U.S. Can't Trace Foreign Visitors on Expired Visas Posted on Monday, October 12 @ 11:28:40 EDT
Topic: Department of Homeland Security
|
DALLAS — Eight years after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks and despite repeated mandates from Congress, the
United States still has no reliable system for verifying that foreign
visitors have left the country.
New concern was focused on that security loophole last week, when
Hosam Maher Husein Smadi, a 19-year-old Jordanian who had overstayed
his tourist visa, was accused in court of plotting to blow up a Dallas
skyscraper.
Last year alone, 2.9 million foreign visitors on temporary visas
like Mr. Smadi’s checked in to the country but never officially checked
out, immigration officials said. While officials say they have no way
to confirm it, they suspect that several hundred thousand of them
overstayed their visas.
Topics: illegal immigration, terrorist, visas, illegal immigrants, students, guest workers, illegal aliens, DHS, security, Lamar Smith
October 12, 2009
By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr. and JULIA PRESTON
NY Times
Over all, the officials said, about 40 percent
of the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States
came on legal visas and overstayed.
Mr. Smadi’s case has brought renewed calls from both parties in
Congress for Department of Homeland Security officials to complete a
universal electronic exit monitoring system.
Representative Lamar Smith of Texas, the senior Republican on the
House Judiciary Committee, said the Smadi case “points to a real need
for an entry and exit system if we are serious about reducing illegal
immigration.”
Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York and chairman of
the Judiciary Committee’s subcommittee on immigration, said he would
try to steer money from the economic stimulus program to build an exit
monitoring system.
Since the Sept. 11 attacks, immigration authorities, with more than
$1 billion from Congress, have greatly improved and expanded their
systems to monitor foreigners when they arrive. But despite several
Congressional authorizations, there are no biometric inspections or a
systematic follow-up to confirm that foreign visitors have departed.
Homeland security officials caution that universal exit monitoring
is a daunting and costly goal, mainly because of the nation’s long and
busy land borders, with more than one million crossings every day. The
wrong exit plan, they said, could clog trade, disrupt border cities and
overwhelm immigration agencies with information they could not
effectively use.
Since 2004, homeland security officials have put systems in place
to check all foreigners as they arrive, whether by air, sea or land.
Customs officers now take fingerprints and digital photographs of
visitors from most countries, instantly comparing them against law
enforcement watch list databases. (Canadians and Mexicans with special
border-crossing cards are exempt from those checks.)
But homeland security officials said that a series of pilot
programs since 2004 had failed to yield an exit monitoring system that
would work for the whole nation. They have not yet found technology to
support speedy exit inspections at land borders. And airlines balked at
an effort last year by the Bush administration to make them responsible
for taking fingerprints and photographs of departing foreigners.
The current system relies on departing foreigners to turn in a paper stub when they leave.
Last year, official figures show, 39 million foreign travelers were
admitted on temporary visas like Mr. Smadi’s. Based on the paper stubs,
homeland security officials said, they confirmed the departure of 92.5
percent of them. Most of the remaining visitors did depart, officials
said, but failed to check out because they did not know how to do so.
But more than 200,000 of them are believed to have overstayed
intentionally.
Immigration authorities have put in place a separate system for
keeping track of foreigners who, unlike Mr. Smadi, come on student
visas. That system has proved effective at confirming that the students
have stayed in school and do not overstay their visas, officials said.
Immigration analysts said that given the difficulties of enforcing
the United States’ vast borders, it remains primarily up to law
enforcement officials to thwart terrorism suspects who do not have
records that would draw scrutiny before they enter the United States.
“You can’t ask the immigration system to do everything,” said Doris
Meissner, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, a research
center in Washington, and a former commissioner of the immigration
service. “This is an example of how changes in law enforcement
priorities and techniques since Sept. 11 actually got to where they
should be.”
Mr. Smadi, like many tourists who overstay visas, was able to fade
easily into society and encountered few barriers to starting a life
here, according to court documents and people who know him. He enrolled
in high school, obtained a California identification card, landed jobs
in two states and rented a string of apartments and houses. He bought
at least two used cars, and even procured a handgun and ammunition.
Mr. Smadi’s arrest on Sept. 24 for the attempted bombing was not
his first encounter with American law enforcement. Two weeks earlier, a
sheriff’s deputy in Ellis County, Tex., pulled him over for a broken
tail light just north of the town of Italy, then arrested him for
driving without a license or insurance.
When the deputy checked his identity, Mr. Smadi’s name showed up on
a watch list by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which was already
investigating him. But the background check turned up no immigration
record. The deputy called the F.B.I. and was told there was no
outstanding arrest warrant for Mr. Smadi. So on the evening of Sept.
11, Mr. Smadi paid a $550 fine and walked out of the county jail.
“There was nothing to indicate to us that this person was currently in the States illegally,” said Chief Deputy Dennis Brearley.
Mr. Smadi had come to the United States from Jordan in early 2007 on a six-month tourist visa, immigration officials say.
For a few weeks he stayed in San Jose, Calif., with Hana Elrabodi,
a retired Jordanian businessman who knew his family, according to Mr.
Elrabodi’s wife, Temina. Though Mr. Smadi was not authorized to work,
he found a job at a local restaurant. In late March, Mr. Smadi obtained
a California identification card using Mr. Elrabodi’s address.
In October 2007, Mr. Smadi moved into an apartment in Santa Clara
with his younger brother, Hussein Smadi, and another man he identified
as his cousin, according to the manager of the apartment complex, Joe
Redzovic. Mr. Smadi took another job, in a falafel restaurant, and in
the winter he briefly enrolled in the Santa Clara High School.
After a fire gutted his Santa Clara apartment, Mr. Smadi moved to
Dallas. Though his visa had expired by April 2008, he landed a job
working behind the counter at Texas Best Smokehouse in Italy, Tex.,
about 45 miles from Dallas. He rented a bungalow nearby, using his
California identification and passing a criminal background check, said
his former landlord, David South.
Three months later, Mr. Smadi married one of his co-workers,
Rosalinda Duron. They separated in the fall of 2008 after only three
months, Ms. Duron said.
Investigators have found no evidence that Mr. Smadi, during his
first year in the United States, openly espoused Islamic
fundamentalism. Neither have they found any evidence that he received
terrorist training abroad or came to the United States intending to
commit a terrorist act, said Mark White, a spokesman for the F.B.I. in
Dallas.
But by the spring of 2008, he caught the attention of the F.B.I. by
posting incendiary remarks about wanting to kill Americans on Jihadist
Web sites. Over the summer, he met with agents posing as members of Al
Qaeda and planned to bomb the Fountain Place office building in
downtown Dallas, according to an indictment unsealed on Thursday.
His arrest on terrorism charges came after he parked a truck that
he had been told was carrying explosives in the building’s underground
garage, according to court documents.
When the F.B.I. later searched his residence, they found a Beretta
9 millimeter pistol and a box of ammunition, along with his passport
and the expired visa, the court documents show.
DISCUSS THIS EMAIL ALERT WITH OUR ONLINE ACTIVISTS AT....
|
|
| |
| Article Rating | Average Score: 5 Votes: 8

| |
|