When Illegal Immigrants Attack
Debbie Hamilton at Right Truth on Mar 26 2008 at 12:47 pm | Filed under: Illegal Immigration
A Lake County Sheriff’s Deputy is recovering after being ambushed while making an arrest. Notice that the report waits until the last sentence to acknowledge two of the attackers were illegal aliens. Lake County Deputy Attacked by Mob
[Lake County Deputy Cliff] McMikeenamy chased the suspect down and attempted to subdue him with a taser gun but before the deputy could secure the man, about a dozen other men attacked the deputy. “As he was securing the subject with his handcuffs, several other people here at the residence began attacking him. They struck him repeatedly, began kicking him, and his injuries lead us to believe that one subject even struck him over the head with a beer bottle,” said Sergeant John Herrell from the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.Deputy McMikeenamy was transported to a Florida Hospital Waterman in Eustis and treated for cuts and bruises.
At least two men were taken into custody. Authorities say the two who were apprehended have been identified as illegal immigrants. (more)
Yep, illegal aliens attack along with some legal residents. Ship the illegals home. Seems the only way we can fine, arrest and deport illegals is when they attack or kill someone, or break some other US law — other than being here illegally in the first place.
Then there’s this:
No Coyote Needed
New Paper Examines Visa Overstays
WASHINGTON (March 2008) – While presidential candidates promise to secure the border, the other major source of illegal immigration is largely ignored – lax visa policies. Visa overstays account for between one-quarter to one-half of the illegal-alien population, and fencing, unmanned aerial vehicles, National Guard patrols, etc., are irrelevant to controlling this part of the immigration problem.
To shine some light on this neglected weakness, the Center for Immigration Studies has published a new paper, “No Coyote Needed: U.S. Visas Still an Easy Ticket in Developing Countries,” written by former State Department official David Seminara, examining the systemic problems in our “nonimmigrant” (i.e., temporary) visa system. The complete paper is online at http://www.cis.org/articles/2008/back208.html.
U.S. law places the burden of proof on the visa applicant to demonstrate that he won’t remain in the United States as an illegal alien after his permission to remain has expired. Despite the law’s tough language, 74 percent of nonimmigrant applications are granted, mostly from countries with much lower standards of living than the United States, where few residents should truly be able to qualify.
The new paper identifies some of the reasons for this laxity, including:
• The crushing volume of applications. Most visa-processing posts are woefully understaffed, resulting in very brief interviews. Managers value speed over clarity of decision making, so many applications that deserve closer scrutiny instead end up being approved.
• Foreign Service officers tend to have a diplomatic rather than a law enforcement mindset.
• Developing countries place great importance on visas in bilateral discussions.
• State Department managers are required to review only visa refusals – not issuances – forcing consular officers to routinely justify denials.
• DHS has not implemented meaningful exit controls or shared entry/exit data with consular officials overseas, leaving them without adequate information on visa renewal applicants.
• Officers evaluate how well-off visa candidates are by the standards of their home country, rather than by U.S. standards, and thus often fail to understand how a nurse from Ecuador, say, would prefer to wash dishes at a restaurant in New York.
• Refused applicants, their relatives, and members of Congress routinely pressure consular officials to overturn visa refusals.
• The simple reality that it is far easier to say “yes” to applicants than to dash their hopes by telling them that they don’t qualify to come to America.
# # #
The Center for Immigration Studies is an independent research institute
which examines the impact of immigration on the United States.1522 K Street NW, Suite 820, Washington, DC 20005-1202
(202) 466-8185 • fax (202) 466-8076 • center@cis.org • www.cis.orgBryan Griffith
Communications Associate
Center for Immigration Studies
1522 K St. NW, Suite 820
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: (202) 466-8185
Fax: (202) 466-8076
See Also: Michelle Malkin: Breaking: Supreme Court rules against illegal alien Death Row murderer (and stupid Bush administration), upholds US sovereignty
[Discuss This Topic with Debbie Hamilton]
Lake County Sheriff, McMikeenamy
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