News Bytes
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Canadian consultant hired by the California Republican Party (CRP) on an H-1B
visa to do campaign consulting has been fired after it was revealed he was
working in violation of immigration law, The
San Francisco Chronicle reports. Christopher
Matthews, a Canadian citizen, was hired last year as political director for the
CRP to handle campaign operations, US Department of Labor records show.
The organization applied last year for an H-1B visa on behalf of
Matthews, saying he would fill the job of "political consultant."
Federal
Election Commission records show that Matthews also had earned nearly $6,000
this year working for a different employer – the San Diego Republican Party.
Jonathon Buettner, spokesman for the San Diego GOP said Matthews was a
legal employee under a TN visa – a renewable one-year special visa for
Canadian and Mexican professionals. However,
officials from ICE said immigration law prohibits such dual visa arrangements.
"Citizens of countries who work here on nonimmigrant visas can only
use one kind at a time, and can only work for the employer who petitioned
them," said Sharon Rummery, ICE spokeswoman.
Violations of the terms of an H-1B visa can result in revocation of the
visa, she added.
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report released by the Migration Policy Institute released last week shows that
nearly 1.4 million naturalization applications were filed in fiscal year 2007,
almost twice as many as during the previous year, Reuters
reports. The study attributes a
sharp fee increase and interest in voting in the 2008
"Beyond
the fee increase for naturalization applications, government experts and
immigrant advocates cite other causes (including) heightened interest in the
2008 elections, citizenship campaigns by advocacy groups, and the charged
political climate surrounding the immigration policy debate," the study
said.
The MPI
report is available online at: http://www.migrationpolicy.org/pubs/FS21_NaturalizationBacklog_022608.pdf.
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According
to the Associated Press, a
woman being held in a
Adriana
Torres-Flores, 38, appeared in court Thursday and pleaded not guilty to a charge
of selling pirated CDs, but a judge ordered her held because she's in the
country illegally, said Sheriff Tim Helder.
Bailiff Jarrod Hankins put her in the cell to await transport to jail,
and she was forgotten.