Border and Enforcement News
A federal inspector at Newark
Liberty International Airport last week pleaded guilty to taking a $4,000 bribe
to help smuggle nearly 200 immigrants from India into the U.S.
He said he split the money with another inspector who is currently
awaiting trial.
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British writer Ian McEwan
received an official apology from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection
division of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security after being denied entry
into the U.S. earlier this year. McEwan
had been seeking to come to Seattle for a speaking appearance when an American
inspector refused him admittance to the U.S. at the Vancouver airport
immigration processing center.
Immigration officials at the
Vancouver airport had determined that the size of McEwan’s speaking fees were
too large to be considered the honoraria that visitors are allowed to receive.
However, research at the Washington, D.C. headquarters of the U.S.
Customs and Border Protection’s Office of Field Operations revealed that no
current regulations determine the size limit of allowable honoraria.
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Community activists in Alabama
are criticizing a sweep performed by federal immigration officials that resulted
in the arrests of 27 day laborers in the city of Hoover last week.
Hispanic community advocates in
the area contend that the agents are only making blanket arrests and are not
checking documents. ICE agents told
The Birmingham News that the arrests were the results of ongoing ICE
investigations, and that the agency is still processing the detainees to find
out the identities and backgrounds of each one.
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A crackdown on migrant
smuggling has forced some involved in the practice to move to into communities
that are not historically known as stopover points for undocumented immigrants,
according to a statement by a Phoenix immigration official to the Associated
Press last week. Smugglers are now
being prompted by the attention such immigrant transporting hubs such as Phoenix
are receiving to move their business practices to Tucson and other communities
in Arizona.
The government wants to use the
same approach in Los Angeles, San Diego and El Paso as they did in Phoenix,
because tighter border enforcement in Arizona is expected to send illegal
immigrants to other areas, according to officials in the ICE office in Phoenix.
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.