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To: doc30
In this case USCIS wanted to deport her, but still needed a judge's order.

Who issued the order to remove her frome the country? Also If you can, please tell me which laws, as a legal citizen, I am allowed to ignore. One last question, if Sascha Herrera is so intent on becoming a U.S. citizen, why doesn't she feel the need to assimilate and take her husbands last name? Something like Sascha Thompson or Sascha Herrera-Thompson? I'll bet she never leaves Senator out when speaking of her husband!

...Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers arrived at her home Nov. 28 with an order to remove her from the U.S. ...

The deportation order stems from Herrera's repeated failure to appear before a judge on the asylum application...

108 posted on 12/05/2006 7:43:51 AM PST by ConservaTexan (February 6, 1911)
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To: ConservaTexan

"The deportation order stems from Herrera's repeated failure to appear before a judge on the asylum application..."

The one she claimns she never received.

I'm gonna' give her the benefit of the doubt. Why go to the trouble of a making a phoney application with a phoney notario using a fake address, and then not appear for the hearings.

That makes no sense whatsoever.


145 posted on 12/05/2006 8:07:17 AM PST by angkor
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To: ConservaTexan
Who issued the order to remove her frome the country? Also If you can, please tell me which laws, as a legal citizen, I am allowed to ignore. One last question, if Sascha Herrera is so intent on becoming a U.S. citizen, why doesn't she feel the need to assimilate and take her husbands last name? Something like Sascha Thompson or Sascha Herrera-Thompson? I'll bet she never leaves Senator out when speaking of her husband!

...Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers arrived at her home Nov. 28 with an order to remove her from the U.S. ...

The deportation order stems from Herrera's repeated failure to appear before a judge on the asylum application...

For your first question, she is entitled to due process under the law. TO deport someone, you need an order to appear. And you are entitled to appeal a deportation order.

Secondly, what does changing her last name have to do with the price of tea in China? I know many people, immigrant and U.S. Citizen that do not change their surnames for a variety of practical reasons. That's their business, not your or mine. It is not a legal requirement and it is irrelevant to this case. And she did the proper thing by turning herself in. Botched paperwork, the root cause of this situation, is not something anyone with common sense would hold against someone. I don't see any wrongdoing here. What would you do if you believed you were doing everything properly in a complex legal situation and then found out everything was a mess and your future and your family were on a precipice as a result?

190 posted on 12/05/2006 9:23:08 AM PST by doc30 (Democrats are to morals what an Etch-A-Sketch is to Art.)
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