News Bytes
A new sign-on letter requesting
that the Department of Homeland Security stipulate to a grant of asylum for
Malik Jarno, a mentally challenged orphan, is circulating among immigration
advocates. The letter contains
information on the growing support for Jarno as well as new evidence that his
supporters are hoping will compel a grant of asylum.
Jarno’s individual hearing is scheduled for July 9, 2004, before
Immigration Judge Churchill, the same judge who heard the case previously.
If you are able to sign on, please notify Ruth Spivack at ruth_spivack@washlaw.org.
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The South Dakota International
Business Institute (SDIBI), Dairy Economic Development Region (DEDR) has been
designated as a regional center to participate in the Immigrant Investor Pilot
Program. The center will have a
commercial investment focus on the commercial enterprise areas of animal dairy
farm operations and animal heifer ranch operations.
Those seeking immigrant visas through the Immigrant Investor Pilot
Program may file individual petitions with USCIS for these new commercial
enterprises located within the SDIBI/DEDR regional center area comprised of 12
counties in eastern South Dakota.
The designation by the USCIS of
the SDIBI/DEDR as a regional center does not reflect any determination on the
merits of individual petitions filed by entrepreneurs under the Investor Pilot
Program. All petitions for those
seeking immigrant visas that invest within the regional center will be
adjudicated by the USCIS on a case-by-case basis and each petition must be fully
documented and submitted to the Texas Service Center.
For questions concerning the SDICI/DEDR designation under the Immigrant
Investor Pilot Program, contact the Office of Programs and Regulation
Development, at (202) 616-7862.
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Nancy Stephenson, a former
employee of the Immigration and Naturalization Service’s California Service
Center in Laguna Niguel, CA, pleaded guilty last week to accepting thousands of
dollars in bribes for issuing work permits she was not authorized to approve.
Although Stephenson was authorized to adjudicate employment–based
immigration petitions, she was not authorized to approve applications for work
permits. The prosecuting attorneys
have said that she charged at least 99 applicants up to $4,000 each to mark
their applications with a coded INS stamp indicating approval, along with having
made false entries in INS computer records supporting the fraudulent approvals.
Stevenson faces up to 25
years in federal prison on charges of bribery and issuing work permits
fraudulently when she is sentenced August 12, 2004.
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The Wall
Street Journal reported that the U.S. State Department has delayed
implementing the Hague Convention on Intercountry Adoption, an international
treaty governing adoptions. This
agreement was to be implemented by the end of 2004, but the date has been moved
to 2006 because the agency needs to address the more than 1,500 comments they
have received from parents and adoption agencies.
This treaty is designed to curb abuses, such as child trafficking, and
the outcome of the delay in ratifying the treaty could make it tougher to adopt
from certain countries. Families
currently in the adoption process are not likely to be affected.
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On Cinco de Mayo, about 400
people, mostly Hispanic families, participated in a protest and march in South
Bend, Indiana. This
demonstration was formed to oppose a March 2004, rule change within the Indiana
Bureau of Motor Vehicles. In
an effort to verify authenticity, the BMV began screening foreign nationals’
immigration documentation. According
to the South Bend Tribune, the BMV’s new screening procedure has created a
culture of fear for immigrants who attempt to obtain driver’s licenses. This
policy, according to protestors, has increased the number of drivers who are
uninsured and not properly trained. The
BMV stated that they could not issue driver’s licenses to people who can’t
prove their legal right to be in the United States, because a driver’s license
serves as a primary identification document.
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Under a new U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) program, certain aliens who are under supervision
and would otherwise be detained prior to their deportation may now report their
whereabouts via telephone. Aliens
who are under supervision are those who have been ordered deported, but cannot
return to their country due to unstable conditions.
ICE will select certain aliens who it determines are not a threat to
society. Once selected, the aliens
no longer have to report to the specified office but may report to ICE by
calling a system that verifies the individual’s voice.
The new program, which allows
officers to prioritize their time to seek out the more than 80,000 criminal
alien fugitives, is currently employed in Anchorage, Chicago, Detroit, Miami,
Orlando, Portland and Seattle.
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ANG Newspapers reports that
Oakland City Council President Ignacio De La Fuente released documents proving
his U.S. citizenship. The 2006
mayoral candidate’s stated reason was to refute local radio talk show host
Gene Burns’ on-air suggestions that he was an illegal immigrant.
De La Fuente was born in Mexico but moved to the U.S. in 1971 and was
naturalized in 1979.
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.