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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    ASU grad who deported self gains legal residency in 361 days

    ASU grad who deported self gains legal residency

    by Richard Ruelas -
    Aug. 30, 2010 11:42 AM
    The Arizona Republic .

    Oscar Vazquez knew he was taking a risk when he returned to Mexico for the first time in his adult life, starting what could have been a years-long odyssey to earn legal U.S. residency.

    Turned out the wait was just 361 days, thanks to some political intervention. Vazquez was back in the U.S. Monday, visa in hand.

    "Even though it took a year, I feel it came out good," Vazquez said Monday.

    ASU grad returns to Mexico to do the right thing

    The illegal immigrant, a recent Arizona State University graduate, knew he would need to obtain the necessary documents if he ever wanted to put his hard-earned engineering degree to work.

    Last year he essentially deported himself, leaving behind his wife and infant daughter to do what he said was the right thing - obtain legal residency.

    And as he settled into Mexico after filing all the paperwork, he feared the wait could stretch on for years. But the timely intervention of a U.S. Senator played a key role in Vazquez's return.

    Vazquez, who received international media attention as a high school student when his robotics team won a collegiate competition, had another splash of publicity with his struggle to reverse his illegal status. His story was told in the The Arizona Republic, on CNN and on the floor of the U.S. Senate.

    When Vazquez graduated from Arizona State University in 2009, he was one of the featured graduates whose tale was told in front of the stadium, where attendees included commencement speaker President Barack Obama.

    But Vazquez knew his legal status would prevent him from using his degree. So, he decided to turn himself in at the consulate in Juarez, Mexico, admit his illegal presence, and apply for permission to re-enter.

    The government initially denied Vazquez's request and asked for additional paperwork, documenting the hardship to his wife and daughter, both U.S. citizens.

    Officials told him to expect a final answer in March. Meanwhile, Vazquez was living in Magdalena del Kino, a dusty town in Sonora, Mexico, working a night shift at an automobile parts factory.

    Vazquez said he was contacted by the office of Sen. Dick Dubin, D-Illinois. Durbin, the Senate Majority Whip, is a proponent of the Dream Act, legislation that would grant legal status to illegal immigrants who entered as children and had attended college or joined the military.

    Vazquez said he once Durbin was involved, "it was fast."

    A Durbin aide, who would only speak about the case on the condition his name wasn't used, said the office did make the Department of Homeland Security aware of the case.

    Vazquez's story was told in the Republic on July 4. On July 14, his wife, Karla Vazquez, received the letter saying her husband's visa waiver had been approved.

    Karla Vazquez, who had been taking regular trips to Mexico, to visit with her husband was about to head down for another trip when she decided to check the mail and saw the letter from the government.

    "It just said, your waiver was approved," Karla Vazquez said.

    She didn't tell Oscar the news until she drove down to Magdalena and saw him in person.

    "We were just looking at it," Oscar said, "just to make sure it was true."

    Oscar Vazquez had his appointment at the U.S. Consulate on Thursday. He received a packet of paperwork on Friday that allowed him to cross back into the United States.

    It was a much different entrance than his first one, at age 12. He and his mother dashed across the border near Douglas into a car waiting at a Wal-Mart parking lot.

    This entry was short on ceremony. Vazquez, 24, said a nearly emotionless-clerk told him that with his visa he was allowed to live and work in the United States.

    Vazquez walked out onto American soil and waited to catch a bus into Phoenix. Before then, he had a meal of KFC.

    His wife met him at the bus station. "It's just hard to describe," Oscar Vazquez said, about seeing his wife and daughter. "It's amazing just to be back home."

    Vazquez said he realized his was a unique case and that he was aided by political pressure. Had it not been for the publicity and a politician's intervention, he thinks he would have been denied.

    "A lot of people think that: 'Why don't you do it the right way?'" he said. "But many people can't."

    Had Vazquez been denied his waiver, he would have been barred from entering the United States for 10 years. He and his wife had discussed plans of moving to Mexico City, Canada or Europe.

    Vazquez expects to receive his Social Security card in about two weeks and will start looking for work in the engineering field.

    Vazquez was on the Carl Hayden High School team that beat out several colleges, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in an underwater robotics competition. The triumph of the four undocumented high school students was featured in Wired magazine. Other national media outlets picked up the story. Movie offers followed.

    On Monday, Vazquez showed up at Carl Hayden High School to talk with his robotics coach, Faridodin Lajvardi. Two other members of that four-person team also showed up, making for an impromptu reunion of that victorious team from 2007.

    Lajvardi gathered his current Carl Hayden students around him in the hallway and introduced Vazquez. His students had seen video of Durbin telling Vazquez's story on the Senate floor.

    "All that time, I kept telling you how you need to fight, fight, fight," he told the students. "It worked."

    The team gave Vazquez a group hug.

    http://www.azcentral.com/community/temp ... tizen.html
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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  2. #2
    Senior Member Bowman's Avatar
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    Would have been better if they had all lived in Mexico, where he could help create jobs for Mexicans. Lots of Americans like his wife live in Mexico.
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  3. #3
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    It's still a bogus way to get a VISA. Not everybody is going to have a Politician in their back pocket and they shouldn't.

    I believe our immigration laws need to be strengthened in a way that if you are EVER found ANYWHERE in the USA illegally it will make your attempt at ever coming back here a VERY LONG WAIT...10-15 years back in your home country should have to pass before you are ever allowed to even apply to come back here. AND if you're here illegally and have committed fraud, murder, rape, molestation, drunk driving, etc, in this country while illegal, your chance of ever coming here legally should be permanently REVOKED!
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    In other words, he still got to jump ahead of everyone else who's been waiting 5-10 years. Nice go. Aren't Mexicans illegals special? What a load of B.S. and preferential treatment!

    Does anyone know the number of Mexican-Americans working at the U.S. passport and citizenship offices that are responsible for granting visas and is anyone naive enough to think that many of these workers aren't stamping approvals left and right for their compadres, placing them ahead of other immigrants?

    Is the Pope Catholic?

  5. #5
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    Peel away all of the fluff, lace and sugar coated BS off of this pro-amnesty piece of journalistic garbage and what you really have is the story of someone who had broken our immigration laws, committed fraud to live, work and go to school here, was a parasite on our medical system and then was rewarded for it all with a visa! AND he was given preferential treatment to obtain that visa above every other legal immigrant playing by the rules and waiting in line by the fact that he is a Mexican!

    This sends a clear message that as long as you are a Mexican, you're allowed to cheat, lie and steal your way into the USA and will be given preferential treatment by this government for doing that! If you are a boat person from Haiti you won't be allowed to "pass go and collect $200, your a-s-s will be swiftly arrested and deported! Is this equal treatment under the law?
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    I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.
    ~Thomas Jefferson (1743 - 1826)

  6. #6
    Senior Member judyweller's Avatar
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    Didn't quite do the legal way. Dick Durbin and CNN made his rule-skipping possible. HE should have spent the 10 years needed before he came back. Why so many rules constantly being broken for illegals?

  7. #7
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Touch-Back Amnesty.

    This isn't waiting in line.

    Dixie
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  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by judyweller
    Didn't quite do the legal way. Dick Durbin and CNN made his rule-skipping possible. HE should have spent the 10 years needed before he came back. Why so many rules constantly being broken for illegals?
    But look closer...NOT ALL ILLEGALS are being treated equally. Illegal Mexicans are given the red carpet treatment into our schools, hospitals and work places...every other nationality..i.e., Chinese, Irish, Haitian, Japanese, Filipino, English, Canadians, etc. are usually sought out if they don't obey the agreements of their visas, arrested and swiftly deported. If they are "stumbled upon" being here illegally by ICE they are swiftly processed and deported.

    Mexicans are given all kinds of preferential treatment, compared to other nationalities and basically are given amnesty under the table by our treasonous elected officials!!
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    I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.
    ~Thomas Jefferson (1743 - 1826)

  9. #9
    Senior Member USPatriot's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by legalalien
    In other words, he still got to jump ahead of everyone else who's been waiting 5-10 years. Nice go. Aren't Mexicans illegals special? What a load of B.S. and preferential treatment!

    Does anyone know the number of Mexican-Americans working at the U.S. passport and citizenship offices that are responsible for granting visas and is anyone naive enough to think that many of these workers aren't stamping approvals left and right for their compadres, placing them ahead of other immigrants?

    Is the Pope Catholic?
    Your right we have too many foxes in the hen house.

    The whole immigration & citizenship crew need to be investigated and alot of them FIRED.
    "A Government big enough to give you everything you want,is strong enough to take everything you have"* Thomas Jefferson

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