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Rewarding Illegal Aliens: Senate Bill Undermines The Rule of Law
The Heritage Foundation ^
| May 23, 2007
| Kris W. Kobach, D.Phil., J.D. and Matthew Spalding, Ph.D.
Posted on 05/23/2007 4:54:25 PM PDT by Blood of Tyrants
Edited on 05/23/2007 4:55:33 PM PDT by Sidebar Moderator.
[history]
Rewarding Illegal Aliens: Senate Bill Undermines The Rule of Law
WebMemo #1468
The most controversial component of the Senate's Secure Borders, Economic Opportunity and Immigration Reform Act of 2007 is Title VI, euphemistically entitled "Nonimmigrants in the United States Previously in Unlawful Status." It would create a new "Z" visa exclusively for illegal aliens. This title would change the status of those who are here illegally to legal, essentially granting amnesty to those "previously in unlawful status." This seriously flawed proposal would undermine the rule of law by granting massive benefits to those who have willfully violated U.S. laws, while denying those benefits to those who have played by the rules and sometimes even to U.S. citizens. Flawed Provisions The following are ten of the worst provisions—by no means an exhaustive list—of Title VI of the bill:
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A Massive Amnesty: Title VI of the bill grants amnesty to virtually all of the 12 million to 20 million illegal aliens in the country today. This amnesty would dwarf the amnesty that the United States granted—with disastrous consequences—in 1986 to 2.7 million illegal aliens. It is also a larger amnesty than that proposed in last year's ill-fated Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act. Indeed, the Senate's bill imposes no cap on the total number of individuals who could receive Z-visa status. To initially qualify for a Z visa, an illegal alien need only have a job (or be the parent, spouse, or child of someone with a job) and provide two documents suggesting that he or she was in the country before January 1, 2007, and has remained in the country since then. A bank statement, pay stub, or similarly forgeable record will do. Also acceptable under the legislation is a sworn affidavit from a non-relative (see Section 601(i)(2)). The price of a Z visa is $3,000 for individuals—only slightly more than the going rate to hire a coyote to smuggle a person across the border. A family of five could purchase visas for the bargain price of $5,000—some $20,000 short of the net cost that household is likely to impose on local, state, and federal government each year, according to Heritage Foundation calculations.
Expect a mass influx unlike anything this country has ever seen once the 12-month period for accepting Z visa applications begins. These provisions are an open invitation for those intent on U.S. residence to sneak in and present two fraudulent pieces of paper indicating that they were here before the beginning of the year.
That is precisely what happened in the 1986 amnesty, during which Immigration and Naturalization Services discovered 398,000 cases of fraud. Expect the number of fraudulent applications to be at least four times larger this time, given the much larger applicant pool.
- The Permanent "Temporary" Visa: Supporters of the bill call the Z visa a "temporary" visa. However, they neglect to mention that it can be renewed every four years until the visa holder dies, according to Section 601(k)(2) of the legislation. This would be the country's first permanent temporary visa. On top of that, it is a "super-visa," allowing the holder to work, attend college, or travel abroad and reenter. These permissible uses are found in Section 602(m).
A law-abiding alien with a normal nonimmigrant visa would surely desire this privileged status. Unfortunately for him, only illegal aliens can qualify, according Section 601(c)(1).
And contrary to popular misconception, illegal aliens need not return to their home countries to apply for the Z visa. That's only necessary if and when an alien decides to adjust from Z visa status to lawful permanent resident ("green card") status under Section 602(a)(1). And even then, it's not really the country of origin; any consulate outside the United States can take applications at its discretion or the direction of the Secretary of State.
- Hobbled Background Checks: The bill would make it extremely difficult for the federal government to prevent criminals and terrorists from obtaining legal status. Under Section 601(h)(1), the bill would allow the government only one business day to conduct a background check to determine whether an applicant is a criminal or terrorist. Unless the government can find a reason not to grant it by the end of the next business day after the alien applies, the alien receives a probationary Z visa (good from the time of approval until six months after the date Z visas begin to be approved, however long that may be) that lets him roam throughout the country and seek employment legally.
The problem is that there is no single, readily searchable database of all of the dangerous people in the world. While the federal government does have computer databases of known criminals and terrorists, these databases are far from comprehensive. Much of this kind of information exists in paper records that cannot be searched within 24 hours. Other information is maintained by foreign governments.
The need for effective background checks is real. During the 1986 amnesty, the United States granted legal status to Mahmoud "The Red" Abouhalima, who fraudulently sought and obtained the amnesty intended for seasonal agricultural workers (even though he was actually employed as a cab driver in New York City). But his real work was in the field of terrorism. He went on to become a ringleader in the 1993 terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center. Using his new legal status after the amnesty, he was able to travel abroad for terrorist training.
- Amnesty for "Absconders": Title VI's amnesty extends even to fugitives who have been ordered deported by an immigration judge but chose to ignore their removal orders. More than 636,000 absconders are now present in the country, having defied the law twice: once when they broke U.S. immigration laws and again when they ignored the orders of the immigration courts.
The Senate's bill allows the government to grant Z visas to absconders. Though the bill appears to deny the visa to absconders in Section 601(d)(1)(B), Section 601(d)(1)(I) allows U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services officials to give an absconder the Z visa anyway if the absconder can demonstrate that departure from the United States "would result in extreme hardship to the alien or the alien's spouse, parent or child."
This is a massive loophole because so many things can be construed to constitute "extreme hardship." This might include removing a child from an American school and placing him in a school in an impoverished country, or deporting a person with any chronic illness. Attorneys representing aliens would also argue that if any member of an absconder's family is a U.S. citizen, then the other members must remain in the United States, because the separation of family members would constitute extreme hardship.
This would also be a reward to those who have defied U.S. immigration courts. Those who have successfully fled justice could receive the most generous visa ever created, but those who complied with the law and have waited years to enter legally would have to wait longer still. (Indeed, the massive bureaucratic load caused by processing Z visas would undoubtedly mean longer waits for those who have played by the rules.) Further, those who have obeyed the law and complied with deportation orders would not be eligible for Z visas.
The effect of this provision may already be felt today. Why would an illegal alien obey a deportation order while this bill is even pending in Congress? If the alien ignores the deportation order, he may be able to qualify for the amnesty; but if he obeys the order, he has no possibility of gaining the amnesty.
- Reverse Justice: The bill would effectively shut down the immigration court system. Under Section 601(h)(6), if an alien in the removal process is "prima facie eligible" for the Z visa, an immigration judge must close any proceedings against the alien and offer the alien an opportunity to apply for amnesty.
- Enforcement of Amnesty, Not Laws: The bill would transform Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from a law enforcement agency into an amnesty distribution center. Under Sections 601(h)(1, 5) if an ICE agent apprehends aliens who appear to be eligible for the Z visa (in other words, just about any illegal alien), the agent cannot detain them. Instead, ICE must provide them a reasonable opportunity to apply for the Z visa. Instead of initiating removal proceedings, ICE will be initiating amnesty applications. This is the equivalent of turning the Drug Enforcement Agency into a needle-distribution network.
- Amnesty for Gang Members: Under Section 602(g)(2) of the bill, gang members would be eligible to receive amnesty. This comes at a time when violent international gangs, such as Mara Salvatrucha 13 (or "MS-13"), have brought mayhem to U.S. cities. More than 30,000 illegal-alien gang members operate in 33 states, trafficking in drugs, arms, and people. Deporting illegal-alien gang members has been a top ICE priority. The Senate bill would end that. To qualify for amnesty, all a gang member would need to do is note his gang membership and sign a "renunciation of gang affiliation."
- Tuition Subsidies for Illegal Aliens: The Senate bill incorporates the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act). The DREAM Act effectively repeals a 1996 federal law (8 U.S.C. § 1623) that prohibits any state from offering in-state tuition rates to illegal aliens unless the state also offers in-state tuition rates to all U.S. citizens. Ten states are currently defying this federal law. Section 616 would allow these and all other states to offer in-state tuition rates to any illegal alien who obtains the Z visa and attends college.
The injustice of this provision is obvious. Illegal aliens would receive a taxpayer subsidy worth tens of thousands of dollars and would be treated better than U.S. citizens from out of state, who must pay three to four times as much to attend college. In an era of limited educational resources and rising tuitions, U.S. citizens, not aliens openly violating federal law, should be first in line to receive education subsidies.
Further, legal aliens who possess an appropriate F, J, or M student visa would not receive this valuable benefit. Nor would they be eligible for the federal student loans that illegal aliens could obtain by this provision.
- Taxpayer-Funded Lawyers for Illegal Aliens: The Senate's bill would force taxpayers to foot the bill for many illegal aliens' lawyers. Under current law, illegal aliens are not eligible for federally funded legal services. Section 622(m) of the bill would allow millions of illegal aliens who work in agriculture to receive free legal services. Every illegal alien working in the agricultural sector would have access to an immigration attorney to argue his case through the immigration courts and federal courts of appeals—all at taxpayer expense. This provision alone could cost hundreds of millions of dollars each year.
- Amnesty Before Enforcement Triggers. Proponents of the Senate approach have consistently claimed that it would allow delayed amnesty only after certain law enforcement goals are met. The text of the bill, however, tells a different story. Section 1(a) allows provisional Z visas to be issued immediately after enactment, and Section 601(f)(2) prohibits the federal government from waiting more than 180 days after enactment to begin issuing provisional Z visas.
These provisional Z visas could be valid for years, depending on when the government begins issuing non-provisional Z visas, according to Section 601(h)(4). Moreover, the "provisional" designation means little. These visas are nearly as good as non-provisional Z visas, giving the alien immediate lawful status, protection from deportation, authorization to work, and the ability to exit and reenter the country (with advance permission). These privileges are listed in Section 601(h)(1).
Conclusion What becomes unmistakably clear from the details of the Senate's bill is that it is not a "compromise" in any meaningful sense. Indeed, the sweeping amnesty provisions of Title VI cripple law enforcement and undermine the rule of law. Kris W. Kobach, D.Phil, J.D., professor of law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, served as counsel to the U.S. Attorney General in 2001-2003 and was the attorney general's chief adviser on immigration law. Matthew Spalding, Ph.D., is the director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for American Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
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TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: aliens; amnesty; illegal; immigrantlist; immigration; ruleoflaw; shamnesty
To: Blood of Tyrants
I corrected the HTML here.
To: Blood of Tyrants
To: Blood of Tyrants; Tony Snow
Hey, Tony. If you're lurking, how about showing a copy of this to President Bush.
Not that he cares.
sw
4
posted on
05/23/2007 5:06:50 PM PDT
by
spectre
(Spectre's wife (..._ _ _...)
To: Blood of Tyrants
It’s even worse than we thought - and we already knew it was abominable!
5
posted on
05/23/2007 5:09:20 PM PDT
by
Gritty
(This Bill is amnesty first, border security later, American citizens last - Dave Weldon, R-Fla)
To: Blood of Tyrants
Getting sent to Mexico is hardly the worst thing in the world. In fact, Mexico is one of the better places to live and has a much better chance at permanent democratic government and the rule of law than anywhere outside of Western Europe and the United States.
No way being sent to Mexico could ever be construed to be a hardship.
At a minimum someone needs to go through this legislation and stipulate that Mexico is an exception to "hardship" at every point where that word occurs.
6
posted on
05/23/2007 5:15:36 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: spectre
If the illegals dont pay back taxes All 100 senators can STFU
7
posted on
05/23/2007 5:24:45 PM PDT
by
italianquaker
("blue dog democrats", that dog don't hunt)
To: Blood of Tyrants
Everyone here should keep in mind that this bill is the product of the resident administration, which is allegedly from the law and order side of the house.
How you can label yourself that, and propose that 12 million people simply walk away from a criminal record in the U.S. is beyond me.
And keep in mind, as I have posted many times before, this is not just for one crime of crossing the border. This is for a laundry list of felonies.
Can we ever say that they government of the United States has been so favorably disposed towards its own people?
8
posted on
05/23/2007 5:29:26 PM PDT
by
Regulator
To: Blood of Tyrants
This is an extremely bad bill. It is a case where no legislation is preferable to bad legislation.
The bill that we should have is simple:
1) border enforcement
2) crackdown on hiring illegals
3) restrictions on inbound travel by nationals from jihad-ridden nations
9
posted on
05/23/2007 5:51:04 PM PDT
by
etradervic
(Any Conservative in 2008)
To: Blood of Tyrants
"This title would change the status of those who are here illegally to legal, essentially granting amnesty to those "previously in unlawful status." This is how Florida fixed it's roach problem.
"We ain't got no steenkin' roaches. Those are palmetto bugs".
10
posted on
05/23/2007 7:28:58 PM PDT
by
Eagles6
(Dig deeper, more ammo.)
To: Blood of Tyrants
11
posted on
05/23/2007 7:29:45 PM PDT
by
Eagles6
(Dig deeper, more ammo.)
To: Blood of Tyrants
This kind of proposed law grants illegal aliens special privileges Americans don't have and which even
legal aliens don't possess. Message: break the law and you will be rewarded by Uncle Sam. What a wonderful country!
Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus
12
posted on
05/23/2007 7:36:27 PM PDT
by
goldstategop
(In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
To: goldstategop
And these guys in congress expect a raise every year for this rubbish?
How about us poor (tax payer) saps voting for your stinking raise. Most folks have their raises tied to performance. What kind of performance is this??
Folks we need term limits on the house and senate. Plan and simple.
13
posted on
05/23/2007 8:03:06 PM PDT
by
topdawwg
To: muawiyah
Agreed. I never understood why going to Mexico (and most other countries) was considered a ‘hardship’ especially if you are native to the country. The USA is the greatest place to live, but that doesn’t imply that everywhere else is untolerable.
14
posted on
05/24/2007 8:57:02 AM PDT
by
DancesWithBolsheviks
(Demands, marches and media sob stories diminish my compassion.)
To: 1_Inch_Group; 2sheep; 2Trievers; 3AngelaD; 3pools; 3rdcanyon; 4Freedom; 4ourprogeny; 7.62 x 51mm; ..
To: Blood of Tyrants
Exactly - rewarding illegal aliens undermines the rule of the law.
16
posted on
05/24/2007 10:21:24 AM PDT
by
Dante3
To: Blood of Tyrants
In order to show just how asinine this legislation is, since the Senate bill incorporates the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act) and the legislation removes “aliens” from their “alien” status to that of a “legalized immigrant”, just how are those with “Z” visas qualified for the DREAM act benefits? According to the legislation, those would no longer be “aliens”.
Those who’ve experienced the brain fart in concocting this BS bill are in desperate need of a handful of Ambien.
17
posted on
05/24/2007 10:33:00 AM PDT
by
azhenfud
(The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.)
To: Blood of Tyrants
The give aways in this bill are so alarming it makes you wonder if a unfriendly government has infiltrated our congress..alarming.....frightening.....
What have we done to end up with GREAT SOCIETY 2 social welfare costs while the globalists and RICH get the profits while spitting in our face and telling us how to live our miserable little insignificant lives.....
18
posted on
05/24/2007 10:36:44 AM PDT
by
Sovernity
(What are You doing other than talking and listening???)
To: Blood of Tyrants
slightly redundant but what the heck, here is my "at a glance list" that complied after listing to Lou Dobbs
1986
"This amnesty will give citizenship to only 1.1-1.3 million illegal aliens. We will secure the borders henceforth. We will never again bring forward another Amnesty Bill like this."
-Ted Kennedy, 1986
2007
1) Amnesty for all illegals in the nation prior to Jan 1, 2007
2) Illegal Immigration given amnesty for all back taxes due
3) Illegal Immigrate gang members given amnesty
4) All illegal immigrate legal fees paid by US tax payers
5) Illegal Immigrates get in state tuition at all state colleges
6) Z visa renewable forever
7) Government given only 24 hours to complete backgound check
8) No health check
9) Illegals get Social Security benefits
10) Estimates cost to US taxpayer 2.5 TRILLON dollars over 20 years.
19
posted on
05/24/2007 10:40:57 AM PDT
by
jpsb
To: Blood of Tyrants
The Big Question for me is
WHY? WHY??
20
posted on
05/24/2007 10:49:06 AM PDT
by
Yaelle
To: Eagles6
In the Nawth’ they’s “waterbugs”.
21
posted on
05/24/2007 12:16:37 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: DancesWithBolsheviks
There are people like Kennedy who actually think life in Mexico is absolutely horrible for everybody, and that no one with a still operable mind would live there under any conditions.
22
posted on
05/24/2007 12:18:13 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: jpsb
The 24 hour background check is kind of a reversal for the Liberals. They want to hold things up for weeks, maybe months or years, if you want to buy a gun from a government regulated dealer.
Makes me wonder what happend to the 24 hour standard ~ like yesterday you had Chris Dodd bellyaching about the 30 day limit to be placed on "parent" visas when even a tourist gets a 180 day limit.
It upset him a lot to deviate from that 180 days.
It's conceivable the Democrats have all taken leave of their minds.
23
posted on
05/24/2007 12:21:11 PM PDT
by
muawiyah
To: spectre
Laura Ingraham has been reading this article on her show today.
Power to the People!!! As she says!
24
posted on
05/24/2007 12:39:23 PM PDT
by
AuntB
(" It takes more than walking across the border to be an American." Duncan Hunter)
To: Blood of Tyrants
This is the difference, a qualitative difference of huge degree, between the legal analysis under A.G. Roberto Gonazales and A.G. John Ashcroft.
This is the analysis which Bush is being shielded from by his circle of yes-men...who know that they are there for that very reason.
25
posted on
05/24/2007 1:16:42 PM PDT
by
Paul Ross
(Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
To: Blood of Tyrants
GET WASHINGTON’S ATTENTION...Change your voter registration from Republican to Independent. We all know what has to be done with the current legislation being discussed but our ideas won’t be given a hearing. Dropping Republican registration will make them take pause OR do I give them too much credit?
To: Yaelle
Just throwin’ this out there. I’ve heard no one say it but...
In mexico’s last election a fellow traveller of fidel and hugo narrowly lost. We would not care for a communist government on our southern border.
The reason that mexico is a third world country while the US and Canada are the big dogs is its’ endemic corruption.
The only reason mexico doesn’t implode/explode is because of the remittances sent back from the US.
If 15-20 million jobless arrive back in mexico at the same time the remittances are cut off...KABOOM!
Massive humanitarian crisis emerges as scores of millions storm north and overwhelm the border as millions already here go to the border to help their countrymen here.
27
posted on
05/24/2007 5:58:00 PM PDT
by
Eagles6
(Dig deeper, more ammo.)
To: Yaelle
Just throwin’ this out there. I’ve heard no one say it but...
In mexico’s last election a fellow traveller of fidel and hugo narrowly lost. We would not care for a communist government on our southern border.
The reason that mexico is a third world country while the US and Canada are the big dogs is its’ endemic corruption.
The only reason mexico doesn’t implode/explode is because of the remittances sent back from the US.
If 15-20 million jobless arrive back in mexico at the same time the remittances are cut off...KABOOM!
Massive humanitarian crisis emerges as scores of millions storm north and overwhelm the border as millions already here go to the border to help their countrymen here.
28
posted on
05/24/2007 5:59:02 PM PDT
by
Eagles6
(Dig deeper, more ammo.)
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