To: King of Florida
There is something very wrong with the picture you are attempting to paint, but don't let me stop you from painting that picture. I'm certain there were laws broken, otherwise this event would not be receiving this type of uproar. Is the OBL now wanting to use any excuse to justify someone or others breaking the law? A judge and law enforcement are not normally involved if the law was upheld. But as I said please continue to paint the picture for someone who has seen the system up close and personal and whose son has been through the process, maybe my daughter-in-law isn't legal....LOL /s
137 posted on
12/05/2006 8:03:06 AM PST by
From One - Many
(Trust the Old Media At Your Own Risk)
To: From One - Many
I'm certain there were laws brokenWell, it wasn't the wife who broke them. As the judge himself indicated at the hearing this morning, it was the notario who should be prosecuted. And for the umpteenth time, remaining here after marriage and applying for AOS is not a violation of the law, as long as you didn't enter the country with the intent of entering into that marriage (and remaining here permanently).
I have been far more "up close and personal" than you -- I have personally been through this process, filing all of the paperwork myself -- I didn't witness it through a relative.
149 posted on
12/05/2006 8:15:13 AM PST by
King of Florida
(A little government and a little luck are necessary in life, but only a fool trusts either of them.)
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