Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Sanctuary City SAN FRANCISCO - ILLEGALS NOT ABOVE THE LAW??? Since When?

YIKES! ILLEGALS ARE UNDER THE LAW???
WHAT WILL BOXER, PELOSI, AND FEINSTEIN SAY ABOUT THAT?
LORDY, WHAT WILL LA RAZA SAY! IT COULD BE THE END OF MEXICAN SUPREMACY.
I’M WORRIED ALSO ABOUT WHAT MEX RACIST SUPREMACIST FUCKER CALDERON MIGHT DO? STOP SENDING MILLIONS OF PREGNANT MEXICANS OVER OUR BORDERS?
OBAMA WON’T READ THE LAW, BUT WILL HAVE HIS SUPREMACIST, HOLDER, JANET “LA RAZA” NAPOLITANO, AND LA RAZA PUTO, HARRY REID, FIGHT THE THIS BIG TIME.
I’M CONCERNED ABOUT THE ILLEGALS’ HURT FEELINGS! THIS MEAN THEY HAVE TO STOP USING STOLEN IDENTITIES TO GET OUR JOBS? CAN’T DRIVE ILLEGALLY? CAN’T CONTRACT ILLEGALLY? CAN’T OPEN ILLEGAL BANK ACCOUNTS ILLEGALLY?

THIS COULD EASILY BE THE FALL OF THE MEXICAN EMPIRE!
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Brown rejects SF's request over immigration check
State Attorney General Jerry Brown rebuffed San Francisco Sheriff Michael Hennessey's request to allow the city to ''opt out'' of the federal Secure Communities program aimed at identifying undocumented immigrants.
The program, scheduled to be rolled out in San Francisco next month, already is operating in 169 counties nationwide, including 17 in California, among them Alameda and Contra Costa.
Under the program, the California Department of Justice automatically sends the digital fingerprints of suspects booked by local law enforcement officials to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, known as ICE.
If ICE finds a match in its database, the suspects can be detained until their immigration status is determined. Currently, the Sheriff's Department sends the fingerprints of everyone who is booked to the state Department of Justice for a criminal background check.
If a suspect has been arrested for a felony offense, and their immigration status can't be verified, the city alerts ICE.
Under the new policy, the fingerprints of anyone booked, including those for minor offenses, would be sent automatically to federal immigration authorities. Hennessey and members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors oppose the initiative, saying it would gut San Francisco's sanctuary law and put many more people at risk of deportation.
Brown, however, defended Secure Communities. ''Because I think this program serves both public safety and the interest of justice, I am declining your request,'' he told Hennessey. He added that the issue is not a local matter. ''Many of the people booked in local jails end up in state prison or go on to commit crimes in other counties and states,'' Brown wrote.
Hennessey's reaction: ''I am disappointed with the attorney general's decision and continue to be concerned that U.S. citizens and minor offenders will be caught up in the broad Secure Communities' net.'' He said he will continue to study the issue '' to see how the program can be applied as fairly as possible.''
The Board of Supervisors was to have voted today on a nonbinding resolution co-sponsored by eight of the 11 supervisors that would urge local law enforcement officials not to participate in the Secure Communities program. But at the request of Supervisor Carmen Chu, who is not a sponsor, consideration was delayed two weeks.
Mayor Gavin Newsom has opposed efforts to remove San Francisco from the Secure Communities program.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/cityinsider/detail?entry_id=64365#ixzz0p4bnQ1oJ

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