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Clear Channel Annexes Los Angeles to Mexico

(I-605 past Romona, Los Angeles County)

 

More Bad News On the Jobs Front

Going Underground - Barron's: The shadow economy

By JIM MCTAGUE

AMERICA HAS TWO ECONOMIES, and one is flourishing at the expense of the
other. First, there's the legitimate economy, in which craftsmen are
licensed and employers and employees pay taxes. Then there's the
fast-growing underground economy, where millions of nannies, construction
workers and others are paid off-the-books, their incomes largely untaxed.
The best guess as to the size of the output of this shadow economy is about
$970 billion, or nearly 9% that of the real economy. It should soon pass $1
trillion.

What is largely fueling the underground economy, experts say, is the
nation's swelling ranks of low-wage illegal immigrants. The government puts
this population at 8.5 million, but that may represent a serious undercount.
Robert Justich, a senior managing director at Bear Stearns Asset Management
in New York, makes a persuasive case in a forthcoming paper, "The
Underground Labor Force Is Rising to the Surface," that illegal immigrants
actually number 18 million to 20 million. If true, the economic implications
are profound and could help shape debates slated in Washington this year
over both immigration policies and tax reform.

Measuring the size of the underground economy is, of course, more art than
science, since most of its denizens seek to remain anonymous. But convincing
anecdotal evidence and a number of credible academic studies suggest that it
is expanding briskly -- probably by an average of 5.6% a year since the
early 1990s, edging out the real economy.
[Underground illustration]

In the process, the underground economy is undermining the effectiveness of
the Internal Revenue Service, which is highly dependent on employees'
withholding taxes. If the IRS could collect all the taxes it says that it is
owed from the underground economy in a given year, then the current budget
deficit would disappear overnight. And if the IRS could collect these taxes
every year, then the nation would have surpluses as far as the eye can see.

The IRS has estimated that its tax gap -- the estimated amount of taxes owed
minus the amount collected -- is around $311 billion in any given year. The
agency will produce a new estimate in 2005, and it could be as high as $400
billion, says former IRS Commissioner Donald Alexander. Now a lawyer in
Washington, he cites a rise in private contracting and the opportunities it
affords for not reporting income.

The gap number measures only a portion of the underground economy. Because
the number is extrapolated from audited returns, it makes no allowances for
criminal enterprises that report no income, and it even fails to capture
some garden varieties of nonreporting. The unreported wages of illegal
immigrants alone could be costing the government another $50 billion a year,
says Justich.

Growth of the underground economy is partly a result of corporate
downsizing, which has forced many former employees to go out on their own.

"We have had an 85% taxpayer compliance rate," says Nina Olson, the IRS's
taxpayer advocate. "I expect the number to decline," because the portion of
employees subject to withholding is on the wane. Such employees are 99%
compliant with tax laws, she says, but in the 21st-century economy, "More
and more people are being treated as independent contractors. We are losing
people from the withholding environment."

Entrepreneurs often are stymied by the complexity of estimating their taxes
and making quarterly payments, which leads to mistakes or out-and-out
avoidance. The growth of online commerce may be exacerbating the situation.
There were over 40 million regular users of eBay alone in 2003, up from 23
million in 2002. The sellers are responsible for paying taxes. Some of them
set up a business and get a taxpayer ID number; others don't. (An eBay
spokesman says the company isn't a tax adviser -- it's up to members to
report their taxes.)

Most unsettling to IRS bureaucrats, taxpayers as a group appear to have
become less honest. Former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik
is the latest poster boy for the phenomenon. He had to drop his bid to
become secretary of homeland security because he failed to pay Social
Security taxes for his children's illegal-immigrant nanny.

Kerik is hardly alone: Any homeowner who has been offered two prices by a
handyman or a gardener -- a higher one for a payment by check, a lower one
for all cash -- knows how quickly the savings can add up. In one twist on
off-the-books business, the New York Times recently reported on a rise in
mechanics who repair cars at curbside for untraceable cash payments. They
are not in want of customers. In some cities, including Boston, owners of
battered cars get similar offers from itinerant body-repair "experts."

In speeches, IRS Commissioner Mark Everson is fond of citing a survey by his
agency showing that the number of Americans who consider tax-cheating
acceptable rose from 11% in 1999 to 17% in 2003.

Former Commissioner Alexander, who ran the agency during the Nixon, Ford and
Carter administrations, said he urged Congress to pass a law making
customers responsible for withholding some taxes on services provided by
carpenters, plumbers and other self-employed contractors. Customers would
have had to hold back 5% of the cost of services and forward it to the IRS,
but Congress failed to embrace the measure.

Result: The underground economy has kept growing nearly unchecked. Academics
accept the work of Austrian Friedrich Schneider as the best estimate of the
underground economy's size. Using data on currency flows and the consumption
of electricity, he guessed that in 1996 it was about 8.8% of the nation's
gross domestic product. This estimate was made before the flood of
immigration from South America, so it might be conservative if used today,
when the nation's GDP stands at $11 trillion.

To be sure, the U.S. underground economy, as a percentage of GDP, is smaller
than those of some other countries. In a 2000 paper in a publication of the
Independent Institute, a nonprofit research organization, Schneider found
that Greece, as of 1998, had the largest underground economy, at 29% of its
GDP, followed by Italy at 27.8% and Spain at 23.4%. Countries with high tax
burdens and high social security costs lead the list.

But the sheer growth of the underground economy in the U.S. is cause for
concern. If Justich's estimate of illegal immigrant workers is correct, the
underground economy may now be growing at a markedly faster rate than the
legitimate economy. Justich, working with Bear Stearns colleague Betty Ng,
an emerging- markets economist, says he's found evidence of a larger illegal
immigrant population by analyzing data on construction and on remittances
sent from the U.S. to Mexico and other countries. He also had conversations
with over 100 immigrants from Mexico, Brazil, the Dominican Republic,
Guinea, China and Tibet. And he interviewed local business owners,
real-estate sales people and police.

Justich, a veteran securities analyst, currently specializes in fixed-income
strategies at Bear Stearns Asset Management, which oversees some $29 billion
in investments. He began digging into the underground economy because of its
broad ramifications for the real economy. In his spare time, he has been
exploring the immigrant communities of northern New Jersey for his work as
executive producer of a documentary film about immigrants and the importance
of their former national anthems in their lives.

From all this, Justich concludes that Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's
estimates of productivity gains are overly rosy. "The productivity miracle
may be slightly overstated because they are counting the output of millions
of illegal immigrants but not counting the input," he says. Likewise,
long-term budget projections could be overstating the potential growth of
the legitimate U.S. economy or underestimating the need for high illegal
immigrant flows to hit the forecast growth targets.

Ideas like that could well become food for thought for House Ways and Means
Committee Chairman Bill Thomas of California. He wants to push ahead with
tax reform this year, including the creation of a national sales tax and
reduction of income taxes. In theory, a sales tax would capture the
underground economy, since all wage earners have to spend money to live.
[Robert Justich]
On the Beat: Robert Justich of Bear Stearns Asset Management scours the
streets of New Jersey for clues about immigration trends.

A larger number of illegal immigrants also would have a profound impact on
coming discussions on immigration reform. President Bush proposes temporary
amnesty for illegal aliens already in the country, allowing them to obtain
permits to work legally for three years and stay longer if their jobs
otherwise can't be filled by native-born workers. But if there are, in fact,
20 million illegal aliens, the Bush proposal could engender a situation not
unlike the German unification of the 1990s, which triggered huge demand for
social services in East Germany. Unanticipated costs here could be enormous.

Steven Camarota of the privately funded Center for Immigration Studies in
Washington asserts that the net cost to the government for amnesty, based on
a population size of 10 million, would have been $10 billion if carried out
in 2002. The total cost would be $26.3 billion minus about $16 billion in
new taxes from the immigrants. The costs would arise because the illegal
immigrants, most of whom are poorly educated, would begin to become heavier
users of government services like food stamps, schools and Medicare.

Camarota, who does contract work for the Census Bureau, doesn't think that
U.S. birth and death records support Justich's claim of 15 million to 20
million illegal immigrants. But Camarota says that he isn't suggesting that
the debate is settled. There are other statistics, like unemployment data,
that might suggest slightly larger numbers.

JUSTICH CERTAINLY HAS DUG DEEPER for data at the local level than most
researchers when preparing his report for his company's investors. He has
unearthed data on building permits that show construction of multifamily
dwelling units is up six-fold in immigrant communities while census data
show just a small percentage increase in population in those same communities.

Justich's analysis of remittances from the U.S. to Mexico also indicates a
larger population of immigrants than the official numbers show. According to
a study by a Georgetown University professor, Manuel Orozco, for the Pew
Hispanic Center, remittances to Mexico tripled to $13.2 billion between 1995
and 2000. Yet the official tally of Mexicans in the U.S. rose 56% and the
estimate of their weekly wages rose 10%.

Similarly, a California official told Barron's of an anecdote that calls
official numbers into real question. Bill Leonard, a member of California's
Board of Equalization, said he was involved in redistricting his state's
congressional districts in 2001. Some areas that were the same size in
population as others, based on census data, ended up having five times as
many unregistered voters. Most of the extra people were noncitizens, he
says. Leonard also says that the number of active retail permits in the
state has been stable for several years at one million -- a sign, he
asserts, that stiff competition from unlicensed businesses may be keeping
new entrants out of the retail market.

Leonard estimates that California loses $100 million in sales taxes each
year to the underground economy.

The IRS's Olson, who operates as Joe Taxpayer's ombudsman, says that tax
collectors and cops enthusiastically pursue two groups of tax evaders -- the
underpayers and the crooks. But she says there's little effort at the
federal level to capture the sidewalk vendor who's hiding most of his income
or to ferret out which of the many lawn-care services operating in suburban
neighborhoods is skipping taxes. The authorities just don't perceive a big
enough bang for the enforcement costs.

The truth is, employers hiring illegal workers have little to fear from the
government right now. Data from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services, as the old Immigration and Naturalization Service has been dubbed
since being shifted to the Department of Homeland Security, show that
enforcement actions against employers and illegal workers have dropped
sharply since 1997. Back then, there were about 18,000 arrests a year
resulting from investigations of employers using illegal alien workers, but
in 2002 there were fewer than 1,000 arrests. Instead, agents are trying to
catch workers at border-crossing points. Opponents argue that cracking down
on employers would be more effective. If immigrants couldn't get work, the
argument goes, they wouldn't bother to come.

THE DECLINE IN ARRESTS COINCIDES with a broader easing of enforcement
actions by the IRS -- following criticism of overzealous collections in the
early 1990s. Audits of individuals dropped from three for every thousand tax
returns in 1998 to two in 1,000 in 2003, according to Syracuse University's
Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. And audits of corporations
dropped 26% in the first six months of 2004 from the same period a year earlier.
[Lengthening Shadows]

There are signs that tide may be turning. The IRS last year added 2,200
enforcement employees. Olson, for her part, favors more spot audits of even
the smallest small businesses because, she says, word of enforcement actions
spread like wildfire and make others think twice about cheating. And Sen.
Kent Conrad, a Democrat from North Dakota, has been calling vociferously for
an increase in the IRS budget to allow for more aggressive enforcement.

In the meantime, however, employment of illegal immigrants is flourishing.
Justich believes that undocumented workers now hold 12 million to 15 million
jobs in the U.S. If those showed up in official data, the Bush
administration's job-creation record would look significantly better. In
fact, four million to six million of these positions have moved from the
legitimate economy into the underground economy in recent years, he says.

While exploring northern New Jersey for the documentary -- he's producing it
with Gary Dial of the Manhattan School of Music and singer Terre Roche --
Justich was struck by the economic impact of Brazilian immigrants on a
neighborhood of Newark adjacent to the city's Penn Station. Sidewalks and
stores are packed with shoppers. Restaurants are filled with diners. New
three-family housing units are popping up block after block.

Justich began doing some detective work. He and his colleague Ng compared
housing permits in the gateway communities with census data and were shocked
at the results. The census data indicate that the populations of Newark, New
Brunswick and Elizabeth grew by 5.6% between 1990 and 2003, and less than
the 9% growth in their three corresponding counties. Yet housing permits in
the three cities were up six-fold versus a three-fold increase for the
counties; and 80% of the permits in the cities were for multifamily
dwellings. That struck him as a huge disconnect, suggesting the immigrant
populations are larger than shown by the census.

Leonard of California holds a seminar on the state's underground economy
every year for officials and legitimate businessmen. They brainstorm ways to
bring entrepreneurs out of the shadows and onto the tax roles. Leonard says
the state has tried tax amnesty programs: "We had a 60-day window and waived
a 10% penalty for nonpayment," he recalls. But the accumulated interest on
the unpaid taxes for many people was more than their back taxes, so the
program didn't go far enough to get more people to come out, he says.

A state amnesty program in 2004 netted $1.4 billion in back taxes from 857
individuals and 340 businesses. For the most part, these were wealthy people
who had become involved with questionable offshore tax shelters. Most of the
illegal immigrant businesses gross less than $100,000 a year, but there are
so many, they probably owe even more.

Los Angeles, Barron's found, is the most aggressive and successful
jurisdiction in the country in moving people from the shadow economy into
the light. The reason for this may be that that the state's amnesty program
is mostly carrot: Small businessmen have more to gain by going legal than
they do by remaining in the shadows.

One piece of the L.A. program provides an exemption from the business tax
for two years for new licensees with under $100,000 in annual gross
receipts. For bigger businesses that owe back taxes, the city offers
flexible repayment plans. Penalties, but not interest, are forgiven. Renata
Simril, Los Angeles' deputy mayor for economic development, says the city
spent $2 million to advertise the most recent amnesty project, begun in
2002. It was money well-spent. L.A. collected business-tax revenues of $21.7
million and added 47,000 new tax accounts.

As Olson points out, it's hard work for someone to stay submerged in the
underground economy in the 21st century. At some point, perhaps when the tax
evader wants to buy, say, a house and encounter lenders who demand tax
returns, the incentive to turn legal can become great. Besides more
aggressive audits, simpler forms might make the transition from shadow to
light more attractive, Oslon says.

One thing is certain: The rest of America is subsidizing the other half's
free ride, and the costs will only grow if authorities continue to
underestimate the scope of the problem.

 

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/05/24/national/main697438.shtml

 
Buried Girl 'Knew' She'd Be Saved
 
 
LAKE WORTH, Fla., May 24, 2005



'Dumped' Girl Found Alive

Milagro Cunningham, 17, right, is photographed during a court appearance in the Palm Beach County Courthouse Juvenile Courts. (Photo: AP)



"She said she knew we would come get her. That's why as soon as the police came, she wiggled her fingers."
Danielle Holloman, a family friend


Rescue workers wheel the girl from the dump to a waiting ambulance. (Photo: CBS/EARLY SHOW)

The type of recycling bin the 8-year-old girl was found in by police. (Photo: CBS/EARLY SHOW)


(AP) The last thing she remembers before being entombed in a trash bin under rocks and concrete blocks was looking into the eyes of the man who had left her there to die.

The 8-year-old remained trapped there for hours, sleeping intermittently, wondering if anyone would find her. Then she heard muffled voices growing closer and the lid being lifted from the bin. She managed to wiggle her fingers — a sign of life that brought elated cries from above.

The girl, who was found by police seven hours after she was reported missing early Sunday, was hospitalized in good condition Monday and was talking with family and friends. After she was rescued, she described her attacker to police, leading to the quick arrest of a teenage boy who had been staying at her godmother's home.

"She said the last thing she remembers is that he looked over her with these big eyes and then she said she went to sleep. She said she was waiting for us to find her," said 18-year-old Danielle Holloman, a family friend who recounted the girl's story.

"She said she knew we would come get her. That's why as soon as the police came, she wiggled her fingers," Holloman said Monday.

Police Sgt. Mike Hall found the girl after climbing into a 25-foot-long trash bin and opening the lid to a 30-gallon recycling container. Inside, he saw the girl's hand and foot peeking out amid heavy concrete slabs.

Rescuers feared the worst, but the mood turned jubilant when they saw the girl's fingers move and realized she was alive.

"There's no doubt in my mind that this child would have been dead if he didn't find her. She was dehydrated and in rough shape with pieces of cement blocks on top of her and she was face down," Sgt. Dan Boland said. "There was no way for her to get out on her own."

He said there must have been enough air pockets in the container to keep her alive.

Her disappearance rattled a state that had been outraged over the arrests of sex offenders in the separate killings earlier this year of 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford and 13-year-old Sarah Lunde.

The girl had been staying overnight at her godmother's house in this town about 10 miles south of West Palm Beach — where she often stayed on weekends when her mother worked.

Authorities said Milagro Cunningham, 17, confessed and was charged with attempted murder, sexual battery on a child under 12, and false imprisonment of a victim under age 13, police said.

The teen initially told investigators that the girl may have been abducted by five men in a station wagon and that he followed them but they got away. His story then unraveled under questioning, Boland said.

Holloman said Cunningham's mother lives in the Bahamas and he had been staying with an aunt until she accused him of stealing and kicked him out about four months ago. He then went to live at the home of Lisa Taylor, Holloman's mother and the girl's godmother.
 
"He was a good person. He would clean and do chores, laugh and play jokes and stuff. We never thought he would do something like that," Holloman said. "The only reason I can think he went crazy like this is his father died and his mother didn't want him. Nobody wanted him."

The teen has a relatively minor criminal record, authorities said. He was on probation for throwing a rock through a car window.

The girl vanished from the bedroom she was sharing with Holloman's 1-year-old son. Her disappearance was discovered when Holloman and Taylor's other teenage daughter came home after a night of roller-skating, authorities said.

A half-hour later, Cunningham knocked on the door and the sisters found him with his shirt torn and his clothes covered with dirt. Investigators said that was when he started telling his story about the men in the station wagon.

"We believed him. We all believed him because we never thought he would do something like that," Holloman said.

After an Amber Alert was issued, neighbors poked holes in the boy's account and the attention began to focus on him. He initially said there were five attackers, then four and later two.

"When somebody tells you a story, sometimes things just don't add up and once you get deeper into it, the holes get bigger and bigger," Boland said.

Authorities said the girl was found far enough from any homes that no one would probably have heard if she had cried out. The trash bin was in a fenced-off former landfill behind a park where she often played with friends.

The Associated Press and CBSNews.com do not identify alleged victims of sexual assault.

_____________

 

IN YOUR COMMUNITY: THIRD WORLD MOMENTUM

By Frosty Wooldridge
March 15, 2005
NewsWithViews.com

Illegal aliens do not try to assimilate into American life. They arrogantly rebuff our society. They steal our jobs, depress our wages, degrade our schools and introduce diseases. Ironically, legal immigrants at 1.1 million annually, also move into our communities without the faintest understanding of personal responsibilities to their neighbors. They ride our welfare system, help others into our country illegally and disregard our American way of life.

Teddy Roosevelt, in 1914, said, “The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, or preventing all possibility of its continuing as a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities.” [and languages]......

Gang will target Minuteman Vigil on Mexico Border

By Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES 

NACO, Ariz. -- Members of a violent Central America-based gang have been sent to Arizona to target Minuteman Project volunteers, who will begin a monthlong border vigil this weekend to find and report foreigner sneaking into the United States, project officials say.

    James Gilchrist, a Vietnam veteran who helped organize the vigil to protest the federal government's failure to control illegal immigration, said he has been told that California and Texas leaders of Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, have issued orders to teach "a lesson" to the Minuteman volunteers........

EXCERPTS: (Mexico/terrorists crossing)

White House Press Briefing

March 15, 2005
 
Q But the President shared the concern of some members of Congress yesterday, for example, that were saying they knew that al Qaeda has some members in Mexico who are trying to get with the coyotes to cross the borders illegally into the United States. Has the President shared that concern? And he trust the Mexican government to deal with that --

MR. McCLELLAN: Oh, sure, we stay in touch with the Mexican government on issues like this, and we will continue to do so in the future, as well. We also will talk to them about our efforts to implement important reforms that will allow us to focus more time on the border, going after those who are coming into this country for the wrong reasons.

####

lThe Overlooked Catastrophe Coming From the South:

Interview with Scott Gulbransen
Author of
“The Silent Invasion”

Gang Arrests Had al-Qaida Link

Tuesday, March 15, 2005 11:15 p.m. EST

A violent street gang whose members were arrested as part a nationwide sweep by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials on Monday had ties to al-Qaida, U.S. intelligence officials say.

Officials said the Central American gang MS-13 is one of the largest and most violent street gangs in the United States, and the majority of its members are in the country illegally.......

Intelligence officials warned in January that al-Qaida members have been seen in El Salvador with MS-13 members, raising concerns the gang may be smuggling terrorists into the United States......

Illegal Alien Influx May Comprmise National Security

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

DOUGLAS, Ariz. — The U.S.-Mexican border is nearly 2,000 miles long. America's determination to keep illegal aliens out is matched only by their desperation to get in.

"The reality is that hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world are successfully sneaking into the United States," said Dave Stoddard, a 27-year Border Patrol veteran........

In spite of the massive resources invested in border security, hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, of undocumented aliens make it into the United States every year.

This is part one of a five-part series looking at how illegal immigration affects U.S. border security, the criminal, health care and education systems, as well as the economy. Watch the series this week on FOX News Channel.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(IRON - Why are Mexican Senators allowed in this country to review this sovereign countries immigration laws?  I love how one Mexican Senator Jesus Galvan Munoz defended the "Guide for the Yucatecan Migrant" (the illegal alien guide book describing how to enter, live and reside in this country illegally) by saying "The guide for the migrant is not promoting (illegal) migration," said Mexico City Sen. Jesús Galván Muñoz at a news conference at the office of the consul general of Mexico in Phoenix. "The content of the document is not promoting the migrants to cross in an illegal way. It's more directed so that the Mexicans that are coming here can take precautions and save their lives.")
 

Mexican Leaders Visit Valley

Concerns aired on Minuteman Project event

Yvonne Wingett
The Arizona Republic
Mar. 12, 2005 12:00 AM

Mexican senators visiting Phoenix said Friday that they are concerned about a gathering of volunteers who plan to help prevent undocumented immigrants in April from crossing the U.S.-Mexican border.

The five senators said they received assurances from Arizona officials that members of the Minuteman Project who violate the law will be punished, according to Sadot Sánchez Carreño, a senator from the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca, and president of Mexico's Human Rights Commission.

A spokeswoman for Paul Charlton, U.S. attorney for Arizona, confirmed his office will monitor the civilian patrols.
 

"Anyone who violates anyone else's civil rights within the United States will have to face punishment," Sandy Raynor said.

The Mexican delegation also defended a guide published by the southeastern state of Yucatan that critics contend encourages illegal immigration. The Guide for the Yucatecan Migrant tells migrants how to apply for work visas but also provides detailed safety advice for those illegally crossing the border, including where to find water in the desert and how to avoid the most dangerous areas. It includes a section specifically about Arizona.....................

 

84 hospitials to close in California due to non-paying illegal aliens; geez.  Interesting, though, at the very bottom is the doctors prescribed medicine to cure this crisis that's plaguing this country.
 
INVASION USA

Illegal Aliens Threaten U.S. Medical System
Docs journal reports hospitals being closed, previously vanquished diseases being spread


Posted: March 13, 2005 1:00 a.m. Eastern
© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

Cristobal Silverio emigrated illegally from Mexico to Stockton, Calif., in 1997 to work as a fruit picker.

He brought with him his wife, Felipa, and three children, 19, 12 and 8 – all illegals. When Felipa gave birth to her fourth child, daughter Flor, the family had what is referred to as an "anchor baby" – an American citizen by birth who provided the entire Silverio clan a ticket to remain in the U.S. permanently.

But Flor was born premature, spent three months in the neonatal incubator and cost the San Joaquin Hospital more than $300,000. Meanwhile, oldest daughter Lourdes married an illegal alien gave birth to a daughter, too. Her name is Esmeralda. And Felipa had yet another child, Cristian.

The two Silverio anchor babies generate $1,000 per month in public welfare funding for the family. Flor gets $600 a month for asthma. Healthy Cristian gets $400. While the Silverios earned $18,000 last year picking fruit, they picked up another $12,000 for their two "anchor babies."

While President Bush says the U.S. needs more "cheap labor" from south of the border to do jobs Americans aren't willing to do, the case of the Silverios shows there are indeed uncalculated costs involved in the importation of such labor – public support and uninsured medical costs ..................

U.S. crackdown nets 103 alleged members of M-13 gang

MS-13 called an emerging threat to U.S.

Monday, March 14, 2005 Posted: 2:24 PM EST (1924 GMT)WASHINGTON (AP) -- More than 100 alleged members of the violent Central American street gang MS-13 have been arrested in a nationwide sweep, authorities said Monday.

Using information from local and state law enforcement agencies, federal agents charged 103 members of the Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, gang with a range of criminal and immigration charges. The arrests came in the New York, Washington, Los Angeles, Baltimore, Newark, Miami and Dallas metropolitan areas over the last several weeks.

Officials said MS-13 is one of the largest and most violent street gangs in the United States, and the majority of its members are in the country illegally........

Illegals at power plant prompt call for legislation


By Stephen Dinan
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
 

Illegal aliens using false Social Security numbers were able to enter and work as contract painters at a power plant in Florida, including work near one nuclear reactor.

    Officials at Progress Energy, which runs the Crystal River Energy Complex in Citrus County, say they followed federal regulations and that the contractor should have better vetted its employees.

Now a congresswoman is calling for hearings on how the lapse could have happened and calling for the Senate to pass a bill cracking down on illegal aliens' ability to obtain government identification..............

Condoleezza Rice Visits Mexico

MEXICO CITY, March 10, 2005

  • (AP)  Mexicans downplayed U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's visit here, saying President Vicente Fox's image as a lame-duck leader and the United States ' preoccupation with other parts of the world are likely to block any major developments in the bilateral relationship.

    "The templates are moving not in favor, but against any dramatic or strategic move" on the part of Mexico or the United States , said Riordan Roett, director of Latin American studies at Johns Hopkins University ........

    ...........Now, instead of pushing for a program that would legalize millions of Mexican workers in the United States , leaders seem resigned to supporting U.S. President Bush's proposal for a guest worker program that would allow some Mexicans with jobs to enter, but not stay permanently, in the country. They also recognize even that proposal has a tough fight in the U.S. Congress, which recently has debated measures to restrict, not expand, migrant rights................



    Border, interior enforcement called severely lackingGovExec.com

    DAILY BRIEFING
    March 9, 2005

By Chris Strohm
cstrohm@govexec.com

Current and former government officials told Congress Wednesday that the nation's border and immigration security suffers from the lack of a comprehensive mission, poor information sharing and coordination between agencies, inadequate resources, inept management and bureaucratic infighting.

They painted a picture of a border and immigration system overwhelmed with illegal, and possibly terrorist, activity, even though the government has pumped billions of dollars into making reforms since 9/11.

"We miss opportunities every day in the area of counterterrorism because of a lack of intelligence that we gather [and] because of a lack of intelligence that's passed on between the appropriate agencies," said David Venturella, former director of the Homeland Security Department's Office of Detention and Removal Operations. "We're missing opportunities to gather that intelligence, to determine the right strategies and the right initiatives, to tackle these problems." ..............

Utah Bill Signed, Illegals Lose Licenses

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Gov. Jon Huntsman on Tuesday signed a bill replacing regular Utah driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants with driving privilege cards that can't be used as official identification to board airplanes or register to vote.

The move comes a day after hundreds of demonstrators gathered to protest the bill, arguing that the cards amount to second-class status for minorities.

The driving privilege card must be renewed annually. Undocumented immigrants must surrender their driver's licenses on their birthdays or on July 1, whichever is sooner.

Huntsman spokeswoman Tammy Kikuchi said the governor has been "pretty strong, from the beginning, in support of this bill" and was undeterred by opposition in the minority community.

Story last updated at 11:30 a.m. Friday, March 14, 2003

Legislators target illegal immigrants

By Tatiana Prophet and Ryan Mahoney

Atlanta Business Chronicle: Updated: 7:00 p.m. ET Feb. 27, 2005

The sponsors of six state bills that would bar illegal immigrants from receiving certain social services and holding certain jobs say they're sending a message to Georgia business owners.

"It is not OK for you to break the law because you want to offer a lower wage," said state Sen. Chip Rogers of Woodstock, who authored four of the bills.

Rogers and Reps. John Lunsford of McDonough and Roger Williams of Dalton , all Republicans, presented their views Feb. 19 at the annual meeting of the Christian Coalition of Georgia .

"For any employer out there who is mad at me for introducing this bill, I want to say ... 'I won't back down,' " Rogers said............

 

 

 

Paid for by I.R.O.N. Updated 08-Feb-2006