Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Are Deportations Up? OR IS THAT MERELY LA RAZA PROPAGANDA AGAIN?

THE REASON HISPANDERING OBAMA PUT LA RAZA OPEN BORDERS ADVOCATE, JANET NAPOLITANO ON HOMELAND SECURITY, WAS TO ASSURE THAT THE LA RAZA PROPAGANDA WOULD CONTINUE, BORDERS LEFT OPEN AND ENFORCEMENT BE PART OF OBAMA’S ROAD SHOW OF “CHANGE”!!!

FOR EVERY ILLEGAL THAT GETS CAUGHT AT OUR BORDERS, IT IS CALCULATED THAT 8 ARE NOT!
10. The illegal aliens in the United States have a crime rate that's two-and-a-half times that of white non-illegal aliens. In particular, their children, are going to make a huge additional crime problem in the US. In sanctuary County of Los Angeles, there are 500 – 1,000 murders by Mexican illegals. They cost the county nearly one million dollars each to prosecute. Over 90% of all warrants for homicide is for a Mexican illegal! Of Los Angeles’ TOP 200 MOST WANTED CRIMINALS, 176 ARE MEXICANS! There have been 2,000 Californians murdered by illegals that fled back to Mexico to avoid prosecution. The rate for re-arrests of illegals is staggering.

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11. During the year of 2005 there were 4 to 10 MILLION illegal aliens that crossed our Southern Border also, as many as 19,500 illegal aliens from Terrorist Countries. Millions of pounds of drugs, cocaine, meth, heroin and marijuana, crossed into the U. S from the Southern border.

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CNN RECENTLY REPORTED THAT THE NUMBER OF MEX GANG MEMBERS EXCEEDS ONE MILLION!

Lou Dobbs Tonight
And there are some 800,000 gang members in this country: That’s more than the combined number of troops in our Army and Marine Corps. These gangs have become one of the principle ways to import and distribute drugs in the United States. Congressman David Reichert joins Lou to tell us why those gangs are growing larger and stronger, and why he’s introduced legislation to eliminate the top three international drug gangs.
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MEXICANOCCUPATION.blogspot.com

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“Half of deported immigrants in the last fiscal year were convicted of crimes, Napolitano said. Of those, 33% were convicted of what ICE considered the most serious crimes, which included murder, rape and major drug crimes. The others were convicted of lesser crimes such as burglary, domestic violence, some property crimes and other offenses.”
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latimes.com
Deportations of illegal immigrants hit record high, officials announce
By Paloma Esquivel
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
12:49 PM PDT, October 6, 2010More than 392,000 illegal immigrants were deported from the United States in fiscal year 2010, the highest number in the country's history, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced Wednesday.

"We have deployed unprecedented infrastructure, unprecedented technology, unprecedented manpower," Napolitano said during a news conference in Washington, D.C.

Napolitano and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton attributed the increased numbers to increased border enforcement, workplace enforcement and an expansion of the department's Secure Communities program.

Secure Communities, which uses fingerprints to identify illegal immigrants in state prisons and local jails, has gone from 14 jurisdictions in 2008 to more than 660, officials said. The department is on track to expand the program to every law-enforcement jurisdiction in the nation by 2013, Napolitano said.

Half of deported immigrants in the last fiscal year were convicted of crimes, Napolitano said. Of those, 33% were convicted of what ICE considered the most serious crimes, which included murder, rape and major drug crimes. The others were convicted of lesser crimes such as burglary, domestic violence, some property crimes and other offenses.

"The numbers reflect our continued focus on those who pose a public-safety threat to our communities," Napolitano said.

In addition, since January 2009, ICE has audited more than 3,200 employers suspected of hiring illegal labor, debarred 225 companies and individuals, and imposed about $50 million in financial sanctions--more than the total amount of audits and debarments than during the entire previous administration, she said.

A coalition of immigrant-rights groups, including the Center for Constitutional Rights and the National Day Laborer Organization Network, called the numbers misleading and said that statistics obtained from ICE showed that nearly 80% of people detained through the Secure Communities program were not criminals or were arrested for lower-level offenses.

Sherriff Lee Baca, who attended the announcement alongside Adrian Garcia, sheriff of Harris County in Texas, and Stan Barry, the sheriff of Virginia's Fairfax County, called the announcement "very good news" and said his department had identified 21,000 people in its jails eligible for deportation.

"Secure Communities does work," Baca said. "It's an excellent policy."

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