Archive for January, 2008

* KS Rep. Lance Kinzer Tough On Illegal Immigration

Kinzer Statement on Immigration
On January 11, 2008, the Kansas House Republican Caucus released its 2008 legislative agenda.  At a press conference to unveil this agenda, Rep. Kinzer addressed the House Republican plans regarding the immigration issue.  After the press conference, Rep. Kinzer released the following statement, which you can also view online here: http://www.lancekinzer.com/immigration011108.html

While immigration policy is largely a federal issue the state does have a role to play. We believe that all people are entitled to be treated with dignity and to be afforded basic human rights. That having been said, citizens of  The United States have both a right and an obligation to enforce an orderly and lawful immigration system. Policies that provide incentives for people to skirt the law are inherently counterproductive and must be reformed. 

With this in mind the House Republican Caucus is committed to policies that reduce the burden unauthorized aliens impose on Kansas taxpayers; and that ensure state and federal immigration law are being enforced by removing incentives to violate those laws.

Republican’s are committed to implementing a workable system to aid in the enforcement of federal laws that deny public benefits to unauthorized aliens.  Failing to do so encourages a climate of law breaking that is inconsistent with our Party’s historic commitment to the rule if law.

Consistent with this principle is the protection of the integrity of our electoral system.  That is why we support the imposition of tougher penalties on any unauthorized alien who registers to vote and/or votes in an election and on those who knowingly assist them in doing so.

Unfortunately, the problem of illegal immigration brings with it the associated issue of identity theft and dealing in false identity documents.  We support enhanced penalties for the crime of  Dealing in False ID Documentation (KSA 21-3830), as well as creation of a separate crime for those who present false identification documents to employers.  These changes will have the added benefit of helping Kansas businesses better comply with immigration laws.While we help Kansas businesses comply with the law we must also hold them accountable.  The State of Kansas< /st1:State> should not reward businesses that knowingly violate the law.  As such we support withholding state funds from organizations and businesses which knowingly violate immigration laws.  This would include tax credits, grants, and loans offered through various state agencies.Finally, we support licensure penalties for any business that knowingly hires an unauthorized alien or fail to comply with federal law regarding verifying an employee’s legal citizenship/work status.  While most Kansas businesses comply with state and federal labor and immigration laws.  Businesses that chose to violate the law must be held accountable for their actions - especially repeat offenders.

http://www.lancekinzer.com

* Illegal Alien commits Identity Theft In Kansas

 Fri, Jan. 04, 2008
Illegal immigrants assuming false IDs to get credit, jobs

Associated Press Writer

When Air Force veteran Marcos Miranda had his identity stolen, he went from being a valued customer and employee to a government statistic - one of thousands of identity theft victims caught up each year in the crackdown on illegal immigrants.Identity theft has been a growing worry nationwide, but a rise in federal prosecutions against illegal immigrants offers a new wrinkle to the problem. As the government develops more sophisticated electronic employment verification systems, illegal immigrants are assuming real names and Social Security numbers of U.S. citizens like Miranda to thwart detection at workplaces, to get driver’s licenses and to obtain credit.

Miranda first learned someone else was using his identity in 2000 when he was arrested on a warrant for unpaid traffic tickets at the border after a visit to relatives in Mexico. The 24-year-old Texas man was released after paying a $340 fine for violations he never incurred. Although his money was eventually returned, his nightmare was just beginning.

Since then, Miranda has responded to repeated letters from the Internal Revenue Service demanding thousands of dollars in back taxes for wages paid to someone using his name and Social Security number to work at Oldham’s LLC, a pork slaughterhouse in Holton. Miranda watched his once-high credit rating plummet as creditors reported unpaid bills incurred by others.

“Even though I am Hispanic, I am against illegal immigration,” Miranda said. “Even though a lot of them come to work, there are always bad apples. (Identity theft) has really made my perspective … negative about immigration.”

In a deal with federal prosecutors, a Mexican national accused of stealing Miranda’s identity pleaded guilty last month to one count of using fraudulent documents. Joel Rojas-Morales, 27, will be sentenced in March.

“That way he knows crime doesn’t pay in America. Maybe in Mexico it does. But here, it may take some time, but the long arm of the law catches up to you,” Miranda said.

Chris Joseph, the defense attorney representing Rojas-Morales, is sympathetic to identity theft victims like Miranda.

“I have no reason to doubt that is absolutely true. There is no question he is a victim of identity theft,” Joseph said. “The question is: Who did the victimizing intentionally? Generally speaking, people who come into the United States don’t go out and steal an identity. They generally purchase a set of identity documents for the purpose of being able to work.”

Illegal immigrants who buy documents often are reassured by sellers that the identity they’re getting belongs to someone who no longer works in this country, who sold his identity papers, who died or who never existed.

“The person naively purchases the papers believing they are not doing any harm,” Joseph said.

Prosecutors said Rojas-Morales worked under a false identity at Oldham’s since 2004, using a fraudulent Colorado driver’s license, a bogus Social Security card and other phony employment forms.

Based on Miranda’s account of his identity theft problems, Joseph said, it’s likely several people were using his identity. Joseph declined to talk specifically about his client’s ongoing criminal case or allow him to be interviewed.

The government has “no solid numbers” showing either an increase or decrease in immigration-related identity theft cases nationwide, said Betsy Broder, assistant director in the division of privacy and identity protection at the Federal Trade Commission.

But she said the agency has seen a rise in prosecutions of workers using other people’s information to be employed, particularly for using fraudulent Social Security numbers.

By far the largest workplace enforcement to date was the December 2006 raid at six plants owned by Swift & Co. in which 1,282 illegal immigrants were arrested.

Statistics show the number of immigration-related criminal cases filed by U.S. Attorney Eric Melgren’s office in Wichita more than tripled between fiscal years 2002 and 2006, peaking at 161 by 2006 in Kansas as the Department of Justice stepped up prosecutions for fraudulent documents and identity theft. By 2007, the number slipped to 100 in the state.

“Certainly there has been far more activity starting with action in the Swift packing plant and a number of actions brought by the Department of Homeland Security on these workplace issues,” Broder said.

An FTC survey released last month showed identity theft for employment purposes accounts for about 1 percent of identity theft cases nationwide, for an estimated 83,000 employment-related identity theft victims in 2005. People using a fraudulent identity to work often use it to also obtain utility services, government benefits, medical care and credit.

Credit card fraud is the most common form of identity theft.

Based on the number of identity theft complaints reported to the FTC in 2006, states bordering Mexico led the nation in identity theft victims per population. Arizona ranked first, followed by Nevada, California, Texas and Florida.

That data showed 246,035 identity theft victims nationwide who reported at least one type of identity theft to the FTC in 2006. Employment-related fraud accounted for 14 percent of the complaints nationwide and about 11 percent of those reported by Kansas victims.

Kansas ranked 29th in the nation with 1,626 identity theft victims who filed complaints in 2006, the FTC data showed. Missouri ranked 21st with 3,753.

As Rojas-Morales sits in jail in Kansas, the real Marcos Miranda is slowly rebuilding his life in El Paso, Texas, where he works as a truck driver for Swift.

Miranda has a new Social Security number and has signed up for a credit monitoring service.

“That way,” he said, “I can get back on track and get my credit back and do what I have to do to keep my identity to myself.”


* REAL ID ACT

By DEVLIN BARRETT, Associated Press Writer Thu Jan 10, 6:37 PM ET

WASHINGTON - Americans born after Dec. 1, 1964, will have to get more secure driver’s licenses in the next six years under ambitious post-9/11 security rules to be unveiled Friday by federal officials.

 The Homeland Security Department has spent years crafting the final regulations for the REAL ID Act, a law designed to make it harder for terrorists, illegal immigrants and con artists to get government-issued identification. The effort once envisioned to take effect in 2008 has been pushed back in the hopes of winning over skeptical state officials.

Even with more time, more federal help, and technical advances, REAL ID still faces stiff opposition from civil liberties groups.

To address some of those concerns, the government now plans to phase in a secure ID initiative that Congress passed into law in 2005. Now, DHS plans a key deadline in 2011, and then further measures to be enacted three years later, according to congressional staffers who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because an announcement had not yet been made. DHS officials briefed legislative aides on the details late Thursday.

The Sept. 11 attacks were the main motivation for the changes.

The hijacker-pilot who flew into the Pentagon, Hani Hanjour, had a total of four driver’s licenses and ID cards from three states. The DHS, which was created in response to the attacks, has created a slogan for REAL ID: “One driver, one license.”

By 2014, anyone seeking to board an airplane or enter a federal building would have to present a REAL ID-compliant driver’s license, with the notable exception of those more than 50 years old, Homeland Security officials said.

The over-50 exemption was created to give states more time to get everyone new licenses, and officials say the risk of someone in that age group being a terrorist, illegal immigrant or con artist is much less.

Where Our Education funds are being spent!

From September 5th Emporia Gazette classified ads:

Migrant Community Resource Coordinator for the Emporia Public Schools.  Responsibilities include serving as a resource to assist migrant families in becoming a positive part of the community by providing awareness of community services and resources and serving as an advocate for migrant families.  Qualifications include strong English/Spanish bilingual skills, strong organizational and communication skills, proven leadership skills and excellent interpersonal relationship  skills.  Salary commensurate with credentials. To obtain an application, contact the Personnel Department at the Board of Education Office, 501 Merchant, Emporia, KS.

According to the list of requirements to become a citizen of the United States of America (see below) you must be able to demonstrate an elementary level of English (able to read, write and understand English) and must have knowledge and understanding of the fundamentals of U.S. history and government.

Simple common sense would dictate that it is obvious that those people who cannot speak English cannot be in the United States legally if they cannot speak read, write or understand English since those are the  requirements to become a legal citizen.

It is quite evident that the schools are violating the law by using taxpayers money to pay for teachers and provide classrooms to teach English to non-English speaking people.

In order to become a U.S. citizen, you must:
(1) have been admitted to lawful permanent residence for five years (three years if Green Card obtained through marriage to U.S. citizen);
(2) you must be 18 years old;
(3) you must maintain continuous residence for five years (three years if Green Card obtained through marriage to U.S. citizen);
(4) you must be physically present in the U.S. for at least half of the 5 years (or half of the 3 years if you obtained a Green Card through a U.S. citizen spouse);
(5) you must be a person of good moral character for the 5 years (or 3 years if the alien obtained a Green Card through a U.S. citizen spouse);
(6) you must demonstrate an elementary level of English (reading, writing, understanding); and,
(7) you must have knowledge and understanding of the fundamentals of history and government of the U.S.
Special exceptions to some of the general requirements are available for the disabled, members of the military, veterans, spouses married to U.S. citizens living overseas, and Legal Permanent Residents who work for certain organizations that promote U.S. interests abroad. Similarly exemptions from the English language requirements are available for those over 55 years who and have lived in the United States as a Legal Permanent Resident for 15 years, or are over 50 years old and have lived in the United States as a Legal Permanent Resident for 20 years.

* Federal Law Regarding in-state tuition

A December 8, 2006 Library of Congress Congressional Research Service summary regarding federal law concerning in-state tuition reads as follows:

Currently, federal law prohibits states from granting unauthorized aliens certain postsecondary educational benefits on the basis of state residence, unless equal benefits are made available to all U.S. citizens.  This prohibition is commonly understood to apply to the granting of “in-state” residency status for tuition purposes.    Specifically, Section 505 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) mandates that unauthorized aliens “shall not be eligible on the basis of residence within a State (or a political subdivision) for any postsecondary education benefit unless a citizen or national of the United States is eligible for such a benefit (in no less an amount, duration, and scope) without regard to whether the citizen or national is such a resident.   

* Harsh You Say!! But, It’s The Law

1.  There will be NO special bilingual programs in the schools;   NO special ballots for elections, and all government business will be conducted in our language.

2.  Foreigners will NOT have the right to vote, no matter how long they are here.

3.  Foreigners will NEVER be able to hold political office.

4.  Foreigners will NOT be a burden to the taxpayers.  NO welfare; NO food stamps; NO health care; nor any other government assistance programs.

5.  Foreigners can invest in this country, BUT it must be an amount equal to 40,000 times the daily minimum wage.

6.  If foreigners do come and want to buy land that will be okay BUT options will be restricted.   You are NOT allowed to own waterfront property.  That property is reserved for citizens naturally born into this country.

7.  Foreigners may NOT protest; NO demonstrations; NO waving a foreign flag; NO political organizing; NO “bad-mouthing” our president or his policies.  If you do you will be sent home.

8.  If you do come to this country illegally, you will be hunted down and sent straignt to jail.

Harsh you say?

These laws happen to be the immigration laws of MEXICO!

(Quotes from English translation of the Constitution of Mexico published by the Organization of American States.  See full English translation at:

http://www.citizensforaconstitutionalrepublic.com/1917_Constitution_of_Mexico.html