Mexican illegals that agreed to testify in court (they were most likely promised resident alien cards) were paroled into the US and allowed to legally work until the court date.

3. The non-Mexican illegals that refused to testify in court against the executives were removed either detained for removal or, if detention was not possible, paroled into the US until their deportation hearing. This is called due process. Yes, they may not show up for that hearing, but next time they get caught it's a felony and they sit in jail until a deportation hearing.

4. The non-Mexican illegals that agreed to testify in court (they were most likely promised resident alien cards) were paroled into the US and allowed to legally work until the court date.
67 posted on 04/20/2006 1:17:28 PM PDT by Marine Inspector (Government is not the solution to our problem; Government is the problem)
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To: Marine Inspector

Why are Mexican and non-Mexican illegals treated differently?
And, I suppose they are going to give amnesty to those who will testify. Sheesh.
susie


69 posted on 04/20/2006 1:21:40 PM PDT by brytlea (amnesty--an act of clemency by an authority by which pardon is granted esp. to a group of individual)
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To: Marine Inspector
I respect what the rank and file at ICE and CBP do but I have little faith in the sincerity of their leadership.

I've seen quite a few of your posts saying essentially that enforcement actions take a long time and that we are not going to see raids every day. I believe to quote you from another thread it was "It's not going to happen".

Referring to the statistics in Post #38, what has changed? The way I read those statistics back in the mid-1990s there was not just one enforcement action every day but literally dozens.

I think ICE has more manpower and is spending more money now than they were in the 90's. Why can't we have dozens of enforcement actions every day?

84 posted on 04/20/2006 2:14:33 PM PDT by jackbenimble (Import the third world, become the third world)
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To: Marine Inspector

This is what happened to the ilelgals:

1. The Mexican illegals that refused to testify in court against the executives were removed to Mexico, and yes, some went back to Mexico, contrary to what the MSM is reporting.

2. The Mexican illegals that agreed to testify in court (they were most likely promised resident alien cards) were paroled into the US and allowed to legally work until the court date.

3. The non-Mexican illegals that refused to testify in court against the executives were removed either detained for removal or, if detention was not possible, paroled into the US until their deportation hearing. This is called due process. Yes, they may not show up for that hearing, but next time they get caught it's a felony and they sit in jail until a deportation hearing.

4. The non-Mexican illegals that agreed to testify in court (they were most likely promised resident alien cards) were paroled into the US and allowed to legally work until the court date.


This sounds more comforting than the reports of "catch and release" style "for-show" arrests -- but, I find #3 to be more than a little bit troubling. The idea of releasing highly probable flight-risks on their own recognizance is just plain braindead.
116 posted on 04/20/2006 10:58:40 PM PDT by Don Joe (We've traded the Rule of Law for the Law of Rule.)
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