
Border News
The Department Of Homeland Security
has yet to combine a dozen separate potential terrorist “watch lists,” according
to Deputy Secretary Gordon England, who said during a news conference hosted by
the Heritage Foundation that the task is a “technical challenge.” England said
the separate databases and computers were not designed to share information.
Another complicating factor is duplicate data included on some of the lists,
with some names listed multiple times with different spellings, birthdates or
hometowns. Despite the slow progress, England said the department had achieved
several accomplishments, including the establishment of a counter-terrorism
intelligence-analysis office, implementation of biometric technology used to
track immigrants, and the use of new inspection systems to scan material
entering the country.
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According to an article published by the Plain Dealer in Cleveland, Ohio, the
Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services has placed a 10 year bar on the
reentry of a Romanian grandmother who admitted to helping babysit her newborn
grandson while in the country on a six-month visitor visa. According to a letter
from the former Immigration and Naturalization Service, Maria Missits accepted
“unauthorized employment” by providing child-care service to her daughter’s
10-month-old baby. Missits told immigration officials that she wanted to help
her daughter, Ioana, with her son when asked why she wanted to extend her visa
for 2 ½ months. In response, the Bureau claimed she was, in effect, “replacing
an employable worker.” Ioana and her husband, Ho-Fan Lee, have
permanent-resident status in the United States. Since Missits departed on March
31, the young couple has not hired anyone to help baby-sit the child.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.