Archive for the ‘Illegal Immigration’ Category

US chamber: Farmers need illegal immigrants in workforce – Arizona Capitol Times

Randy Johnson, a vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, explains his organizations views on immigration and labor Monday. With him is Glenn Hamer, president of the state chamber. (Capitol Media Services photo by Howard Fischer)

Arizona needs its 920,000 foreign-born residents, both legal and otherwise, to fuel the states economy, according to a new study and some business leaders.

The report Monday by the New American Economy says those families had $21.4 billion in household income in 2014, the most recent figures available. They paid $1.7 billion in state and local taxes and have $16 billion in spending power.

When just the undocumented are counted, their earnings were $3.5 billion and $3.1 billion in spending power.

And the number of foreign-born immigrants living in Arizona grew faster between 2010 and 2014 than the overall rate of growth, both from births and people moving here from other states.

Kate Brick, the organizations director of state and local initiatives, said all that means more money in the economy, more dollars into Social Security and Medicare, and more people buying homes which in turn keeps the value of housing here increasing.

But the report, done for the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry, also shows that migrants represent a disproportional share of people in lower-wage jobs, including 32 percent of janitors and building cleaners, 50 percent of grounds maintenance workers and 55 percent of people working as maids and housekeeping cleaners.

And Randy Johnson, a vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said up to 60 percent of the agriculture workforce is not just foreign born but also undocumented.

More to the point, he said the industry is dependent on that. And Johnson said any federal legislation to require employers to electronically check the legal immigration status of their workers is dependent on farmers and others being able to get the laborers they need some way.

Lets just say it: They cant work without undocumented workers in the workforce, he said.

Glenn Hamer, president of the state chamber, insisted its not simply a matter of farmers paying higher wages to attract people who are here legally.

First is the question of whether legal residents would take those jobs. Thats not a new argument.

I dont think I need to tell you that there are jobs that Americans will not do, U.S. Sen. John McCain famously said in 2008. And when audience members suggested the issue is paying higher wages, the senator offered $50 an hour to anyone who would pick lettuce in Yuma for the whole season.

You cant do it, my friend, he said.

Hamer on Monday said its irrelevant whether people will take certain jobs even if the wages are increased.

Those farms couldnt exist, he said. They would go elsewhere.

Hamer said thats already happened with some operations moving to Mexico.

Who wins there? he said. The entire ecosystem gets blown to smithereens, affecting not only the workers but the managers of those firms plus the ripple effect on everything from pizza parlors to barber shops that were supported by those employees.

Johnson also denied that all the national chamber wants is cheap labor.

If we wanted just cheap labor, youre right, we wouldnt support legalization, he said, allowing those who are undocumented and already here to remain subject to some conditions, like a background check.

Anyway, he said, its better than this sort of wink and a nod that we create through an I-9 system. That refers to the current requirement of employers to verify the legal status of workers by logging in documents they present, a system that is generally considered to be rife with loopholes and people using forged and stolen papers.

But theres something standing in the way of interest of the business community in legalizing all the undocumented workers they are now using.

State Rep. Noel Campbell, R-Prescott, said he doesnt have a problem with providing legal status to the estimated 11.3 million perhaps 325,000 in Arizona who are undocumented. But he said that theres a political reality to get the votes.

We have to have the border secured first, said Campbell who worked for 27 years for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, reflecting the views of many within his party.

Were never going to secure it 100 percent, he said, citing his time on the border. But once we can accomplish that, then other steps can happen.

Brick acknowledged the concentration of foreign-born workers in some jobs but said the data shows they are not all concentrated in lower-wage jobs.

She said they make up 17.3 percent in STEM jobs science, technology, engineering and math despite being just 13.7 percent of the state population. And Brick said if half of the states 1,070 foreign students on temporary visas who earned advanced STEM degrees stayed in Arizona they would create more than 1,400 jobs for U.S.-born workers by 2021.

And theres something else: 71 percent of foreign-born workers are of working age, compared with 47 percent of those born in this country. She said that helps fuel the economy.

Victoria DeFrancesco Soto, an adjunct professor of public affairs at the University of Texas, had a slightly different take on the issue.

She said Hispanic women have a birth rate of 2.4 children, versus 1.8 for others. And all those children, Soto said, will help contribute to keeping Social Security solvent for what is becoming an aging population.

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US chamber: Farmers need illegal immigrants in workforce - Arizona Capitol Times

Judge Nap Blasts OR Gov’t After 20-Time Deportee Allegedly Assaults Woman – Fox News Insider

Judge Andrew Napolitano criticized the Oregon government after it failed to protect a senior citizen who was allegedly sexually assaulted by an illegal immigrant.

Sergio Martinez was deported 20 times prior to the alleged attack.

As FoxNews.com reported:

Sergio Jose Martinez, 31, was taken into custody Monday night on charges that include robbery, kidnapping, burglary and sexual abuse involving two victims.

Martinez allegedly assaulted a woman in the basement of a parking garage while armed with a knife, police said. The woman kicked him in the stomach and pressed the panic button in her car, and Martinez fled when authorities arrived.

The suspect has been a transient in the Portland area for more than a year and has five probation violations for re-entering the United States.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) lodged an immigration detainer against Martinez in December 2016, asking local authorities to notify them before releasing Martinez. However, he was released into the community and ICE was not notified.

It is illegal for cities in Oregon to use their resources to help enforce federal immigration laws; in March, Portland declared itself a "sanctuary city" for undocumented immigrants.

"There's obviously something wrong with the system," Napolitano said.

Portland, where the alleged incident occurred, is a sanctuary city.

He wondered aloud why the Oregon government "would not be concerned enough for the safety of the people."

Napolitano said that returning to the United States after deportation is a crime, and coming back 19 more times is 19 more crimes.

"Why hasn't he been arrested?" he asked.

Watch more above.

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Judge Nap Blasts OR Gov't After 20-Time Deportee Allegedly Assaults Woman - Fox News Insider

DOJ is Now Officially Using The ‘I-Word,’ and Advocates are Outraged – LawNewz

There has been a shift in the language that the U.S. Department of Justice is using in its press releases and official announcements, and its not sitting well with some. The DOJ, under the leadership of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, has begun using the term illegal aliens to refer to immigrants who do not have the proper paperwork to be in the United States. Last week, in announcing stricter rules for so-called sanctuary cities, a DOJ announcement said, So-called sanctuary policies make all of us less safe because they intentionally undermine our laws and protect illegal aliens who have committed crimes.

The DOJ also sent this press release out last month:

Advocates point to the 2012 Supreme Court ruling in which Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote,As a general rule, it is not a crime for a movable alien to remain in the United States.

In conservative circles, the term illegal immigrant is frequently used in the immigration battle. President Donald Trump has used the term repeatedly on Twitter during his term, and on the campaign trail.

I think this cuts to the heart of the debate over sanctuary cities and to what extent local law enforcement should cooperate with immigration authorities. Important legal nuances are reflected in words we use. A detainee is not a prisoner, for instance, wrote Ted Slowik in a recent opinion piece for The Chicago Tribune.

We reached out to the Department of Justice to find out more about why the decision was made.

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DOJ is Now Officially Using The 'I-Word,' and Advocates are Outraged - LawNewz

Undocumented immigrants found in restaurant owners’ North Jacksonville home – ActionNewsJax.com

by: Michael Yoshida, Action News Jax Updated: Jul 31, 2017 - 11:41 PM

Jacksonville restaurant owners are accused of hiding people in their home who are in the country illegally.

According to an affidavit filed Monday, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Department of Homeland Security bust happened July 6 at a home in the 11400 block of Tori Lane, near Dunn Avenue and Duval Road. An investigation into a tip about a 16-year-old who had been smuggled into the country led investigators to the Northside home.

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The tip came during an operation to crack down on organizations smuggling undocumented children into the United States. That information eventually led special agents to the home on Tori Lane, which the government said is tied to Fujiyama Japanese Steakhouse and Sushi Lounge, which is located just a few miles away at the River City Marketplace.

An American flag covers a window at the home where the six illegal immigrants were arrested.

One of them went in the house with, like, a long chain with a bunch of handcuffs, neighbor David Davis said.

Davis lives next door and says he was there when special agents were at the home on July 6.

Loaded them in the van and hauled them off, Davis said.

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According to an affidavit, ICE agents went to the home looking for a Guatemalan person potentially connected to smuggling a 16-year-old child. The Guatemalan person wasnt there, but agents ended up arresting six other illegal immigrants.

The affidavit says the home is owned by Xiu Liu and Liang Yang, who also own Fujiyama Japanese Steakhouse, the place where all the illegal immigrants said they worked.

On Monday, Action News Jaxs Michael Yoshida went to the steakhouse and asked to speak with the owners. He was told to speak with a lawyer, whom he called. The lawyer declined to comment.

The affidavit said the owners didn't ask for identification for employment but were told all workers were getting immigration status. It also says they didn't charge the immigrants rent.

2017 Cox Media Group.

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Undocumented immigrants found in restaurant owners' North Jacksonville home - ActionNewsJax.com

Activists decry latest attempt to force out the Dreamers – Washington Times

Immigrant rights advocates are urging a federal judge to close out a court case before Texas can use it to nix the Obama-era amnesty thats currently protecting nearly 800,000 illegal immigrant Dreamers.

While the Trump administration is still trying to decide what to do about the Obama amnesty, known in Washington as DACA, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund has taken up the case.

MALDEF told Judge Andrew S. Hanen that even though he has ruled against a broader amnesty, implemented by President Obama in 2014 and known as DAPA, he cannot now expand the case to include the original DACA amnesty, created in 2012.

DACA was in place over two years before the 2014 DAPA memorandum [was] issued. Plaintiffs could have challenged it when they filed suit in December 2014, yet they instead chose to file suit only against the DAPA memorandum, MALDEF said in its latest filing.

The original 2012 DACA itself is not at issue here, the groups lawyers said.

They said both Judge Hanen and Texas repeatedly agreed during two years of legal argument that the case only tangentially dealt with Dreamers.

They pointed to a Jan. 15, 2015, statement by Texas lawyer, who said flatly that the state was not challenging the DACA program.

Judge Hanen in 2015 ruled the broader DAPA amnesty a violation of federal procedural laws. An appeals court upheld his injunction, ruling DAPA also broke immigration law.

The Supreme Court last year deadlocked 4-4 on the case, leaving the injunction in place.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has now said that if DAPA is illegal, so is DACA, which rests on the same basic legal claims of executive flexibility in enforcing immigration law. He has given the Trump administration until early September to phase out the program, or else he said he will ask Judge Hanen to invalidate it.

The DAPA program would have applied to perhaps 4 million illegal immigrant parents with U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident children. It would have offered a temporary year stay of deportation and granted work permits, entitling illegal immigrants to Social Security numbers, drivers licenses and some taxpayer benefits.

The DACA program offered the same benefits but to some 800,000 young adult illegal immigrants, known as Dreamers, who were brought to the U.S. as children.

Homeland Security has revoked the DAPA policy, but has said it would keep the DACA policy in place though Secretary John F. Kelly has said legal experts told him the policy is likely to be found illegal should the issue reach the decision stage in court.

Activists have struggled to refute the legal questions, but insist Mr. Trump should fight to preserve the program anyway for the sake of Dreamers.

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Activists decry latest attempt to force out the Dreamers - Washington Times