Comrades, the High Commissars do not want the filthy evil rich to flee the USSA.
Crossing the Ohio River might be like that in a decade or two.
And this case ...
Veteran accused of passport fraud freed days ahead of trial
By Greg Botelho
7/8/11
A Navy veteran was freed from a federal detention center Friday, giving him four days of freedom before the start of his trial for allegedly lying on his passport application.
Former Petty Officer 2nd Class Elisha Leo Dawkins has been behind bars since April, having been detained nine days after returning from a stint in Cuba working as a military photographer.
He could get 10 years in prison if convicted of lying five years ago on a passport application, as federal prosecutors contend. But his attorney, Clark Mervis, has told CNN that his client’s actions were understandable and innocent.
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A hearing was held in a federal court Friday, at which the government agreed to reduce Dawkins’ bond to effectively nothing and paved the way for his release, said Annette Castillo of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami.
The government went along with a bond reduction after the Department of Homeland Security lifted an immigration detainer against Dawkins, Castillo explained by e-mail.
The grand jury indictment claims that Dawkins “did knowingly and willfully make a false statement” on an April 2006 passport application completed in Miami-Dade County. Specifically, Dawkins said that he had never before requested a U.S. passport, “when in truth ... and as the defendant ... knew, he had previously applied,” according to the indictment.
“Flash” Gordon Schwartz, a former Navy pilot, said that his friend Dawkins started filling out a passport application in 2004 but didn’t finish it. When he filled out another application two years later, Dawkins checked “no” next to the question about whether he’d completed an application previously — assuming that was the right answer, since his previous attempt wasn’t complete.
He got the passport. But five years later, in March, a warrant was issued for Dawkins’ arrest — at the same time he was at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, working as a military photographer, according to Schwartz. He returned to the United States on April 10, and was detained nine days later, said Dianne Rinehardt, a veteran who met him while both were in nursing school.
Schwartz, who is a Jacksonville accountant and also has Dawkins’ power of attorney, said Friday that his friend is happy to be free and is looking forward to his day in court.
“You have a dedicated young man, who is dedicated to the United States,” said Schwartz, noting he talked with his friend after his release. “He just wants to clear his name.”
Dawkins’ determination is so firm, according to his friend who is also his power of attorney, that he turned down an offer from the U.S. Attorney’s office to drop the charges once he completed a supervised pretrial diversion program.
Schwartz said that he plans to testify on his friend’s behalf as a character witness, as will some of Dawkins’ former “direct supervisors in the military.”
In recent weeks, Dawkins’ case has gained national attention with friends, politicians, past colleagues and strangers among the hundreds supporting a man who joined the U.S. Army upon graduating from high school. He served a tour in Iraq, and then joined the Navy in part so he could attend nursing school and re-enlist, Schwartz said.
A document, provided to CNN by Schwartz as authorized by U.S. Navy Vice Adm. M.E. Ferguson III, indicates that Dawkins had secret clearance while at Guantanamo. In an evaluation report, one superior lauds Dawkins as “a team player ... with a strong work ethic and desire to learn” and recommends him for promotion.
Try renouncing your U.S. citizenship if you should so desire.
You end up with a bill from the IRS for the next decade of taxes on income that you would have made in their opinion, had you not done so.
How about having our President fill out the new State Department form?
Ironic....
Oh and it’s even worse than you think. I had a friend who owed about $300 in back taxes and he couldn’t get a passport. I’ve known several people to send in for passports to have them delayed or rejected for the silliest of reasons. A couple applications were even “lost.”
The American police state is in full swing. And if you think in about 5-10 years it will be easy to leave ... think again.
I used to be able to go into Canada or Mexico and back with no more than a driver’s license.
Dark days ahead, my friends. Very dark days.
I once got drunk with the French Border guards and gave them a bottle of Jack Daniels that I was carrying for such emergencies so that me and 4 other Army personnel and 2 young, French Army drivers could clear the border.
It recently occurred to me that bringing the bottle of Jack across borders in the mid 1980s could have been violating some law, is that likely?
I remember back in 1983, soon after KAL-007 was shot down by the Soviet Union, I asked this question just for “sh@#$ & giggles.” I just started 11th grade. I asked, “What if, one day, the US became the USSR and the USSR became the US?” I added, “what if we ever became the Evil Empire?” Looks like my little thought experiment might give me an answers soon if this keeps up. With the TSA and now this, I think the terrorists have won. B-(
It’s been like this for us here in Michigan for a generation or three.
But now that MI is totally a red state for now at the state level the rats are powerless, and many things are looking better.
Like a balanced budget, on time for the time in 4 decades, little stuff like that.
This is the same government that can’t stop illiterate Mexicans from crossing over by the hundreds of thousands every year. If it ever gets so bad you need to flee the country, you’ll find a way to get out. Just make sure the financial move is staged properly and you have a trustworthy agent on the other side to empty the receiving accounts immediately after transfer.
*cracks knuckles*
“In the US, the government now requires all citizens to have a passport in order to pass the border, even when driving into Mexico or Canada. Obtaining a passport, however, is neither free nor guaranteed. You must apply, pay an ever-increasing fee, and wait for weeks to be approved and receive it. “
You should not be required to provide a passport to leave. The only thing they should be doing for people leaving is making sure they are not wanted criminals.
Is this article a joke?
What if you do not have the info to the questions?