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  1. #12
    LuvBigRip's Avatar
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    I wonder how many soldiers wives have broken the law since husbands have been activated. I wonder how many husbands have broken the law since their wives were activated. I wonder if the laws are not being applied to them. While I am sympathetic towards this woman for the pain and suffering she is going through while her husbands whereabouts are unknown, the point is she is a criminal. The laws need to be applied to her same as to any other spouse of military personell who are deployed. The only reason it isn't is because of the backing of so many pro-illegal groups.
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  3. #13

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    I will probably get flamed for this but I think illegal spouses (im not talking about stealing something but just being here illegally) should get special treatment. The men and women in the militairy are there by CHOICE. There was no draft to make them go so I think their spouses should get more favorable results when it comes to Legalizing them.

  4. #14
    LuvBigRip's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by freeby4me View Post
    I will probably get flamed for this but I think illegal spouses (im not talking about stealing something but just being here illegally) should get special treatment. The men and women in the militairy are there by CHOICE. There was no draft to make them go so I think their spouses should get more favorable results when it comes to Legalizing them.
    And if we do this, you think the coyotes will not try to capitalize on this? Have some young military guys marrying for green cards for dollars (this already happens) But if we allow for special rules, it will only exacerbate a problem, create a new market for the trade in human flesh. Personally, I think military and law enforcenment should be held to a HIGHER standard.
    The oil is all in Texas, but the dipsticks are in D.C.

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    Years ago people became legal by marrying american citizens. There were companies making money for the arrangements. People would land at an airport and be whisked away to a judge to be married to virtual strangers. Once they were married they did not always stay together since their motive was just to be legal. It took a while for this country to open it's eyes but eventually they did and put an end to this operation.

    Of course there are still many problems. Some illegals have been known to make sure they give birth here so that they can ask not to be separated from their american born children who are american citizens. Of course I will not buy their tears about having to be separated and deported back to their country of origin while leaving their children here. There is no law that states that their children cannot leave the country with their parents. We should have a law such as France where guess/visitors/illegals's children born there are not French citizens - they are citizens of their parents country.

    I can sympathize with this illegal wife of a service man but the fact remains that she is illegal and has committed a crime. If a military wife stole from a bank, should a judge postpone her jail term until her husband can be found (hopefully alive)?

    As far as military enlistees goes there are many reasons why people enlist. Some will tell you that they want to protect their country....some will tell you that they like the opportunity to learn a trade....some will mention that it is the only way they will be able to get a college education......some will even say that it's the only way for them to find employment and support their family.....and it can also be a combination of all the above plus many other reasons.

    Now I have a question: How can this country allow people to get married knowing that one of the people is illegal?

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    As sad as this whole thing is, this woman is still an illegal immigrant. If i went and did something illegal i would not expect special treatment because my husband is in the military and over seas. Laws are laws, there shouldn't be special cases. And i agree that if they did allow this woman legal statis then it would create a whole new way for illegals to come here.

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by stephanyb View Post
    As sad as this whole thing is, this woman is still an illegal immigrant. If i went and did something illegal i would not expect special treatment because my husband is in the military and over seas. Laws are laws, there shouldn't be special cases. And i agree that if they did allow this woman legal statis then it would create a whole new way for illegals to come here.
    I agree. She shouldn't be given special treatment.

  8. #18
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    Jimenez family attorney Matthew Kolken, reached briefly at his Buffalo, N.Y., office, said Kerry's letter won't change his client's legal status, but "that letter is very good in that they (authorities) have it in their power to make a motion in her case" to reopen the proceedings.

    Another immigration attorney said only an act of Congress would ensure the wife's legal status in the United States. "Unless Congress passes a private bill on her behalf, she is subject to deportation,"
    It happens more often then you may think ... and frankly I'd rather they assist someone like Yaderlin Jimenez than some of the scum bags mentioned in the article below ....


    On Monday, I reported on how Congress gives special relief to convicted murderers, smugglers, and other alien law-breakers through private claims bills that sabotage deportation efforts.

    Today in my syndicated newspaper column, I report on another aspect of the deportation abyss--the endless appeals process and immigration litigation lottery played by deportable aliens and their open-borders lawyers.

    As you follow the debate over the Bush-Kennedy immigration bill, keep this cardinal rule in mind: 99.99 percent of the lawmakers who promise you that they'll ensure the deportation of anyone who doesn't follow their new "guest-worker" regulations are either A) lying or B) completely clueless.

    Rule No. 2: Anyone who plays the Enforcement equalsKicking-Down-Doors-And-Depriving-Babies-of-Mother's-Milk card (yes, that's you, Geraldo Rivera) is either A) lying or B) completely clueless.

    As I've reported many times over the last several years, the nation's deportation abyss is governed by one reality: "It ain't over 'til the alien wins." Immigration lawyers and ethnic activists run a massive, lucrative industry whose sole objective is to help illegal aliens and convicted criminal visa holders evade deportation for as long as possible. Entry into this country should be a privilege, not a right. The open borders lobby has turned that principle on its head.

    It ain't over 'til the alien wins
    By Michelle Malkin


    As you follow the debate over the Bush-Kennedy immigration bill, keep this cardinal rule in mind: 99.99 percent of the lawmakers who promise you that they'll ensure the deportation of anyone who doesn't follow their new "guest-worker" regulations are either A) lying or B) completely clueless.

    Rule No. 2: Anyone who plays the Enforcement equals Kicking-Down-Doors-And-Depriving-Babies-of-Mother's-Milk card (yes, that's you, Geraldo Rivera) is either A) lying or B) completely clueless.

    As I've reported many times over the last several years, the nation's deportation abyss is governed by one reality: "It ain't over 'til the alien wins." Immigration lawyers and ethnic activists run a massive, lucrative industry whose sole objective is to help illegal aliens and convicted criminal visa holders evade deportation for as long as possible. Entry into this country should be a privilege, not a right. The open borders lobby has turned that principle on its head.


    Look no further than New York, where four convicted criminal aliens — a child molester, two killers and a racketeer — just won a federal lawsuit to remain in the country after all being ordered deported. The stunning decision from the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, Blake v. Carbone, came down on June 1 as the shamnesty debate was bubbling in Washington. The ruling, which hinges on convoluted due process arguments, will greatly expand the number of criminal aliens convicted of certain aggravated felonies who can now receive relief from deportation. This is happening despite the passage of two federal immigration reform laws in 1996 severely restricting deportation waivers for criminal aliens convicted of aggravated felonies.


    The lead winning plaintiff, Leroy Blake, is a Jamaican national convicted of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor in 1992. The feds began deportation proceedings in 1999. An immigration judge ruled Blake deportable in 2000. Blake took his case to the federal Board of Immigration Appeals, which remanded the case back to the immigration judge, who granted him relief from deportation. The then-INS appealed the judge's ruling. In 2005, the Board of Immigration Appeals sided with the INS and ordered Blake removed from the U.S. Blake filed a motion to reconsider, then took his case to the Second Circuit.

    The other plaintiffs who've successfully gamed the system include:

    Aundre Singh, a native of Guyana, who was convicted of second-degree murder in 1986. In 1997, the then-INS moved to deport him. In 1998, an immigration judge ordered him deported. In 1999, the Board of Immigration Appeals dismissed Singh's appeal. In 2003, Singh filed a motion to reconsider, which the appeals board denied. Singh filed for reconsideration of that ruling, which was denied in 2004. Singh tried again to appeal the board's ruling in 2005 and was denied again before heading to the Second Circuit for relief.

    Errol Foster, a Jamaican national, who killed a man with a pistol in 1990. He pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter. He was released from prison in 2002. The feds began deportation proceedings while he was still in custody. An immigration judge ordered his removal in 2000, which Foster appealed. The Board of Immigration Appeals rejected his appeal in 2001. Four years later, Foster was still in the country — appealing the rejected appeal and filing three separate federal lawsuits before getting lucky with the Second Circuit.

    And Ho Yoon Chong, a South Korean national, who was sentenced in 1995 for racketeering related to his participation in the "Korean Fuk Ching" crime ring. In 1998, the then-INS moved to deport him. In 2002, an immigration judge ordered him deported. In 2004, the Board of Immigration Appeals sided with the judge. Like his fellow criminal aliens, Chong didn't give up, and now he's won the immigration litigation lottery.

    Immigration lawyers representing criminal aliens like these four menaces have gummed up the court system with 11 years of litigation over the 1996 laws banning deportation relief for felons. Meanwhile, when all else fails, deportable aliens can appeal directly to their member of Congress to circumvent immigration laws through special legislation. More than 50 bills have been introduced this year that would grant special, private relief to individual immigrants fighting deportation. Past and present beneficiaries have included smugglers, illegal aliens and a convicted murderer, Mohuiddin A.K.M. Ahmed, who is wanted in Bangladesh for engaging in terrorist activity and participating in a 1975 assassination plot that left the prime minister and dozens of his family members dead.


    These individual bills are ripe for corruption. Indeed, the Abscam scandal in the 1970s involved payoffs for the sponsorship of exactly these kind of private immigration laws. Democrats and Republicans alike continue to sponsor these "private relief" bills seeking to sabotage deportation efforts. Every time a private relief bill passes, the number of available visas for that year is reduced by the number of illegal alien/deportable immigrant recipients granted legal status/deportation relief through the special legislation. The bills needn't pass for the recipients to gain benefits. Mere introduction of the bills buys the deportable aliens time that ordinary, law-abiding citizens can't buy in our court system.

    Open-borders Democrats led by Ted Kennedy bleat about the lack of "due process" for downtrodden aliens, but immigration lawyers and their clients know the deal. Whether the Bush-Kennedy bill passes or not, it ain't over 'til the alien wins.

    This is the real "silent amnesty" that no one in Washington will talk about. Go ahead. Ask them.

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  9. #19
    LuvBigRip's Avatar
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    BOSTON - A woman whose soldier husband is missing in Iraq has gotten her green card after authorities threatened to deport her for entering the U.S. illegally.

    Yaderlin Hiraldo Jimenez walked out of a Citizenship and Immigration Services office in Buffalo, N.Y., on Friday with her permanent residency papers, her lawyer said.

    “She was moved to tears,” attorney Matthew Kolken, who accompanied his client, told The Boston Globe for Sunday’s editions.

    “Her immigration problems have been solved in their entirety and now her focus is completely dedicated to her hope and desire that she’s going to see her husband again,” Kolken said.

    Army Spec. Alex Jimenez, of Lawrence, Mass., has been missing since his unit was attacked in Iraq on May 12.

    Woman was smuggled into U.S.
    His wife illegally entered the U.S. from the Dominican Republic in June 2001, paying $500 to a smuggler and walking three days from Mexico to California. The couple were married in 2004.

    Jimenez’s request for a green card and legal residence status for his wife alerted authorities to her situation.

    She has been living in Pennsylvania and had been facing deportation but an immigration judge put a temporary stop to the proceedings after Jimenez was reported missing.

    DHS ends deportation process
    last month, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said his agency would end the deportation case. He said in a letter to Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., that “the sacrifices made by our soldiers and their families deserve our greatest respect.”

    Kolken said his client hopes to apply for citizenship and to attend college.

    “She commented about how much she loved this country,” Kolken said.

    On Friday, the Pentagon changed the status of Jimenez and a comrade, Pvt. Byron Fouty, 19, of Waterford, Mich., from “whereabouts unknown” to “missing/captured.”

    The change reflects an official determination that the two were seized by hostile forces, but it does not mean the military has gained any new information about their whereabouts.

    An Iraqi insurgent group claimed in a video posted on the Internet last month that the missing soldiers were killed and buried, but offered no proof they were dead.

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19536767/
    The oil is all in Texas, but the dipsticks are in D.C.

  10. #20
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    I feel for her and the fact that her hubby is MIA but I still don't think she should have been rewarded for breaking the law
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