LilOlLady's Everlasting Gobstopper Illegal Immigration Thread

There is no need to change the 14th amendment, US children are allowed to leave the country with their parents, wether the parents are legal or illegal. Over reaction is illustrated by the call for changing the constitution. Not to mention the money that would be spent on such an endevor by both sides, when it could and should be spent elsewhere.
 
There is no need to change the 14th amendment, US children are allowed to leave the country with their parents, wether the parents are legal or illegal.

The question is not whether these children are allowed to leave the US. It's a matter of whether they can be required to leave. If they are citizens, then the answer is "no." They cannot be deported, because they are citizens. That then raises the difficult question of what to do with the illegal parents? Because society is resistant to breaking up families for immigration enforcement, the government tends not to deport illegal aliens who have citizen children.

There is the further issue of these children, as citizens, qualifying for welfare benefits, and the fact that this is a point for abuse by many illegal aliens. There's also the issue of the loophole serving as an attraction for people to illegally immigrate. The fact that citizenship is so easily obtainable for one's children by immigrating shortly before birth of the children spurs immigration by parents who want their children to be able to gain the benefits of US citizenship.

Over reaction is illustrated by the call for changing the constitution.

It's not an over reaction to cite the many problems associated with illegal immigration in our country. It's not an over reaction to note the very true facts of how the anchor baby loophole is not only exploitable, but is frequently exploited in a malicious way. Since it is not an over reaction to note these points, there is no over reaction by recommending a reasonable solution which is based on legal necessities of the issue. Since the ONLY legal resolution is to amend the constitution, suggesting such is not an over reaction. It is, in fact, the ONLY possible reaction.

Not to mention the money that would be spent on such an endevor by both sides, when it could and should be spent elsewhere.

There is no cost to amend the constitution. :cuckoo:
 
I'm just asking a question that is highly likely to occur.

There are solutions, like: Grant birthright citizenship to children born to people who can document a bloodline going back 4 generations of "Sort of Americans".

:eusa_think: Do we REALLY want to go there, Kemo Sabe? Ranking Americans in classes by the length of their bloodline born on American soil?

Why would we have to? By this point in time, everyone in this country is either a documentable citizen in his own right (or a documentable legal resident), or isn't. Period. So if you're born here, and neither of your parents is a documented citizen or legal resident, neither are you.

Simple. Why do you feel the need to complicate this?

You have to refer back to the quote from the original post from LoL.

I recently introduced legislation so that a person born in the United States to illegal aliens does not automatically gain citizenship unless at least one parent is a legal citizen (including naturalized citizens), legal immigrant, or active member of the Armed Forces. Closing this loophole will not prevent anyone from becoming a citizen. What it will do is ensure that he or she has to go through the same process as anyone else born of foreign parents who wants to become an American citizen.

It seems to be proposed legislation to stop handing out a Social Security Number to every kid lucky enough to be born on American soil. If we do that, what do we do with the inevitable children, also born on American soil, of a union between two of these semi-legal bastards? What about their children? How many generations do we exile?


It's a legitimate question.

What are you not understanding about this quote? ". . . unless at least one parent is a legal citizen (including naturalized citizens), legal immigrant, or active member of the Armed Forces."

As long as at least one parent is in the country legally, the kid's good to go. If BOTH parents are here legally, so much the better. If they're both illegal, so's the kid. Where's the confusion?
 
Why would we have to? By this point in time, everyone in this country is either a documentable citizen in his own right (or a documentable legal resident), or isn't. Period. So if you're born here, and neither of your parents is a documented citizen or legal resident, neither are you.

Simple. Why do you feel the need to complicate this?

You have to refer back to the quote from the original post from LoL.

I recently introduced legislation so that a person born in the United States to illegal aliens does not automatically gain citizenship unless at least one parent is a legal citizen (including naturalized citizens), legal immigrant, or active member of the Armed Forces. Closing this loophole will not prevent anyone from becoming a citizen. What it will do is ensure that he or she has to go through the same process as anyone else born of foreign parents who wants to become an American citizen.

It seems to be proposed legislation to stop handing out a Social Security Number to every kid lucky enough to be born on American soil. If we do that, what do we do with the inevitable children, also born on American soil, of a union between two of these semi-legal bastards? What about their children? How many generations do we exile?


It's a legitimate question.

What are you not understanding about this quote? ". . . unless at least one parent is a legal citizen (including naturalized citizens), legal immigrant, or active member of the Armed Forces."

As long as at least one parent is in the country legally, the kid's good to go. If BOTH parents are here legally, so much the better. If they're both illegal, so's the kid. Where's the confusion?

What do you do with the next generation? Eventually you're going to end up with a class of creatures who can name layers of BOTH parents who were born here born here illegally. How many generations do these families have to survive before their kids have a country?

:eusa_think: Will Mexico grant citizenship to a kid born here to non-citizen parents who were both born here?

I'm telling you this is not so black and white.
 
You have to refer back to the quote from the original post from LoL.



It seems to be proposed legislation to stop handing out a Social Security Number to every kid lucky enough to be born on American soil. If we do that, what do we do with the inevitable children, also born on American soil, of a union between two of these semi-legal bastards? What about their children? How many generations do we exile?


It's a legitimate question.

What are you not understanding about this quote? ". . . unless at least one parent is a legal citizen (including naturalized citizens), legal immigrant, or active member of the Armed Forces."

As long as at least one parent is in the country legally, the kid's good to go. If BOTH parents are here legally, so much the better. If they're both illegal, so's the kid. Where's the confusion?

What do you do with the next generation? Eventually you're going to end up with a class of creatures who can name layers of BOTH parents who were born here born here illegally. How many generations do these families have to survive before their kids have a country?

They HAVE a country: the one their parents are legal citizens of. It is not our obligation to provide anyone with a country.

What you're asking is, "How long do people have to break the law before we let them get away with it?" The answer is, "Forever." I don't care how many generations of someone's family manage to get away with violating our laws. They're still lawbreakers. They need to go home.

:eusa_think: Will Mexico grant citizenship to a kid born here to non-citizen parents who were both born here?

I'm telling you this is not so black and white.

How is that OUR problem? Seems to me their frigging PARENTS need to be thinking about their future and well-being, rather than hanging out here, waiting for US to take care of their children.

What's that you say? Your children and grandchildren might wind up with no home country if you stay? THEN GO HOME.
 
So since virtually all of us are descended from immigrants we should go "home"?

No, just those who are descended from ILLEGAL immigrants and those who are too damned stupid to understand the difference between "legal" and "illegal".

Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
 
So since virtually all of us are descended from immigrants we should go "home"?

The last time it was researched, most Americans in the country today decended from the settlers who built America. Immigrants came after the country was settled.

Does anyone even have a history book out there?

Stop giving the LA RAZA answer that public schools have been handing out in the last few decades.
 
Tweaked immigration bill advances

Panel's 8-5 vote sends measure to full Senate, though a lawmaker says it's merely 'less ugly'

Feb 18, 2011
Written by
Mary Beth Schneider

A bill to crack down on illegal immigration in Indiana, similar to a law in Arizona, passed its second legislative hurdle Thursday after some cosmetic changes.

But even one senator who joined the 8-5 majority on the Senate Appropriations Committee in supporting Senate Bill 590 questioned whether the bill is an improvement Indiana needs.

Tweaked immigration bill advances | The Indianapolis Star | indystar.com
 
Senate passes crackdown on illegal immigrants
Illegals would face trespassing charges under bill
State Sen. John Schickel, R-Union, Ky.

01/07/2011

By: Associated Press
FRANKFORT, Ky. - The Kentucky Senate passed a bill aimed at cracking down on illegal immigrants by giving police broad authority to check on the immigration status of people they stop.

The proposal, Senate Bill 6 , would allow police to arrest illegal immigrants on trespassing charges for setting foot in Kentucky.

Crackdown on illegal immigrants passes
 
What are you not understanding about this quote? ". . . unless at least one parent is a legal citizen (including naturalized citizens), legal immigrant, or active member of the Armed Forces."

As long as at least one parent is in the country legally, the kid's good to go. If BOTH parents are here legally, so much the better. If they're both illegal, so's the kid. Where's the confusion?

What do you do with the next generation? Eventually you're going to end up with a class of creatures who can name layers of BOTH parents who were born here born here illegally. How many generations do these families have to survive before their kids have a country?

They HAVE a country: the one their parents are legal citizens of. It is not our obligation to provide anyone with a country.

What you're asking is, "How long do people have to break the law before we let them get away with it?" The answer is, "Forever." I don't care how many generations of someone's family manage to get away with violating our laws. They're still lawbreakers. They need to go home.

:eusa_think: Will Mexico grant citizenship to a kid born here to non-citizen parents who were both born here?

I'm telling you this is not so black and white.

How is that OUR problem? Seems to me their frigging PARENTS need to be thinking about their future and well-being, rather than hanging out here, waiting for US to take care of their children.

What's that you say? Your children and grandchildren might wind up with no home country if you stay? THEN GO HOME.

So you advocate deporting mother and child at the moment of discovery? That's the only way it would work. There would have to be a cold, zero tolerance policy of deporting any pregnant human females without papers, and putting forth a strong effort to hunt them down. Harsh, especially in light of human trafficking, but it would work, ass-u-me-ing it was 100% successful.

:eusa_think: Sounds expensive.
 
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What do you do with the next generation? Eventually you're going to end up with a class of creatures who can name layers of BOTH parents who were born here born here illegally. How many generations do these families have to survive before their kids have a country?

They HAVE a country: the one their parents are legal citizens of. It is not our obligation to provide anyone with a country.

What you're asking is, "How long do people have to break the law before we let them get away with it?" The answer is, "Forever." I don't care how many generations of someone's family manage to get away with violating our laws. They're still lawbreakers. They need to go home.

:eusa_think: Will Mexico grant citizenship to a kid born here to non-citizen parents who were both born here?

I'm telling you this is not so black and white.

How is that OUR problem? Seems to me their frigging PARENTS need to be thinking about their future and well-being, rather than hanging out here, waiting for US to take care of their children.

What's that you say? Your children and grandchildren might wind up with no home country if you stay? THEN GO HOME.

So you advocate deporting mother and child at the moment of discovery? That's the only way it would work. There would have to be a cold, zero tolerance policy of deporting any pregnant human females without papers, and putting forth a strong effort to hunt them down. Harsh, especially in light of human trafficking, but it would work, ass-u-me-ing it was 100% successful.

NOW you're getting it. Throw their illegal asses out the door the minute we find them, and actually behave as though finding them is a desirable thing.

As far as human trafficking goes, the United States already has provisions in its immigration laws - and rightly so, I feel - regarding asking for asylum. My quarrel isn't with the small number of people brought here against their will. It's with the HUGE numbers of people deliberately la-de-da-ing across our border to take advantage of us.

As for "100% successful", have you not figured out yet that if you make illegal immigration less desirable through measures like this, the lawbreakers police themselves? Already, Sonora is bitching and whining at Arizona because our policies are making their people pack up and return to Mexico, which doesn't want the expense. Awwwww. :eusa_boohoo: Killing off the anchor baby loophole and making it clear that their problems and those of their children created by their lawbreaking is getting zero sympathy from us, and a lot more of them are suddenly going to decide that breaking our laws doesn't look so attractive, after all.

:eusa_think: Sounds expensive.

You mean, as opposed to harboring millions of illegal immigrants and making no effort to send them home?
 
They HAVE a country: the one their parents are legal citizens of. It is not our obligation to provide anyone with a country.

What you're asking is, "How long do people have to break the law before we let them get away with it?" The answer is, "Forever." I don't care how many generations of someone's family manage to get away with violating our laws. They're still lawbreakers. They need to go home.



How is that OUR problem? Seems to me their frigging PARENTS need to be thinking about their future and well-being, rather than hanging out here, waiting for US to take care of their children.

What's that you say? Your children and grandchildren might wind up with no home country if you stay? THEN GO HOME.

So you advocate deporting mother and child at the moment of discovery? That's the only way it would work. There would have to be a cold, zero tolerance policy of deporting any pregnant human females without papers, and putting forth a strong effort to hunt them down. Harsh, especially in light of human trafficking, but it would work, ass-u-me-ing it was 100% successful.

NOW you're getting it. Throw their illegal asses out the door the minute we find them, and actually behave as though finding them is a desirable thing.

As far as human trafficking goes, the United States already has provisions in its immigration laws - and rightly so, I feel - regarding asking for asylum. My quarrel isn't with the small number of people brought here against their will. It's with the HUGE numbers of people deliberately la-de-da-ing across our border to take advantage of us.

As for "100% successful", have you not figured out yet that if you make illegal immigration less desirable through measures like this, the lawbreakers police themselves? Already, Sonora is bitching and whining at Arizona because our policies are making their people pack up and return to Mexico, which doesn't want the expense. Awwwww. :eusa_boohoo: Killing off the anchor baby loophole and making it clear that their problems and those of their children created by their lawbreaking is getting zero sympathy from us, and a lot more of them are suddenly going to decide that breaking our laws doesn't look so attractive, after all.

:eusa_think: Sounds expensive.

You mean, as opposed to harboring millions of illegal immigrants and making no effort to send them home?

Sounds like you know what you want. Good luck!
 
How Obama is Transforming America Through Immigration By Mark Krikorian
April 2010


President Obama and his allies have made no secret about their immigration goals: easy amnesty, loose enforcement, and ever-higher levels of legal immigration. One prominent labor leader has boasted that continued mass immigration "will solidify and expand the progressive coalition for the future."

In this penetrating Broadside, Mark Krikorian lays out the details of Obama's open-borders approach to immigration and its political consequences. Krikorian, one of the leading critics of current immigration policy, examines the Administration's record of weakening enforcement and describes how legislation crafted by the president's supporters in Congress would ensure new waves of illegal immigration. Krikorian also explains how continued high levels of immigration, regardless of legal status, would progressively move the United States in the direction of more government and less liberty.:cuckoo:
How Obama is Transforming America Through Immigration | Center for Immigration Studies

This is a lie. It is a fact that Since Obama took office there has been more raids on businesses, more deportations, more border security, less illegal crossings, more money spend on border security and enforcement.. More has been done to curb illegal immigration since Obama took office. Reagan gave 3 million amnesty, not Obama.

Republicans want a return to workplace immigration raids - Los Angeles Times

Deportation of illegal immigrants increases under Obama administration

Immigration Enforcement up under Obama
 
And just what changes to existing immifration rules, etc has The Obama administration made?

the OP article was quite vague, intentionally so it appears.
 
Serious Crimes of Illegal Aliens in Just One Year
January 21, 2011 by Border Narcotics Intelligence

These aliens were all in the country illegally, and many of them had previous encounters with law enforcement agencies. But they were not deported or in some cases were deported but reentered the country.

Better prevention from illegal immigration is a public safety issue.


This is a long, long list… and just a few of them


November 2010

— Ingmar Guandique, a Salvadoran illegal alien, was convicted of the murder in 2001 of Chandra Levy, a congressional staff member. Guandique was previously convicted of sexual assault on two other women in Rock Creek Park in Washington DC and was serving time in prison at the time of his murder conviction. (Washington Post, November 23, 2010)


— A Guatemalan illegal alien, Heydeman Armando Argueta-Godoy, who had been previously deported, was sentenced in Reno, Nevada to prison for attempted kidnapping of a jogger and teenage girls.


October 2010

— An illegal alien living in Seagrove, NC was found guilty of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and illegal possession of ammunition. Jose Juan Organes-Espino faces a sentence of up to 10-years in prison.


— Jorge Hernandez-Hernandez, a Mexican illegal immigrant, was sentenced in McAllen, Texas to 15 years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy in transporting illegal immigrants that resulted in the drowning deaths of nine Salvadoran and Honduran nationals in 2004. (Associated Press, October 28, 2010)


— Pedro Marcos Marcos, an illegal alien from Guatemala, entered pleas in Los Angeles to five felony counts, including hostage taking. He faces a sentence of up to life in prison. (Associated Press, October 27, 2010)
 — An illegal Mexican immigrant, Samuel Juarez Cruz, pled guilty to third-degree murder and conspiracy charges in Pennsylvania. He is likely to be sentenced to 15 to 20 years in prison. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 22, 2010)


— Servando Alvarado-Casas, a Mexican illegal alien, was convicted in Texas for conspiring to transport illegal immigrants and was sentenced to 15 years, 10 months in prison. At the same time he was sentenced to 10 years in prison for a conviction of being a felon in possession of firearms. (Corpus Cristi Caller, October 21, 2010)


— A Mexican illegal alien, Juan Gabriel Rumbo Rosas, was sentenced in Seattle, Washington to ten years in prison for heroin distribution. Rumbo had prior convictions for narcotics distribution and had previously been deported. (Press Release, United States Attorney’s Office, Western District of Washington, October 15, 2010)


— Brothers Hilario and Margarito Hernandez-Romero, Mexican illegal aliens living in Hyattsville Maryland, pled guilty to identification fraud and aggravated identity theft for making thousands of illegal identification documents for other illegal aliens. They were sentenced to four years in prison. (Washington Examiner, October 11, 2010)


September 2010


— Arturo Lopez, a teenaged Mexican illegal alien, was found guilty of abducting and raping his foster mother in Richmond, Virginia. He was sentenced respectively to 10 and 20 years in prison on the two charges. (Richmond Times-Dispatch, September 23, 2010)


— Carlos Molinares-Nunez, a Mexican drug “kingpin” who fled to the United States to avoid assassination, pled guilty in Phoenix to two counts of continuing criminal enterprise and conspiracy. He was sentenced to 21 years imprisonment and forfeiture of $4,000,000 and property, vehicles, and jewelry seized in the United States. (FBI Press Release, Phoenix, September 3, 2010)


— Carlos Mauricio Ruano, an illegal immigrant from El Salvador, was sentenced to 35 years imprisonment for the rape of a 4-year-old family member in Leesburg, Virginia. He entered the country illegally in 2008. (Leesburg Today, September 1, 2010)


— Moises Ortiz-Castaneda, a Mexican illegal alien, pled guilty in Columbus, Indiana to felony domestic battery, resisting law enforcement, invasion of privacy and public intoxication, but the judge rejected the proposed three-year prison sentence and two years on probation because he had concerns about giving a probationary sentence to someone who had been deported and re-entered the country. Ortiz-Castaneda was deported from Arizona back to Mexico on May 16, 2002; June 18, 2002; July 18, 2002; Feb. 28, 2003; April 5, 2004; April 19, 2004; and April 1, 2005. (Republic, August 24, 2010)


August 2010

— Fabian Ruiz-Estrada, an illegal alien, was sentenced to 15-18 years in prison for sexual assault in Wyoming in 2009. He was found in prison in Colorado for an unspecified crime when he was tied to the rape by DNA. In addition to the prison and probation time, Ruiz-Estrada was ordered to pay $470 to the court in fees and assessments, and nearly $3,300 in restitution to cover the victim’s medical costs and counseling. (Powell Tribune, August 24, 2010)


— Celso Campo-Duartes, a Mexican illegal alien, was convicted of hit and run driving in 2005. The elderly pedestrian he hit died several months later while still hospitalized from the accident. In January 2008, he entered a negotiated plea to a charge of failure to stop at or return to the scene of an accident and was sentenced to two years in prison and three years of probation. In August 2009, he arrested for driving without a license and released the same day on bond. In October, he was arrested again on the same charge. Then May 28, 2010 he was charged with disorderly conduct and unlicensed driving. As Gwinnett County, Georgia now participates in the 287(g) program, Campo-Duartes is to be deported when the current charge of parole violation is resolved. (Atlanta Constitution Journal, August, 23 2010)


— Geoffry Kouevi, a West African immigrant, was sentenced to two years and two months in prison for conspiracy and visa fraud in connection to a human-trafficking ring that smuggled girls and women into New Jersey to work at hair-braiding salons in Newark and East Orange in a case investigators equated with modern-day slavery. The ring was run by Akouavi Kpade Afolabi, an immigrant from Togo, who was convicted in 2009. Afolabi’s ex-husband, Lassissi Afolabi, was sentenced last month to 24 years in prison for his role in the crime. Her son, Dereck Hounakey, also Togolese, was sentenced in June to four and 1/2 years. (Star-Ledger, August 18, 2010).


— Ricardo Velasquez, a Honduran illegal alien, who has two previous convictions in North Carolina, is currently being held on charges of having raped relatives who are 7 and 8 years old. His first conviction in 2004 resulted from reported breaking and entering and assault on a woman. He was convicted, however, only for interfering with a 911 emergency call. He was not sentenced to prison and, apparently, immigration authorities were not notified. In 2007, he was arrested and convicted of reckless driving under the influence and put on one year of unsupervised probation. This time immigration authorities were apparently notified and his illegal status was confirmed, but he was not considered a priority case, and was not taken into custody. (WBTV, Charlotte, NC August 12, 2010.)


— Melvin Alvarado, an illegal alien from El Salvador, who was deported in both 2008 and 2009 following drunk driving convictions, is charged with first degree murder in Houston for the shooting murder and robbery of a 14-year old girl. Also charged for the same crime is Jonathan Lopez-Torres, a legal resident from Honduras, who, if convicted, will also be deportable following imprisonment. (Houston Chronicle, August 12, 2010)
— Faustino Chiquete-Reyes and Nestor Chiquete-Reyes, both Mexicans, pled guilty to hostage taking in connection with armed resistance to a police raid in Tucson, Arizona at an illegal alien “stash house” where smuggled aliens were being held hostage. Two others arrested at the same time were convicted earlier. (Arizona Daily Star, August 4, 2010)


July 2010

— Jose Joe Velasco, a Salvadoran illegal alien, was sentenced to four years in prison for his fourth drunk driving conviction. The charges against him also included assault on a police officer and resisting arrest as he tried to run down Loudoun County, Virginia sheriff’s deputies and crashing into one of their vehicles when they attempted to detain him. (Washington Post, July 23, 2010)


— Rodolfo Godinez Gomez, a Nicaraguan illegal alien was convicted in Newark, New Jersey for the 2007 execution-style slayings of three persons and attempted murder of a fourth by members of the Mara Salvatrucha gang and was sentenced to three life terms plus 20 years. Godinez entered the United States in 1992 and was ordered deported in 1993. He was arrested as a juvenile for robbery in 1999 and was put on probation for 18 months. In 2002 he was arrested and indicted for aggravated assault, robbery and weapons possession. In 2003 he was arrested for robbery in Newark and sentenced to 18 months of probation. (Associated Press, July 8, 2010) Another of the gang members, Melvin Jovel, a Honduran, pled guilty to three counts of murder, one count of attempted murder and weapons charges and faces a sentence of lifetime in prison. (AP September 22, 2010)


June 2010


— Ismael Lopez-Rodriguez, an illegal alien, was indicted for vehicular homicide in Dalton, Georgia. Charges against him included failure to register a car, failure to get a license, identity fraud, forgery and giving false information to authorities. Before he could be brought to trial he was released on bail and deported. (Dalton Daily Citizen, June 20, 2010)


— Maynor Quintanilla-Leon an illegal alien pled guilty to sexually exploiting a minor to produce child pornography in Prince George’s County, Maryland. He faces a sentence of between 15 and 30 years in prison. He also agreed as part of a plea bargain to be deported after he has completed his sentence. (Washington Post, June 4, 2010)


May 2010

— Rene Pinto Melendez, a Honduran illegal alien, pled guilty to second-degree murder, second-degree rape and felony larceny. At the time he committed the murder, he was out on bond awaiting trial on charges of drunken driving and had two earlier DWI convictions in Michigan using a different name. (WRAL.com News, June 4, 2010)


— Joel Eliazar Ortega, an illegal alien, was convicted in Reno Nevada to life in prison for dragging a paralyzed woman out of her wheelchair, raping her, and leaving her nude in an alley to die. (Reno Gazette, May 26, 2010)


— Jose Lopez Madrigal, a Mexican illegal alien, is in jail in Seattle charged with rape. His fingerprints established that he has been deported nine times since 1989 when he was deported following a conviction for armed robbery. His other convictions included narcotics trafficking and sexual assault. (KING5 TV News, May 21, 2010)


April 2010


— Christian Daniel Castro Alvarez, a Mexican teenager, pled guilty to killing a Border Patrol agent. He was sentenced to 40 years in prison in San Diego. (Los Angeles Times, April 30, 2010)


— Enrique Mendez, an illegal immigrant…”with at least five previous arrests for driving while under the influence of alcohol notched his sixth arrest Saturday night when a trooper stopped him for a traffic violation…” in Westchester NY and determined he was intoxicated. His license was suspended after his last DWI conviction. There is now a federal immigration detainer to put him into deportation proceedings. (LoHud.com [Lower Hudson] April 13, 2010)


— Ten illegal aliens pled guilty to conspiracy to commit mail fraud by filing fake income tax returns in North and South Carolina that bilked the federal government of about $13 million. Of those identified, eight were Mexican (Edgar Carrillo-Borjas, Miguel Angel Carrillo-Borjas, David Hernandez-Juarez, Ariana Canseco-Orozco, Maribel Juan-Orozco, Cristina Sanchez-Perez, Juan Carlos Carrillo-Roy, Carlos Carrillo-Rodriguez) and one was Costa Rican (Luis Gerardo Mora-Vargas). (Greenville News, April 2, 2010)


— Efrain Gomez-Gomez, a Honduran illegal alien, was sentenced to 42 years in prison for two sexual assaults in Phoenix in 2009 and the attempted kidnapping in 2007 of a teenage girl. (KOLD News, April 7, 2010)


March 2010

— Hector Salina, a Mexican illegal alien, was convicted in Bellingham Washington of rape and faces a life sentence as a three-strike offender. He previously had been convicted of robbery and assault and had been deported at least five times. (Bellingham Herald, May 28, 2010)


— Neftali Urrutia-Barrera, an illegal alien member of the MS-13 gang, was sentenced to 60 years imprisonment for two of a string of crimes in Northern Virginia committed in 2008. Testimony established that on Sept. 17, 2008 he shot and wounded three persons he thought were members of a rival gang. One of the victims, who was not a gang member, resulted paralyzed from the waist down. On Oct. 6, 2008: he and two other MS-13 members shot three people, one of whom was not a member of a rival gang, in Reston. At the time of his conviction for those crimes, he was already imprisoned for the near fatal knifing of a man mistakenly identified as a rival gang member later in October in Richmond. (Loudon County Times, March 31, 2010)


— Santana Batiz-Aceves, a Mexican illegal alien, pled guilty in Arizona to 12 of 47 counts including child molestation, sexual conduct with a minor, kidnapping, aggravated assault and burglary from June 2006 to November 2007. Batiz-Aceves agreed to a 168-year prison sentence as part of a plea agreement. (AP in Washington Post, March 1, 2010)


February 2010

— Francis Hernandez, a Guatemalan illegal alien, was found guilty in Colorado of vehicular homicide and other charges relating to the death of three people in a crash he caused when he ran a red light driving 80 mph in a 40-mph zone. Hernandez had a dozen prior arrests but avoided identification as an illegal alien by using 12 aliases and two dates of birth. He was sentenced to 60 years in prison. (AP in New York Times, February 23, 2010)


— Leonardo DeLeon, aka Cristan Reconco-Solorzano, a Honduran illegal alien, pled guilty in Myrtle Beach, Florida to illegally reentering the country. He was convicted of attempted murder in Texas in 1999 and deported in 2001. When he was arrested, he was active in the Mexican Mafia street gang. He faces a sentence of up to 20 years in prison. (The Sun News, February 11, 2010)


— Felix Montoya, a Colombian illegal alien, was sentenced in Pennsylvania to life in prison plus 20 40 years for raping a 5-year-old girl. (The Times Tribune, February 2, 2010)


January 2010

— Heydeman Armando Argueta-Godoy, a Guatemalan illegal alien who had been previously deported, pled guilty to attempted kidnapping in South Reno. He tried to lure a 13 and a 14-year old girl into his truck and subsequently tried to kidnap a woman jogger using gardening shears. He was sentenced to 11 years in prison. (The Reno Gazette-Journal, January 27, 2010)


— Jose Felix Huerta-Valdez, an illegal alien, pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine. He was arrested in Woodburn, Oregon and sentenced to six and one-half years in prison. (The Statesman Journal, January 27, 2010)


— Conses Garcia Zacarias, an illegal alien, pled guilty in Carmel, New York to vehicular homicide (DWI) in the deaths of a mother and daughter. He was sentenced to eight years and four months in prison. (AP at WCAX, January 13, 2010)


— Jesus Anguiano Robles, an illegal alien, pled guilty to possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute in Dallas, Texas. Anguiano was previously deported at least nine times and had a previous drug conviction as well as convictions for assault with a firearm, hit and run with property damage, giving a false name to a police officer, carrying a concealed weapon and receiving stolen property. He faces a sentence of up to 10 years in prison. (Dallas Morning News, January 1, 2010)

AND THIS IS JUST IN ONE YEAR!!!

Serious Crimes of Illegal Aliens in Just One Year | Border Narcotics Intelligence
 
Cartels On The High Ground In Arizona
Posted on January 21, 2011 by Border Narcotics Intelligence

Mexican drug cartels have set up shop on American soil, maintaining lookout bases in strategic locations in the hills of southern Arizona from which their scouts can monitor every move made by law enforcement officials, federal agents tell Fox News.



Cartels On The High Ground In Arizona | Border Narcotics Intelligence
 

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